81_FR_6183 81 FR 6159 - Supplemental Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Department of Homeland Security

81 FR 6159 - Supplemental Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Department of Homeland Security

DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 24 (February 5, 2016)

Page Range6159-6169
FR Document2016-01318

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS), with the concurrence of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics (OGE), is finalizing this rule to supplement the OGE Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch (OGE Standards) for DHS employees. These regulations supplement the OGE Standards and, among other things, set forth employee restrictions on the purchase of certain Government-owned property; require employees to report allegations of waste, fraud, and abuse; require employees to seek prior approval for certain outside employment and activities; prohibit employees in some DHS components from engaging in certain types of outside employment activities; and require designated components to develop instructions regarding the procedures for obtaining prior approval for outside employment and activities. These regulations also designate components within DHS as separate agencies for purposes of determining whether the donor of a gift is a ``prohibited source'' and of identifying an employee's agency for the regulations governing teaching, speaking, and writing. This rulemaking is necessary in view of DHS programs and operations; DHS is comprised of numerous legacy agencies which have varying or no supplemental ethics regulations. This final rule follows publication of a proposed rule on October 12, 2011. We considered public comments on the proposed rule while revising this final rule. This final rule includes revisions to the definition of ``outside employment'' and the additional provisions applicable only to employees of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 24 (Friday, February 5, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 24 (Friday, February 5, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 6159-6169]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-01318]



========================================================================
Rules and Regulations
                                                Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________

This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents 
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed 
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published 
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.

The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents. 
Prices of new books are listed in the first FEDERAL REGISTER issue of each 
week.

========================================================================


Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 24 / Friday, February 5, 2016 / Rules 
and Regulations

[[Page 6159]]



DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY

5 CFR Chapter XXXVI

[Docket No. DHS-2008-0168]
RINs 1601-AA17, 3209-AA15


Supplemental Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the 
Department of Homeland Security

AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, Department of Homeland Security.

ACTION: Final rule.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: The Department of Homeland Security (DHS), with the 
concurrence of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics (OGE), is 
finalizing this rule to supplement the OGE Standards of Ethical Conduct 
for Employees of the Executive Branch (OGE Standards) for DHS 
employees. These regulations supplement the OGE Standards and, among 
other things, set forth employee restrictions on the purchase of 
certain Government-owned property; require employees to report 
allegations of waste, fraud, and abuse; require employees to seek prior 
approval for certain outside employment and activities; prohibit 
employees in some DHS components from engaging in certain types of 
outside employment activities; and require designated components to 
develop instructions regarding the procedures for obtaining prior 
approval for outside employment and activities. These regulations also 
designate components within DHS as separate agencies for purposes of 
determining whether the donor of a gift is a ``prohibited source'' and 
of identifying an employee's agency for the regulations governing 
teaching, speaking, and writing. This rulemaking is necessary in view 
of DHS programs and operations; DHS is comprised of numerous legacy 
agencies which have varying or no supplemental ethics regulations. This 
final rule follows publication of a proposed rule on October 12, 2011. 
We considered public comments on the proposed rule while revising this 
final rule. This final rule includes revisions to the definition of 
``outside employment'' and the additional provisions applicable only to 
employees of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection and U.S. 
Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

DATES: This rule is effective March 7, 2016.

ADDRESSES: Comments and material received from the public, as well as 
documents mentioned in this preamble as being available in the docket, 
are part of docket DHS-2008-0168 and are available for inspection or 
copying from the Internet by going to http://www.regulations.gov, 
inserting DHS-2008-0168 in the ``SEARCH'' box, and then clicking 
``SEARCH.''

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ferne L. Mosley, Deputy Ethics 
Official, Department of Homeland Security, 202-447-3302, email: 
[email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Table of Contents

I. Background
II. Regulatory History
III. Discussion of NPRM Comments
    A. Comments Regarding the Proposed Definition of ``Outside 
Employment''
    B. Comments Regarding the Proposed Prior Approval Requirement
    C. Comments Regarding Manuals or Instructions on Implementing 
the Prior Approval Requirement
    D. Comments Regarding the Standard of Review of Outside 
Employment and Activity Requests
    E. Comments Regarding Outside Employment Restrictions Specific 
to CBP
    F. Comments Regarding Outside Employment Restrictions Specific 
to ICE
    G. Comments Regarding the Requirement To Report Waste, Fraud, 
Abuse and Corruption
    H. Other Comments
IV. Discussion of Final Rule
    A. 5 CFR 4601.101 General
    B. 5 CFR 4601.102 Designation of DHS Components as Separate 
Agencies
    C. 5 CFR 4601.103 Prior Approval for Outside Employment and 
Activities
    D. 5 CFR 4601.104 Additional Rules for CBP Employees
    E. 5 CFR 4601.105 Additional Rules for FEMA Employees
    F. 5 CFR 4601.106 Additional Rules for ICE Employees
    G. 5 CFR 4601.107 Prohibited Purchases of Property
    H. 5 CFR 4601.108 Reporting Waste, Fraud, Abuse, and Corruption
V. Regulatory Analyses
    A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
    B. Small Entities/Regulatory Flexibility Act

Table of Acronyms

CBP U.S. Customs and Border Protection
CDEO Chief Deputy Ethics Official
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
DAEO Designated Agency Ethics Official
DHS Department of Homeland Security
FEMA Federal Emergency Management Agency
ICE U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
NPRM Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
OGE U.S. Office of Government Ethics
U.S.C. United States Code
Sec.  Section Symbol

I. Background

    On August 7, 1992, the U.S. Office of Government Ethics (OGE) 
issued a final rule setting forth the uniform Standards of Ethical 
Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch (OGE Standards), which, 
as corrected and amended, are codified at 5 CFR part 2635 (57 FR 
35006). Effective on February 3, 1993, the OGE Standards established 
uniform ethics rules applicable to all Executive branch personnel.
    Pursuant to 5 CFR 2635.105, Executive branch agencies are 
authorized to publish, with the concurrence of OGE, supplemental 
regulations deemed necessary to implement their respective ethics 
programs. Prior to the creation of DHS, several legacy agencies were 
operating under supplemental ethics regulations issued by their former 
parent departments. The regulations finalized in this action will 
advance the purposes of the OGE Standards. Some outside employment 
interests and activities, if held by employees of certain Department of 
Homeland Security (DHS) components, could cause a reasonable person to 
question an employee's impartiality and objectivity. Particularly in 
view of the breadth of DHS's programs and operations, and because DHS 
is comprised of numerous legacy components with varying or no 
supplemental ethics regulations, this action is both necessary and 
appropriate. This rule will require prior approval of certain outside 
employment and activities to avoid potential conflicts of interest. 
This rule will also

[[Page 6160]]

prohibit conflicting outside employment activities in certain 
components.

II. Regulatory History

    On October 12, 2011, DHS, with OGE's concurrence, published for 
comment a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) to supplement the OGE 
Standards for DHS employees. 76 FR 63206. The NPRM proposed 
supplemental ethics rules designed to implement uniform ethical 
requirements for all DHS employees, many of whom were previously 
employed by 22 other Executive branch departments and agencies prior to 
DHS's formation in 2003. The NPRM also proposed certain ethical 
requirements specific to certain DHS components based on the nature of 
their programs and operations. Specifically, the NPRM proposed to (1) 
set forth employee restrictions on the purchase of certain Government-
owned property; (2) require employees to report allegations of waste, 
fraud, and abuse; (3) require employees to seek prior approval for 
certain outside employment and activities; (4) prohibit employees in 
some DHS components from engaging in certain types of outside 
employment activities; (5) require designated components to develop 
instructions regarding the procedures for obtaining prior approval for 
outside employment and activities; and (6) designate components within 
DHS as a separate agency for purposes of determining whether the donor 
of a gift is a ``prohibited source'' and of identifying an employee's 
agency for the regulations governing teaching, speaking, and writing. 
These proposals sought to strengthen the integrity of DHS programs and 
operations and give the public greater confidence that DHS employees 
are held to a high standard of ethical behavior while carrying out 
DHS's missions. For a more complete discussion of the proposals in the 
NPRM, please refer to the preamble of that document available in the 
public docket for this rulemaking and in the Federal Register at 76 FR 
63206.
    By the close of the NPRM's public comment period on December 12, 
2011, DHS received 12 comment letters. Eight of the commenters 
expressed concern that the NPRM's definition of ``outside employment'' 
was overly broad. Some commenters stated that the definition impeded 
the constitutional rights and lawful political activities of DHS 
employees. Other commenters addressed the necessity for the rule, 
specifically the requirement to seek prior approval for outside 
activities and employment; the requirement for employees to report 
waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption; and the amount of government 
resources and time required to implement the rule's provisions. Other 
commenters generally sought clarification on the impact the rule will 
have on employees serving as U.S. Coast Guard reservists and reservists 
in other military services, as well as the rule's effect on official 
employee interactions with non-Federal entities. There were also 
comments on the agency-specific proposed regulations for employees of 
U.S. Customs & Border Protection (CBP) and U.S. Immigration & Customs 
Enforcement (ICE) components, regarding the broad nature of the 
prohibited outside employment and activities for these employees and 
how this might affect an employee's ability to engage in certain 
routine consumer transactions. In the next section, we discuss the 
public comments in greater detail and provide DHS responses.

III. Discussion of NPRM Comments

A. Comments Regarding the Proposed Definition of ``Outside Employment''

    Comment: One commenter stated that the definition of ``outside 
employment'' should only include employment and activities that 
directly relate to an employee's official duties, because outside 
positions that are unrelated to the employee's duties will not present 
a conflict of interest. The commenter stated that any activity with a 
non-profit organization should be excluded from the definition, even if 
the activity is compensated.
    DHS Response: DHS disagrees. DHS notes that matters that are 
``related to'' the DHS mission or even the employee's official duties 
are not always obvious or intuitive. For example, employees may not 
necessarily be aware of broader DHS mission involvement, grant 
programs, regulatory activities, and the like, which may apply to non-
profit organizations. Moreover, there are occasions when holding a 
fiduciary or compensated position with a non-profit organization, or 
providing personal services to such an organization, may indeed create 
a criminal conflict of interest for an employee. This is true even if 
the non-profit organization's mission does not relate to the employee's 
duties or the programs of the employee's agency.
    For example, all Federal employees are prohibited by criminal 
statute from acting as an agent or attorney on behalf of another in a 
matter in which the United States is a party or has a direct and 
substantial interest before any officer, employee, or court of the 
United States. See 18 U.S.C. 205(a)(2). This rule applies regardless of 
whether the representation relates to the federal employee's assigned 
duties. Accordingly, under one possible scenario, a DHS employee who 
submits a grant application to another government agency in the 
employee's capacity as a board member of a non-profit organization 
would violate a criminal law by signing and submitting the application. 
Additionally, an employee who accepts compensation for such an activity 
would also violate another criminal statute, 18 U.S.C. 203, which 
prohibits employees from accepting compensation for certain 
representational activities before a Federal agency or court. These 
prohibitions also apply to employees holding positions with for-profit 
companies. The above scenario provides an illustration of the rationale 
behind requiring DHS employees to generally obtain prior approval to 
engage in outside employment and activities, and why we are not 
limiting the prohibition on outside employment to activities directly 
related to an employee's official duties or exempting all positions 
with non-profit organizations. These provisions not only help manage 
DHS's ethics program, they also protect employees from inadvertent 
violations of the law. Outside employment and activities--even those 
that appear to be unrelated to DHS's mission or the employee's duties--
may create conflicts of interest or present other ethical 
considerations.
    Comment: Two commenters raised constitutional concerns that the 
definition of ``outside employment,'' to the extent that it may include 
a prior approval requirement for speaking and writing on matters of 
public concern, acted as a prior restraint on free speech. One 
commenter expressed concern that the prior approval requirement for 
speaking, teaching, writing, and political activity would by its nature 
delay the employee's ability to engage in such activities, and that all 
DHS employees would need to obtain prior approval for almost any 
expressive activity undertaken for compensation, including articles or 
speeches on matters of public concern unrelated to DHS's mission of the 
employees' duties. Another commenter expressed concern that writing 
personal letters to a newspaper editor or engaging in social media 
activities and blogging would be deemed to be an activity ``under an 
arrangement with another person,'' which would fall under the prior 
approval requirement.
    DHS Response: The definition proposed in the NPRM was not intended 
to unconstitutionally restrict speech or expression. DHS does not view 
personal, uncompensated

[[Page 6161]]

expressions of opinion, such as writing letters to newspaper editors or 
social media or blogging activities, as being done under an 
``arrangement with another person'' for purposes of the supplemental 
DHS ethics regulations. DHS did not intend to require prior approval to 
engage in these types of uncompensated, personal expressions. 
Additionally, DHS did not intend these regulations to adversely impact 
an employee's ability to engage in or abstain from political activities 
permitted by the Hatch Act, 5 U.S.C. 7321-7326, that Act's related 
regulations, or relevant Executive branch policy. Such expressions are 
generally not the types of activities that would create a conflicting 
financial interest. These expressive activities are also not likely to 
involve a relationship for an employee that, under the OGE Standards, 
would result in an employee's disqualification from participating in an 
official capacity or cause a reasonable person to question an 
employee's impartiality, or otherwise amount to a conflicting outside 
employment or activity. To address the concerns raised by these 
commenters, this final rule narrows the definition of ``outside 
employment'' from what we proposed in the NPRM. Specifically, this 
final rule exempts ``speaking and writing'' from the definition of 
``outside employment,'' provided that these activities are not combined 
with the provision of additional services that otherwise fall within 
the definition. The revised language also refers employees to the 
existing regulations at 5 CFR 2635.807 for further guidance on the 
limitations for accepting compensation for speaking and writing 
activities done in a personal capacity. The final rule retains 
``teaching'' in the definition of ``outside employment,'' even though 
most teaching fits within the exceptions outlined in the OGE Standards.
    Comment: Two commenters raised concerns that the proposed 
definition of ``outside employment'' seemed to include uncompensated 
speaking. The commenters also suggested that DHS should differentiate 
between an employee speaking or writing as a representative of the 
agency as opposed to speaking or writing on the employee's own behalf 
for compensation. The commenters further suggested that the two 
exclusions should appear in the regulatory text within the relevant 
section under separate numbers or other designation.
    DHS Response: DHS agrees that in general, personal expressions such 
as writing letters to the editor and other uncompensated speaking and 
writing activities, should not be covered as ``outside employment or 
activity.'' As explained above, this final rule revises the definition 
of ``outside employment'' from that in the NPRM to generally exempt 
``speaking and writing'' unless it otherwise falls under the 
definition. The revised language also refers employees to the existing 
regulations in 5 CFR 2635.807 for further guidance on the limitations 
for accepting compensation for teaching, speaking and writing 
activities done in a personal capacity.
    Comment: Some commenters raised concerns that the proposed 
definition of ``outside employment'' would impact an employee's ability 
to interact with, prepare materials for, and/or speak to non-Federal 
entities and other organizations in an employee's official capacity.
    DHS Response: DHS disagrees. The regulation states that it applies 
to outside employment and activities, which does not include an 
employee's activities in an official DHS capacity. DHS acknowledges 
that these comments might have been precipitated due to confusion 
created by an errant reference in the proposed rule to 5 CFR 2635.802 
(``relates to an employee's official duties''). This final rule 
contains a corrected reference that appropriately cites to 5 CFR 
2635.807.
    Comment: One commenter stated that the prior approval requirement 
violates employees' privacy, and suggested that the definition of 
``outside employment'' should contain a list that specifically excludes 
certain types of outside employment and activities that would never be 
a conflict for an employee (e.g., a holiday job at a retail store). The 
commenter also suggested that DHS should not require prior approval for 
certain types of employment and other activities. Finally, the 
commenter suggested that DHS should identify, in advance, types of 
employment and other activities that are always prohibited.
    DHS Response: DHS declines to carve out from the ``outside 
employment'' definition and the prior approval requirement additional 
categories of outside employment and activities because the employment 
or activity would never pose an ethical conflict for any DHS employee. 
It is not always obvious or intuitive that a certain type of outside 
employment activity presents an ethical conflict. To adopt the 
commenter's scenario, working at a retail establishment may indeed pose 
a conflict for a DHS employee. For example, ethics rules would prohibit 
outside employment at certain retail stores for ICE employees who 
inspect retail facilities for immigration violations, or other DHS 
employees with official responsibilities for immigration and employment 
verification policies applicable to the retail industry. Although DHS 
does not find sufficient justification to support a broad exclusion for 
retail employment as the commenter suggested, the rule does provide DHS 
components with the discretion to exempt this type of activity under 
their implementing policies based on each component's unique mission. 
As a result, some types of outside employment or activities may be 
excluded by an individual component's implementing instructions.
    Regarding the commenter's other suggestion, although some DHS 
components (specifically, CBP, FEMA, and ICE) have determined that 
certain types of outside employment and other activities should be 
prohibited, those determinations do not apply DHS-wide. For example, 
there is no basis for broadly extending the prohibition on CBP 
employees from working for a customs broker to the employees of other 
DHS components whose missions do not involve customs. Moreover, it is 
not possible to anticipate all types of outside employment and other 
activities that might create a potential conflict. Accordingly, this 
final rule does not adopt the commenter's suggestion for a blanket list 
of prohibited employment or activities, because such a list would 
likely result in overly-broad restrictions for all DHS employees.

B. Comments Regarding the Proposed Prior Approval Requirement

    Comment: One commenter stated that the prior approval requirement 
was unnecessary, stating that DHS employees are ``fully capable of 
determining for themselves whether an activity would conflict with 
their official responsibilities or otherwise adversely affect DHS, or 
create the appearance of impropriety.'' The commenter also stated that 
employees would voluntarily seek ethics advice without a prior approval 
requirement, thus rendering the requirement moot.
    DHS Response: DHS disagrees. Requiring an ethics review is a low-
cost mechanism for avoiding serious consequences that may accrue to 
employees who would otherwise inadvertently run afoul of the rules. 
Employees are often not aware of all applicable ethics statutes, 
regulations, and OGE guidance that may be implicated when engaging in 
outside employment or activities. The OGE Standards establish that 
agencies carry out an ethics program competent to ensure the 
fundamental objectives of providing employees with informed and 
objective guidance. DHS ethics counselors serve as a resource for

[[Page 6162]]

employees and provide employees with guidance and legal opinions in 
order to ensure that employees are aware of and follow the relevant 
ethics regulations and conflict of interest statutes. Many of the 
ethics rules, including ones that may be implicated by outside 
employment and activities, include criminal penalties. Violations of 
these laws may carry civil and criminal penalties and may result in 
termination of employment. In addition, an employee who seeks an 
opinion from an agency ethics official and has made full disclosure of 
all relevant circumstances, and relies in good faith on such an opinion 
is shielded, at a minimum, from agency administrative action. See 5 CFR 
2635.107(b).
    Although many employees voluntarily seek the guidance of an agency 
ethics official before engaging in outside employment or activities, 
some conflicts may not be obvious to employees, thereby putting them at 
unnecessary risk for potential conflicts or violations of the law. 
Therefore, a regulatory requirement for employees to obtain prior 
approval for outside employment and other activities is not only in the 
best interest of DHS and the public, it will also help protect 
employees from inadvertent missteps.
    Comment: One commenter stated that a prior approval requirement 
would be a waste of time and create unnecessary paperwork. The 
commenter also questioned DHS's motives for the prior approval 
requirement.
    DHS Response: For the reasons stated above, the prior approval 
requirement will help protect DHS's interest in the integrity of its 
programs by creating a mechanism to affirmatively provide substantive 
guidance to employees in an effort to avoid potential conflicts of 
interest. The prior approval requirement will also help employees 
comply with the laws governing employee ethics. This prior approval 
requirement is consistent with similar requirements promulgated by 
other cabinet-level departments.
    Additionally, DHS has determined that a uniform prior approval 
requirement in the DHS supplemental ethics regulations is important for 
establishing and maintaining consistency in the DHS ethics program. The 
rule will eliminate discrepancies between certain DHS employees 
previously employed by legacy agencies, who are covered by the legacy 
agency's ethics rules, and employees hired after DHS was created, who 
had not previously been covered by a supplemental ethics regulation. 
This rule will cover all DHS employees.
    Comment: One commenter stated that proposed section 4601.103(a) was 
overbroad and exceeded the DHS and OGE's legal authority to establish 
the prior approval requirement. The commenter characterized the NPRM as 
requiring prior approval for ``all types of activities.''
    DHS Response: DHS disagrees. The prior approval requirement applies 
only to certain types of outside employment and activities as defined 
in the rule. Additionally, section 404 of title 5 App., United States 
Code (U.S.C.) grants OGE the authority to promulgate regulations that 
govern the ethical conduct of Executive branch employees. Further, 5 
CFR 2635.803 permits agencies to require employees to obtain prior 
approval before engaging in certain outside employment or activities.
    Comment: One commenter was concerned that the prior approval 
requirement would have the unintended consequence of requiring members 
of the military (e.g., Army and Air National Guard) to obtain prior 
approval to engage in military service.
    DHS Response: DHS does not intend to require members of the 
military to seek and obtain prior approval before engaging in military 
service. In response to this comment and to avoid any confusion, this 
final rule includes a revised definition of ``outside employment or 
activity'' that specifically excludes military service.
    Comment: One commenter questioned whether the rule would require 
U.S. Coast Guard reservists to obtain prior approval for their full-
time civilian jobs.
    DHS Response: DHS wishes to clarify that a U.S. Coast Guard 
reservist who is on voluntary active duty for a period in excess of one 
hundred and thirty days is considered to be a DHS employee and will be 
subject to the prior approval requirement for outside employment or 
activities. A U.S. Coast Guard reservist who is on active duty solely 
for training or who is involuntarily serving is considered to be a 
``Special Government Employee'' and is not subject to the prior 
approval requirement; the majority of reservists fall into one of these 
latter categories. Accordingly, this rulemaking should have a minimal 
impact on the majority of U.S. Coast Guard reservists.
    Additionally, this final rule requires DHS components to issue 
component-specific instructions or a manual that governs employee 
requests for approval of outside employment or activities. The U.S. 
Coast Guard may address matters such as the one raised by the commenter 
in its instructions or manual.
    Comment: One commenter argued that the prior approval requirement 
will strain the resources of DHS ethics offices.
    DHS Response: DHS disagrees. DHS is aware that this final rule will 
result in employee requests for prior approval of outside employment or 
activities to be reviewed by ethics officials at DHS headquarters and 
at the components. Based on the experience of DHS ethics officials, a 
number of these employee requests will involve outside employment or 
activities that require minimal analysis, are already excluded from the 
regulatory definition of ``outside employment,'' or are (or will be) 
addressed in the relevant component-specific instructions or manual. 
For employee requests that require more detailed analysis by DHS ethics 
officials, DHS expects the prior approval process to help employees 
avoid engaging in prohibited outside employment or activities. As a 
result, DHS employees and ethics officials will encounter fewer 
actualized conflict situations, which DHS expects will offset any 
increased initial time investment on the part of DHS ethics officials 
to process employee requests for prior approval.

C. Comments Regarding Manuals or Instructions on Implementing the Prior 
Approval Requirement

    Comment: One commenter noted that the proposed rule did not discuss 
the particulars of the publication of a ``manual'' and expressed 
concern regarding non-publication within the specified timeline.
    DHS Response: DHS wishes to clarify that component manuals and 
instructions governing employee requests for approval of outside 
employment and activities will be internal DHS documents. In response 
to this comment, however, this final rule clarifies that the component 
instructions or manuals will be issued internally within 60 days of the 
publication of the final rule. Instructions will be issued consistent 
with each component's procedures for issuing internal instructions or 
manuals affecting its employees. Further, the regulation as finalized 
also states that, ``in the absence of a manual or instruction 
identifying a person designated to act upon a request for approval for 
outside employment, the Chief Deputy Ethics Official at each agency 
shall act upon a request.'' The proposed rule already provided 
instruction on how outside employment requests are to be processed 
before a specific DHS component has issued its internal instruction or 
manual.
    Comment: One commenter was concerned that subsequent internal

[[Page 6163]]

agency instructions may require employees to seek prior approval for 
all types of outside employment, even when the definition in the rule 
generally excludes charitable agencies.
    DHS Response: DHS notes that the text of 5 CFR 4601.103(c)(2) 
states that, ``agencies may include in their instructions or manual 
examples of outside employment or activities that are permissible or 
prohibited consistent with 5 CFR part 2635 and this part'' (emphasis 
added). Accordingly, a DHS component's instructions may not require 
prior approval for any activities and employment that do not already 
fall under the regulatory definition of ``outside employment'' and the 
exclusions in 5 CFR 4601.102(d). For example, because the definition in 
the rule excludes activities or personal services with non-profit 
organizations that are non-fiduciary and uncompensated, a DHS 
component's instructions may not include this type of activity as one 
requiring prior approval in an agency instruction; to do so would 
require employees to seek prior approval for employment and activities 
that are inconsistent with regulatory definition of ``outside 
employment.'' Moreover, to help ensure consistency with the applicable 
regulations, the DHS Designated Agency Ethics Official (DAEO) must 
review and approve the relevant component manuals and instructions 
prior to issuance.

D. Comments Regarding the Standard of Review of Outside Employment and 
Activity Requests

    Comment: One commenter suggested that DHS adopt the standard that 
it will approve requests for outside employment unless there is a 
showing that the activity will involve prohibited conduct.
    DHS Response: DHS agrees. This final rule changes the standard in 
the proposed rule, which had provided that DHS would approve outside 
employment requests only upon a determination that the activity does 
not involve prohibited conduct. The final standard requires DHS to 
grant permission to engage in the activity unless the conduct is 
prohibited by law or regulation, including 5 CFR part 2635 and this 
part. Considering the rights of employees to engage in activities and 
employment on their own time within the confines of the law, this 
revised standard still requires the reviewing official(s) to make an 
affirmative determination that the proposed activity or employment does 
or does not create a conflict of interest with the employee's job or 
otherwise violate the law or ethical standards, so the integrity of the 
Department's programs will still be protected but the standard will not 
unduly restrict an employee's ability to participate in outside 
employment and other activities. This standard more accurately reflects 
the basis under the OGE Standards for determining whether an outside 
activity conflicts with an employee's official duties. See generally 5 
CFR part 2635, subpart H.
    Comment: One commenter suggested that there should be deadlines for 
DHS to act on outside employment requests.
    DHS Response: DHS disagrees. While DHS ethics officials consider 
the time sensitivities related to any request for ethics advice, these 
officials must sufficiently develop the facts surrounding each request 
in order to provide accurate ethics guidance. Setting uniform deadlines 
as the commenter suggests could hinder the provision of accurate ethics 
guidance. DHS also disagrees that a request not answered within a 
specific time frame should be presumed approved. This practice would 
not best serve the interests of DHS or its employees because potential 
ethics violations could subject an employee to criminal prosecution or 
administrative action and may disrupt ongoing operations. An employee 
who acts in good faith in reliance on an opinion from an agency ethics 
official, and has made full disclosure of all relevant circumstances, 
is protected from administrative action, and this reliance may also be 
a mitigating factor in instances of potential civil or criminal 
violations. An employee who acts without an opinion from an ethics 
official in violation of the law is not afforded such protection. 5 CFR 
2635.107(b). Accordingly, a standard that would permit an employee to 
act in the absence of guidance from an ethics official would undermine 
the purpose of the ethics program and the role of the agency's ethics 
officials to provide guidance to employees that prevents violations of 
the ethics laws and regulations.
    Comment: One commenter suggested that the rule should contain 
criteria for approval of outside employment and activities.
    DHS Response: DHS notes that the ethics regulations in 5 CFR 
2635.802 already contain criteria for approval of outside employment or 
any other outside activity (and outline the circumstances in which an 
employee's outside employment or activity conflicts with the employee's 
official duties).

E. Comments Regarding Outside Employment Restrictions Specific to CBP

    Comment: One commenter argued that the proposed rule's provisions 
specific to CBP would unnecessarily restrict CBP employees from 
engaging in outside employment or activities. Specifically, the 
commenter suggested that DHS clarify whether a CBP employee is 
prohibited from any employment by a company that engages in the listed 
activities, or only to the extent that the outside employment would 
relate to the prohibited activity. For example, the commenter inquired 
whether a CBP employee would be prohibited from outside employment at a 
law firm that conducts some customs business even if the outside 
employment activity is unrelated to the law firm's customs business.
    DHS Response: DHS disagrees with the commenter's suggestion that 
the proposed rule would unnecessarily restrict CBP employees from 
engaging in outside employment or activities. There are certain types 
of employment and activities that conflict with the official duties of 
CBP employees and, therefore, CBP employees are prohibited from such 
outside employment and activities in any circumstance. Accordingly, 5 
CFR 4601.104(a)(2) prohibits CBP employees from engaging in employment 
or business activities related to importing or exporting merchandise or 
agricultural products, or the entry or departure of persons into or out 
of the United States.
    In addition, there are certain types of employers with which the 
employment of a CBP employee would create a conflict, regardless of the 
nature of the employment activity. Thus, 5 CFR 4601.104(a)(1) prohibits 
a CBP employee from engaging in outside employment activities in 
support of or on behalf of certain types of entities that generally 
engage in business related to CBP missions (e.g., customs, immigration, 
agriculture), even if the CBP employee's actual outside employment 
activity at that entity would be apparently unrelated to any CBP 
mission. The rationale behind this latter prohibition is that 
employment in any capacity with such an entity would expose a CBP 
employee to an environment in which customs, immigration, and/or 
agriculture issues are discussed, and also where the employee may be 
queried or called upon for assistance because of the employee's 
affiliation with CBP. The potential risk in this environment of 
intermingling private and Federal interests constitutes a sufficient 
reason

[[Page 6164]]

to restrict such employment in any capacity with these entities 
engaging in operations regulated by CBP. Finally, we note that the 
Department of the Treasury supplemental ethics regulation included 
substantially the same restriction for former Customs Service employees 
prior to CBP's reorganization under DHS.
    Following review of the proposed regulatory text, DHS has included 
a number of revisions in this final rule. DHS intends the revisions to 
improve clarity without sacrificing important controls over potentially 
problematic employee activities.
    Comment: One commenter argued that the proposed restriction on CBP 
employees to privately engage in employment or activities related to 
the importation or exportation of merchandise is overly broad. 
Specifically, the commenter argued that the provision would prohibit 
CBP employees from: (1) Purchasing products online that would be 
shipped from outside the United States; (2) buying products while on 
vacation that would be shipped back to the United States; or (3) 
sending a non-monetary gift to a friend, relative, or charity outside 
the United States.
    DHS Response: DHS does not intend this provision to cover the types 
of personal transactions highlighted by the commenter. DHS intends the 
provision to cover outside employment in the nature of conducting 
transactions for a business purpose, not the personal use of an 
employee. In response to this comment, DHS has revised the regulatory 
language in this final rule so that it now includes the word 
``business'' to clarify that the restriction does not apply to personal 
transactions similar to those highlighted by the commenter.
    Additionally, in response to this comment, DHS conducted a broader 
review of the CBP provisions in the regulatory text to determine 
whether similar clarifications would be appropriate. As a result of 
that review, this final rule includes another revision to the provision 
that prohibits CBP employees from engaging in outside employment 
activities related to agriculture matters. As proposed, the rule would 
have generally restricted CBP employees from engaging in outside 
employment or activities with a business or other entity that engages 
in services related to ``agriculture matters.'' Regarding this 
regulatory provision, DHS only intends to restrict CBP employees from 
engaging with businesses or entities that deal with agricultural 
matters that relate to CBP's mission. To avoid restricting CBP employee 
involvement in such activities that would not conflict with their 
official duties or CBP's mission, this final rule includes clarifying 
language to that effect in the regulatory text.

F. Comments Regarding Outside Employment Restrictions Specific to ICE

    Comment: One commenter argued that the proposed restriction on ICE 
employees to privately engage in employment or activities related to 
the importation or exportation of merchandise is overly broad. 
Specifically, the commenter expressed concern that the rule as proposed 
would prohibit ICE employees from mailing: (1) Gifts to a relative 
overseas (or receiving gifts from overseas) since the package would 
require inspection; and (2) merchandise to a buyer overseas after a 
lawful online auction.
    DHS Response: Assuming that the commenter's examples are unrelated 
to the operation of a business by an employee, DHS does not intend the 
provision to cover the types of personal transactions highlighted by 
the commenter. DHS intends the rule to cover outside employment in the 
nature of conducting business activities--this does not include 
personal, routine consumer transactions unrelated to the operation of a 
business. In response to this comment, DHS has revised the regulatory 
language in this final rule so that it now includes the word 
``business,'' to clarify the scope of the restriction.
    Additionally, in response to this comment and the CBP-specific 
comment referenced above, DHS also reviewed the ICE-specific provisions 
in the regulatory text to determine whether additional clarifications 
would be appropriate. As a result of that review, this final rule 
includes revisions in parallel with the CBP-specific revisions 
described above.

G. Comments Regarding the Requirement To Report Waste, Fraud, Abuse, 
and Corruption

    Comment: One commenter suggested that DHS employees should be 
required to report not just suspected violations of laws or regulations 
regarding waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption, but also lawful 
activities as well that may constitute suspected waste, fraud, abuse, 
or corruption.
    DHS Response: The proposed rule required employees to ``report 
immediately any suspicions of violations of law or regulation involving 
Department of Homeland Security programs or operations to appropriate 
authorities, such as the Office of the Inspector General.'' DHS has 
revised the final rule to mirror the language in Executive Order 12674 
of April 12, 1989 (as modified by Executive Order 12731) and the 
general principle at 5 CFR 2635.101(b)(11). The final rule requires 
employees to ``disclose waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption to 
appropriate authorities, such as the DHS Office of Inspector General.'' 
DHS emphasizes the responsibility of DHS employees to be stewards of 
Government funds and to protect the integrity of DHS programs and 
operations.
    Comment: Two commenters suggested that DHS provide greater 
specificity in the regulations regarding the appropriate authorities to 
whom employees should report suspected violations.
    DHS Response: The NPRM proposed to require employees to report 
suspected violations to ``appropriate authorities, such as the Office 
of the Inspector General.'' DHS believes this language provides both 
sufficient specificity and flexibility to cover the large number of 
reporting chains of authority throughout DHS. Certain DHS components 
also maintain internal offices of internal affairs, inspections, 
audits, or professional responsibility, which would also be appropriate 
authorities for these purposes.
    Comment: One commenter stated that the proposed rule would require 
employees to have sufficient in-depth knowledge of laws or regulations 
to render legal determinations on whether violations have occurred. The 
same commenter suggested that a requirement to report ``suspicions'' 
creates the potential for abuse and erroneous reporting, and therefore, 
DHS should consider requiring employees to report information that 
gives rise to ``probable cause,'' a standard used by law enforcement in 
certain contexts.
    DHS Response: DHS disagrees with both comments. Employees are 
capable of detecting waste, fraud, abuse, or corruption based on common 
sense and personal observation. Reporting such suspicions imposes no 
requirement on an employee to interpret the law or regulations, 
investigate, or make any determinations on the legal or other 
substantive merits of a potential allegation. Under the final rule, 
employees are responsible for alerting the appropriate authorities of a 
suspected violation. Trained investigators within DHS are able to 
conduct investigations to determine the merits of employee reports.
    Comment: One commenter suggested that there should be a list of the 
types of alleged fraud, waste, abuse, and corruption that should be 
reported. Another commenter requested more

[[Page 6165]]

specific definitions of the terms ``waste,'' ``fraud,'' ``abuse,'' and 
``corruption,'' and questioned whether the requirement to report 
suspicions of waste applied to de minimis forms of waste (e.g., wasting 
small amounts of office supplies).
    DHS Response: Due to the breadth and scope of incidents of possible 
waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption, it would be impractical to provide 
a comprehensive list, and it would also serve to limit the incidents to 
those on the list when other actions may go unreported but still 
qualify as a violation. As stated above, DHS expects employees to use 
common sense when considering whether they have observed reportable 
waste, fraud, abuse, or corruption. Additionally, DHS has issued 
guidelines to assist employees regarding how, when, and where to report 
such allegations. An employee who is unsure about whether there is a 
reporting requirement may consult an agency ethics official or the 
Department's Office of Inspector General.
    Comment: One commenter suggested that the rule should also require 
an employee to report a new arrest or charge.
    DHS Response: This rule deals primarily with outside employment and 
waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption. Matters such as employee arrest 
records are personnel matters (i.e., under the Office of Security of 
the Chief Human Capital Officer) and are outside the scope of this 
rulemaking.

H. Other Comments

    Comment: One commenter suggested that DHS take measures to ensure 
that there are ethical boundaries on corporations and their level of 
influence over national policies.
    DHS Response: This rule deals primarily with outside employment and 
waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption. Matters that deal with the ethical 
boundaries on private corporations and their level of influence over 
national policies are outside the scope of this rulemaking.
    Comment: One commenter suggested that Executive Order 12866 
requires DHS to conduct a cost-benefit analysis reviewed by OMB for 
this rulemaking.
    DHS Response: While the NPRM was not identified as a significant 
regulatory action as defined by section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866, 
DHS did consider the costs and benefits of this rulemaking. This rule 
only regulates DHS employees and imposes no direct costs on the private 
sector. Accordingly, the NPRM certified the proposed rule would not 
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities (76 FR 63207).
    In addition, DHS does not believe this rulemaking would increase 
government costs. To the extent that additional prior approval of 
outside employment activities increases the number of reviews by DHS 
ethics officials of proposed outside employment, this increased volume 
is expected to be offset with fewer conflict situations for ethics 
officials and employees. In summary, this rule only regulates DHS 
employees, is not expected to increase government costs, and is 
expected to reduce the number of conflict situations--and therefore, 
reduce the costs associated with potentially lengthy investigations and 
corrective actions--within DHS. The rule is also expected to result in 
substantial additional benefits, including enhanced transparency into 
prior approval requirements and stronger public confidence in the 
integrity of DHS programs and operations.

IV. Discussion of Final Rule

    Aside from the changes made in response to comments discussed in 
Section III., this final rule adopts the proposals from the NPRM. The 
following discussion provides a summary of the provisions in the final 
rule.

A. 5 CFR 4601.101 General

    This section identifies to whom the supplemental regulations apply. 
It also cross-references to other ethics regulations and guidance 
applicable to DHS employees--including regulations on financial 
disclosure, financial interests, and employee responsibilities and 
conduct--and implementing DHS guidance and procedures issued in 
accordance with the OGE Standards.
    This section further defines the term ``agency designee'' as it 
appears in 5 CFR 2635.102(b), to identify those persons within DHS who 
are designated to act on requests and make determinations relating to 5 
CFR part 2635 and this part. The section also defines the term 
``outside employment'' and lists the types of employment and activities 
that would require prior approval. It also lists activities for which 
prior approval is not required, such as the uncompensated activities 
(other than the reimbursement of expenses) on behalf of a charitable or 
nonprofit organization that do not involve fiduciary duties and do not 
relate to the employee's official duties as defined by 5 CFR 2635.807. 
In addition, this section defines the term ``Chief Deputy Ethics 
Official'' as the person (or persons) within DHS delegated authority by 
the DHS Designated Agency Ethics Official (DAEO) to manage and 
coordinate the ethics programs within DHS's components and offices.

B. 5 CFR 4601.102 Designation of DHS Components as Separate Agencies

    This section identifies certain components within DHS as separate 
agencies for the purposes of the provisions governing prior approval 
for outside activities, accepting gifts from non-Federal sources, 
outside teaching, speaking, and writing activities, and issuing prior 
approval instructions. For those specified purposes, DHS has designated 
eight DHS components as separate agencies and has designated the 
remainder of the DHS components as a single agency. For the limited 
purpose of issuing prior approval instructions, DHS has designated the 
Office of Inspector General as a separate agency. To avoid confusion 
when reading this preamble together with the regulatory text, the 
discussion in this Section IV. will refer to the DHS components as 
``agencies,'' consistent with the regulatory text of this final rule.
    In addition, paragraph (c) of this section explains the 
applicability of these requirements to detailed employees within DHS 
(i.e., an employee from one agency temporarily working for another 
agency). An employee on detail from his/her employing agency to another 
agency for a period in excess of 30 calendar days is subject to the 
supplemental regulations and instructions of the agency to which the 
employee is detailed rather than the employing agency. For example, if 
a U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) employee is detailed to U.S. 
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for 60 days, the CBP employee 
will be subject to ICE's supplemental regulations and instructions 
during the period of the detail with ICE.

C. 5 CFR 4601.103 Prior Approval for Outside Employment and Activities

    This section requires employees to obtain written approval prior to 
engaging in any outside employment and activities, as defined by the 
rule. The prior approval requirement is an integral part of DHS's 
ethics program. The prior approval requirement is necessary to ensure 
that an employee's participation in certain outside employment does not 
adversely affect operations within the employing agency or place the 
employee at risk of violating applicable Federal conduct statutes and 
regulations. In addition,

[[Page 6166]]

prior approval is necessary to avoid the appearance that an outside 
employment or activity was obtained through a misuse of the employee's 
official position and to address a number of other potential ethics 
concerns.
    Because DHS provides money in the form of grants and contracts, and 
engages in enforcement, regulatory, and security functions across a 
multitude of industry sectors, requiring prior approval is necessary to 
ensure that the public will have confidence in the integrity of DHS 
programs and operations. In fulfilling its mission, DHS would be 
hindered if members of the public did not have confidence in DHS 
employees' ability to act impartially while performing their official 
duties.
    Section 4601.103(a) requires employees to obtain approval from the 
DHS employee's agency for certain outside employment and activities, 
with or without compensation, unless the employing agency issues an 
instruction or manual exempting such outside employment or activities. 
Section 4601.103(b) describes the standard the agency must follow for 
approval of requests for outside employment and activities. Section 
4601.103(c) describes the responsibilities of DHS agencies for issuing 
instructions to employees on how to request prior approval of outside 
employment and activities.
    Because Special Government Employees may serve at DHS only for a 
limited time during a 365-day period and for a limited purpose (such as 
service on a Federal Advisory Committee or service as a consultant), 
the nature of their service to DHS does not require that they be 
subject to the prior approval requirement for outside employment and 
activities or the additional restrictions applicable to CBP, Federal 
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), or ICE employees described below.

D. 5 CFR 4601.104 Additional Rules for CBP Employees

    This section prohibits CBP employees, except Special Government 
Employees, from being employed by, or from engaging in, activities in 
support of or on behalf of, an entity that engages in a trade or 
business performing specified customs, immigration, or agriculture 
activities or services.
    This section also requires a CBP employee with a spouse, a relative 
who is a financial dependent or household member, or another household 
member or financial dependent who is employed in a position that the 
CBP employee is prohibited from occupying to notify his or her agency 
designee in writing of the above-described employment circumstances. In 
addition, the employee is disqualified from participating in an 
official capacity in any particular matter involving such person or the 
person's employer unless authorized to do so by the agency designee, 
with the advice and clearance of the CBP Chief Deputy Ethics Official.

E. 5 CFR 4601.105 Additional Rules for FEMA Employees

    This section prohibits certain FEMA employees, except Special 
Government Employees, both intermittent and non-intermittent, from 
being employed by a FEMA contractor. It also provides the procedures 
for requesting a waiver of this restriction.

F. 5 CFR 4601.106 Additional Rules for ICE Employees

    This section prohibits ICE employees, except Special Government 
Employees, from being employed by, or from engaging in activities in 
support of or on behalf of, an entity that engages in a trade or 
business performing specified customs, immigration, or agriculture 
activities or services. This section also requires an ICE employee with 
a spouse, a relative who is a financial dependent or household member, 
or another household member or financial dependent who is employed in a 
position that the ICE employee is prohibited from occupying to notify 
his or her agency designee in writing of the above-described employment 
circumstances. In addition, the employee is disqualified from 
participating in an official capacity in any particular matter 
involving such person or the person's employer unless authorized to do 
so by the agency designee, with the advice and clearance of the ICE 
Chief Deputy Ethics Official.

G. 5 CFR 4601.107 Prohibited Purchases of Property

    This section prohibits the purchase by employees of certain 
Government property under the control of, seized by, forfeited, under 
the direction of, or incident to, the employee's agency. It also sets 
forth the exception and waiver provisions under this section.

H. 5 CFR 4601.108 Reporting Waste, Fraud, Abuse, and Corruption

    This section requires all DHS employees to report allegations of 
waste, fraud, abuse, or corruption to the appropriate authorities 
within DHS, such as the DHS Office of Inspector General or the 
appropriate Office of Internal Affairs or Office of Professional 
Responsibility. Employee responsibilities for reporting suspicions of 
violations of law or regulation to the DHS Office of Inspector General 
or similar office are found in related DHS and agency instructions. 
This regulation complements but does not displace those 
responsibilities.

V. Regulatory Analyses

A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563

    This rule is not a ``significant regulatory action'' under section 
3(f) of Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review, as 
supplemented by Executive Order 13563, Improving Regulation and 
Regulatory Review, and does not require an assessment of potential 
costs and benefits under section 6(a)(3) of that Order. Accordingly, 
the Office of Management and Budget has not reviewed it. As discussed 
previously, this rule only regulates DHS employees and consequently 
does not impose any additional direct costs on the private sector. In 
addition, DHS does not believe this rulemaking would increase 
government costs. To the extent that additional prior approval of 
outside employment activities increases the number of reviews by DHS 
ethics officials of proposed outside employment, this increased volume 
is expected to be offset with fewer conflict situations--and therefore, 
reduce the costs associated with potentially lengthy investigations and 
corrective actions--within DHS. The rule is also expected to result in 
substantial additional benefits, including enhanced transparency into 
prior approval requirements and stronger public confidence in the 
integrity of DHS programs and operations.

B. Small Entities/Regulatory Flexibility Act

    Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612), DHS has 
considered whether this rule will have a significant economic impact on 
a substantial number of small entities. The term ``small entities'' 
comprises small businesses, not-for-profit organizations that are 
independently owned and operated and are not dominant in their fields, 
and governmental jurisdictions with populations of less than 50,000. 
DHS certifies that this rule would not have a significant economic 
impact on a substantial number of small entities, because it would only 
directly affect DHS employees.

List of Subjects in 5 CFR Part 4601

    Conflict of interests, Government employees.

    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, DHS, with the 
concurrence of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, is

[[Page 6167]]

amending title 5 of the Code of Federal Regulations by adding chapter 
XXXVI, consisting of part 4601, to read as follows:

Title 5--Administrative Personnel

CHAPTER XXXVI--DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY

PART 4601--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES 
OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY

Sec.
4601.101 General.
4601.102 Designation of DHS components as separate agencies.
4601.103 Prior approval for outside employment and activities.
4601.104 Additional rules for U.S. Customs and Border Protection 
(CBP) employees.
4601.105 Additional rules for Federal Emergency Management Agency 
(FEMA) employees.
4601.106 Additional rules for U.S. Immigration and Customs 
Enforcement (ICE) employees.
4601.107 Prohibited purchases of property.
4601.108 Reporting waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption.

    Authority:  5 U.S.C. 301, 7301, 7353; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in 
Government Act of 1978); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., 
p. 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., 
p. 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.203(a), 2635.403(a), 2635.702, 
2635.703, 2635.802(a), 2635.803, 2635.807(a)(2)(ii).


Sec.  4601.101  General.

    (a) Applicability. In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the 
regulations in this part apply to employees of the Department of 
Homeland Security (DHS) and supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct 
for Employees of the Executive Branch (OGE Standards) in 5 CFR part 
2635.
    (b) Cross-references to other ethics regulations and guidance. In 
addition to the OGE Standards in 5 CFR part 2635 and this part, DHS 
employees are subject to the Executive branch financial disclosure 
regulations contained in 5 CFR parts 2634, the Executive branch 
financial interests regulations contained in 5 CFR part 2640, the 
Executive branch employee responsibilities and conduct regulations 
contained in 5 CFR part 735, and DHS guidance and procedures on 
employee conduct, including those issued under paragraph (c) of this 
section.
    (c) DHS agency instructions. Prior to issuance, the DHS Designated 
Agency Ethics Official (DAEO) must approve any internal instructions or 
manuals that DHS agencies, as designated in Sec.  4601.102 of this 
part, issue to provide explanatory ethics-related guidance and to 
establish procedures necessary to implement 5 CFR part 2635 and this 
part.
    (d) Definitions--(1) Agency designee as used in this part and in 5 
CFR part 2635 means an employee who has been identified in an 
instruction or manual issued by an agency under paragraph (c) of this 
section to make a determination, give an approval, or take other action 
required or permitted by this part or 5 CFR part 2635 with respect to 
another employee.
    (2) Outside employment or activity as used in this part means any 
form of non-Federal employment, business activity, business 
relationship, or other covered activity as identified in this section, 
involving the provision of personal services by the employee, whether 
or not for compensation. It includes, but is not limited to, personal 
services as an officer, director, employee, agent, attorney, advisor, 
consultant, contractor, general partner, trustee, or teacher. There are 
several exclusions and limitations to the definition as described 
immediately below.
    (i) Speaking and writing activities. Outside employment generally 
does not include speaking and writing activities so long as they are 
not combined with the provision of other services that do fall within 
this definition, such as the practice of law and other outside 
employment or activities covered by paragraph (d)(2)(ii)(A) through (D) 
of this section. Employees who wish to engage in compensated speaking 
or writing in a personal capacity are subject to the provisions of 5 
CFR 2635.807 and are encouraged to seek additional guidance from an 
agency ethics official.
    (ii) Nonprofit and other organizations. Outside employment does not 
include participation in the activities of a nonprofit charitable, 
religious, professional, social, fraternal, educational, recreational, 
public service, or civic organization, unless the participation 
involves:
    (A) Acting in a fiduciary capacity,
    (B) Providing professional services for compensation,
    (C) Rendering advice for compensation other than the reimbursement 
of expenses, or
    (D) An activity relating to the employee's official duties as 
defined in 5 CFR 2635.807(a)(2)(i)(A) through (E), to include 
activities relating to any ongoing or announced policy, program, or 
operation of the employee's agency as it is defined at 5 CFR 4601.102.
    (iii) The Hatch Act. Outside employment does not include activities 
otherwise permissible by the Hatch Act and related regulations relating 
to partisan political activities.
    (iv) Military service. Outside employment does not include state or 
Federal military service protected by the Uniformed Services Employment 
and Reemployment Rights Act.
    (v) Additional restrictions for certain employees. Employees of the 
Federal Emergency Management Agency, U.S. Customs and Border 
Protection, and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement should also 
refer to the agency-specific provisions in this part relating to 
outside employment.
    (3) Chief Deputy Ethics Official as used in this part means the 
persons delegated authority by the DHS DAEO to manage and coordinate 
the ethics programs within the DHS components pursuant to the DAEO's 
authority in 5 CFR 2638.204.
    (4) ``Special Government Employee'' as used in this part has the 
same meaning as in 18 U.S.C. 202(a).


Sec.  4601.102  Designation of DHS components as separate agencies.

    (a) Pursuant to 5 CFR 2635.203(a), DHS designates each of the 
following components as a separate agency for purposes of the 
regulations in subpart B of 5 CFR part 2635 governing gifts from 
outside sources, including determining whether the donor of a gift is a 
prohibited source under 5 CFR 2635.203(d); for purposes of the 
regulations in Sec.  4601.103(c) of this part governing the 
establishment of procedures for obtaining prior approval for outside 
employment; for purposes of the regulations in Sec.  4601.103(c) of 
this part governing the designation of officials; and for the purposes 
of the regulations in 5 CFR 2635.807 governing teaching, speaking, and 
writing:
    (1) Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA);
    (2) Federal Law Enforcement Training Center;
    (3) Transportation Security Administration;
    (4) U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services;
    (5) U.S. Coast Guard;
    (6) U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP);
    (7) U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE); and
    (8) U.S. Secret Service.
    (b)(1) DHS will treat employees of DHS components not designated as 
separate agencies in paragraph (a) of this section, including employees 
of the Office of the Secretary, as employees of the remainder of DHS. 
For purposes of the regulations in subpart B of 5 CFR part 2635 
governing gifts from outside sources, including determining whether

[[Page 6168]]

the donor of a gift is a prohibited source under 5 CFR 2635.203(d); for 
purposes of the regulations in Sec.  4601.103(c) of this part governing 
the establishment of procedures for obtaining prior approval for 
outside employment; for purposes of the regulations in Sec.  
4601.103(c) of this part governing the designation of officials; and 
for purposes of the regulations in 5 CFR 2635.807 governing teaching, 
speaking, and writing, DHS will treat the remainder of DHS as a single 
agency that is separate from the components designated as separate 
agencies in paragraph (a) of this section.
    (2) For the limited purposes of establishing procedures for 
obtaining prior approval for outside employment and designating 
officials pursuant to Sec.  4601.103(c) of this part, DHS will treat 
the DHS Office of Inspector General as a separate agency.
    (c) An employee on detail from his or her employing agency to 
another agency for a period in excess of 30 calendar days is subject to 
the supplemental regulations and instructions of the agency to which he 
is detailed rather than his or her employing agency.


Sec.  4601.103  Prior approval for outside employment and activities.

    (a) General requirement for approval. A DHS employee, other than a 
Special Government Employee, shall obtain prior written approval before 
engaging in any outside employment or activity (as defined by Sec.  
4601.101 of this part), with or without compensation, unless the 
employee's agency has exempted the outside employment or activity (or 
category or class of outside employment or activity) from this 
requirement by an instruction or manual issued pursuant to paragraph 
(c) of this section.
    (b) Standard for approval. Approval shall be granted unless it has 
been determined that the outside employment is expected to involve 
conduct prohibited by statute or Federal regulation, including 5 CFR 
part 2635 and this part.
    (c) Agency responsibilities. (1) With the approval of the DHS DAEO, 
each agency as set forth in Sec.  4601.102 of this part shall issue 
internal instructions or a manual governing the submission of requests 
for approval of outside employment and activities and designating 
appropriate officials to act on such requests not later than May 5, 
2016.
    (2) The instructions or manual may exempt particular outside 
employment or activities (or categories or classes of outside 
employment or activities) from the prior approval requirement of this 
section if such outside employment or activities would generally be 
approved and are not likely to involve conduct prohibited by statute or 
Federal regulation, including 5 CFR part 2635 and this part. Agencies 
may include in their instructions or manual examples of outside 
employment or activities that are permissible or prohibited consistent 
with 5 CFR part 2635 and this part.
    (3) In the absence of a manual or instruction identifying a person 
designated to act upon a request for approval for outside employment, 
the Chief Deputy Ethics Official at each agency shall act upon a 
request.


Sec.  4601.104  Additional rules for U.S. Customs and Border Protection 
(CBP) employees.

    The following rules apply to employees of CBP, except Special 
Government Employees, and are in addition to Sec. Sec.  4601.101 
through 4601.103 and Sec. Sec.  4601.107 and 4601.108 of this part:
    (a) Prohibitions on outside employment and activities. (1) No CBP 
employee shall be employed by or engage in activities in support of or 
on behalf of a customs broker; international carrier; bonded warehouse; 
foreign trade zone as defined in 15 CFR 400.2; cartman; law firm 
engaged in the practice of customs, immigration, or agriculture law; 
entity engaged in the enforcement of customs, immigration, or 
agriculture law; importation or exportation department of a business; 
or business or other entity which engages in services related to 
agriculture matters where such agriculture matters relate to CBP's 
mission.
    (2) No CBP employee shall, in any private capacity, engage in 
employment or a business activity related to the importation or 
exportation of merchandise or agricultural products requiring 
inspection (other than a personal, routine consumer transaction 
unrelated to the operation of a business), or the entry of persons into 
or departure of persons from the United States.
    (3) No CBP employee shall engage in outside employment or 
activities for a non-profit or other organization that involve 
assisting persons with matters related to the entry of persons or 
merchandise into or the departure of persons or merchandise from the 
United States, or matters related to obtaining temporary or permanent 
residency, citizenship, adjustment of status, or other immigration-
related benefits.
    (b) Restrictions arising from employment of the spouse, relatives, 
members of the employee's household, or financial dependents. (1) A CBP 
employee shall notify in writing his or her agency designee when any of 
the following circumstances exist:
    (i) The spouse of the CBP employee is employed in a position that 
the CBP employee would be prohibited from occupying by paragraph (a) of 
this section;
    (ii) A relative (as defined in 5 CFR 2634.105(o)), who is 
financially dependent on or who is a member of the household of the CBP 
employee, is employed in a position that the CBP employee would be 
prohibited from occupying by paragraph (a) of this section; or
    (iii) Any person, other than the spouse or relative of the CBP 
employee, who is financially dependent on or who is a member of the 
household of the CBP employee, is employed in a position that the CBP 
employee would be prohibited from occupying by paragraph (a) of this 
section.
    (2) The CBP employee shall be disqualified from participating in an 
official capacity in any particular matter involving the individuals 
identified in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, or the employer 
thereof, unless the agency designee, with the advice and clearance of 
the CBP Chief Deputy Ethics Official, authorizes the CBP employee to 
participate in the matter using the standard in 5 CFR 2635.502(d), or 
the waiver provisions in 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1), as appropriate.


Sec.  4601.105  Additional rules for Federal Emergency Management 
Agency (FEMA) Employees.

    The following rules apply to employees of FEMA, except Special 
Government Employees, and are in addition to Sec. Sec.  4601.101 
through 4601.103 and 4601.107 and 4601.108 of this part:
    (a) Prohibited outside employment (intermittent employees). Except 
as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, no intermittent FEMA 
employees hired under the authority of 42 U.S.C. 5149, which includes 
all Disaster Assistance Employees or Stafford Act Employees and Cadre 
of On-Call Response Employees, shall be employed by a current FEMA 
contractor while a FEMA employee, whether or not they are on activated 
status.
    (b) Prohibited outside employment (non-intermittent employees). 
Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, no non-
intermittent FEMA employee shall be employed by a current FEMA 
contractor.
    (c) Waivers. The FEMA Chief Deputy Ethics Official or his or her 
agency designee may grant a written waiver of any prohibition in 
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section with the DAEO's

[[Page 6169]]

concurrence. To grant the waiver, the FEMA Chief Deputy Ethics Official 
or his or her agency designee must determine that the waiver is 
consistent with 5 CFR part 2635 and not otherwise prohibited by law; 
that the prohibition is not necessary to avoid the appearance of misuse 
of position or loss of impartiality; and that the waiver will not 
undermine the public's confidence in the employee's impartiality and 
objectivity in administering FEMA programs. A waiver under this 
paragraph may impose appropriate conditions, such as requiring 
execution of a written disqualification statement.


Sec.  4601.106  Additional rules for U.S. Immigration and Customs 
Enforcement (ICE) employees.

    The following rules apply to employees of ICE, except Special 
Government Employees, and are in addition to Sec. Sec.  4601.101 
through 4601.103 and 4601.107 and 4601.108 of this part:
    (a) Prohibitions on outside employment and activities. (1) No ICE 
employee shall be employed by or engage in activities in support of or 
on behalf of a customs broker; international carrier; bonded warehouse; 
foreign trade zone as defined in 15 CFR 400.2; cartman; law firm 
engaged in the practice of customs, immigration or agriculture law; 
entity engaged in the enforcement of customs, immigration or 
agriculture law; importation department of a business; or business or 
other entity which engages in agriculture matters where such 
agriculture matters relate to ICE's mission.
    (2) No ICE employee shall, in any private capacity, engage in 
employment or a business activity related to the importation or 
exportation of merchandise or agricultural products requiring 
inspection (other than a personal, routine consumer transaction 
unrelated to the operation of a business), or the entry of persons into 
or the departure of persons from the United States.
    (3) No ICE employee shall engage in outside employment or 
activities for a non-profit or other organization that involve 
assisting persons with matters related to the entry of persons or 
merchandise into or the departure of persons or merchandise from the 
United States, or matters related to obtaining temporary or permanent 
residency, citizenship, adjustment of status, or other immigration-
related benefits.
    (b) Restrictions arising from employment of spouse, relatives, 
members of the employee's household, or financial dependents. (1) An 
ICE employee shall notify in writing his or her agency designee when 
any of the following circumstances exist:
    (i) The spouse of the ICE employee is employed in a position that 
the ICE employee would be prohibited from occupying by paragraph (a) of 
this section;
    (ii) A relative (as defined in 5 CFR 2634.105(o)) who is 
financially dependent on or who is a member of the household of the ICE 
employee is employed in a position that the ICE employee would be 
prohibited from occupying by paragraph (a) of this section; or
    (iii) Any person, other than the spouse or relative of the ICE 
employee, who is financially dependent on or who is a member of the 
household of the ICE employee, is employed in a position that the ICE 
employee would be prohibited from occupying by paragraph (a) of this 
section.
    (2) The ICE employee shall be disqualified from participating in an 
official capacity in any particular matter involving the individuals 
described in paragraph (b)(1) of this section or the employer thereof, 
unless the agency designee, with the advice and clearance of the ICE 
Chief Deputy Ethics Official, authorizes the ICE employee to 
participate in the matter using the standard in 5 CFR 2635.502(d), or 
the waiver provisions in 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1), as appropriate.


Sec.  4601.107  Prohibited purchases of property.

    (a) General prohibition. Except as provided in paragraph (c) of 
this section, no DHS employee may purchase, directly or indirectly, 
property that is:
    (1) Owned by the Federal Government and under the control of the 
employee's agency, unless the sale of the property is being conducted 
by the General Services Administration; or
    (2) Seized or forfeited under the direction or incident to the 
functions of the employee's agency.
    (b) Designated separate components. For purposes of this section, 
the employee's agency is the relevant separate agency component as set 
forth in Sec.  4601.102 of this part.
    (c) Waiver. Employees may make a purchase prohibited by paragraph 
(a) of this section where a written waiver of the prohibition is issued 
in advance by the agency designee with the clearance of the DAEO or his 
or her designee. A waiver may only be granted if it is not otherwise 
prohibited by law or regulation and the purchase of the property will 
not cause a reasonable person with knowledge of the particular 
circumstances to question the employee's impartiality, or create the 
appearance that the employee has used his or her official position or 
nonpublic information for his or her personal gain.


Sec.  4601.108  Reporting waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption.

    Employees shall disclose waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption to 
appropriate authorities, such as the DHS Office of Inspector General.

Jeh Charles Johnson,
Secretary.
Walter M. Shaub, Jr.,
Director, U.S. Office of Government Ethics.
[FR Doc. 2016-01318 Filed 2-4-16; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 9110-9B-P



                                                                                                                                                                                                6159

                                           Rules and Regulations                                                                                         Federal Register
                                                                                                                                                         Vol. 81, No. 24

                                                                                                                                                         Friday, February 5, 2016



                                           This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER                    final rule follows publication of a                     G. 5 CFR 4601.107 Prohibited Purchases of
                                           contains regulatory documents having general            proposed rule on October 12, 2011. We                     Property
                                           applicability and legal effect, most of which           considered public comments on the                       H. 5 CFR 4601.108 Reporting Waste, Fraud,
                                           are keyed to and codified in the Code of                proposed rule while revising this final                   Abuse, and Corruption
                                           Federal Regulations, which is published under                                                                 V. Regulatory Analyses
                                                                                                   rule. This final rule includes revisions                A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
                                           50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
                                                                                                   to the definition of ‘‘outside                          B. Small Entities/Regulatory Flexibility Act
                                           The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by              employment’’ and the additional
                                           the Superintendent of Documents. Prices of              provisions applicable only to employees               Table of Acronyms
                                           new books are listed in the first FEDERAL               of the U.S. Customs and Border                        CBP U.S. Customs and Border Protection
                                           REGISTER issue of each week.                            Protection and U.S. Immigration and                   CDEO Chief Deputy Ethics Official
                                                                                                   Customs Enforcement.                                  CFR Code of Federal Regulations
                                                                                                   DATES: This rule is effective March 7,                DAEO Designated Agency Ethics Official
                                           DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND                                  2016.                                                 DHS Department of Homeland Security
                                           SECURITY                                                                                                      FEMA Federal Emergency Management
                                                                                                   ADDRESSES:   Comments and material                      Agency
                                           5 CFR Chapter XXXVI                                     received from the public, as well as                  ICE U.S. Immigration and Customs
                                                                                                   documents mentioned in this preamble                    Enforcement
                                           [Docket No. DHS–2008–0168]                                                                                    NPRM Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
                                                                                                   as being available in the docket, are part
                                                                                                                                                         OGE U.S. Office of Government Ethics
                                           RINs 1601–AA17, 3209–AA15                               of docket DHS–2008–0168 and are                       U.S.C. United States Code
                                                                                                   available for inspection or copying from              § Section Symbol
                                           Supplemental Standards of Ethical                       the Internet by going to http://
                                           Conduct for Employees of the                            www.regulations.gov, inserting DHS–                   I. Background
                                           Department of Homeland Security                         2008–0168 in the ‘‘SEARCH’’ box, and                     On August 7, 1992, the U.S. Office of
                                           AGENCY:  Office of the Secretary,                       then clicking ‘‘SEARCH.’’                             Government Ethics (OGE) issued a final
                                           Department of Homeland Security.                        FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                      rule setting forth the uniform Standards
                                           ACTION: Final rule.
                                                                                                   Ferne L. Mosley, Deputy Ethics Official,              of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the
                                                                                                   Department of Homeland Security, 202–                 Executive Branch (OGE Standards),
                                           SUMMARY:   The Department of Homeland                   447–3302, email: ferne.mosley@                        which, as corrected and amended, are
                                           Security (DHS), with the concurrence of                 hq.dhs.gov.                                           codified at 5 CFR part 2635 (57 FR
                                           the U.S. Office of Government Ethics                    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                            35006). Effective on February 3, 1993,
                                           (OGE), is finalizing this rule to                                                                             the OGE Standards established uniform
                                           supplement the OGE Standards of                         Table of Contents                                     ethics rules applicable to all Executive
                                           Ethical Conduct for Employees of the                    I. Background                                         branch personnel.
                                           Executive Branch (OGE Standards) for                    II. Regulatory History                                   Pursuant to 5 CFR 2635.105,
                                           DHS employees. These regulations                        III. Discussion of NPRM Comments                      Executive branch agencies are
                                           supplement the OGE Standards and,                          A. Comments Regarding the Proposed                 authorized to publish, with the
                                           among other things, set forth employee                        Definition of ‘‘Outside Employment’’            concurrence of OGE, supplemental
                                           restrictions on the purchase of certain                    B. Comments Regarding the Proposed Prior           regulations deemed necessary to
                                           Government-owned property; require                            Approval Requirement                            implement their respective ethics
                                                                                                      C. Comments Regarding Manuals or
                                           employees to report allegations of waste,                     Instructions on Implementing the Prior
                                                                                                                                                         programs. Prior to the creation of DHS,
                                           fraud, and abuse; require employees to                        Approval Requirement                            several legacy agencies were operating
                                           seek prior approval for certain outside                    D. Comments Regarding the Standard of              under supplemental ethics regulations
                                           employment and activities; prohibit                           Review of Outside Employment and                issued by their former parent
                                           employees in some DHS components                              Activity Requests                               departments. The regulations finalized
                                           from engaging in certain types of                          E. Comments Regarding Outside                      in this action will advance the purposes
                                           outside employment activities; and                            Employment Restrictions Specific to CBP         of the OGE Standards. Some outside
                                           require designated components to                           F. Comments Regarding Outside                      employment interests and activities, if
                                           develop instructions regarding the                            Employment Restrictions Specific to ICE         held by employees of certain
                                                                                                      G. Comments Regarding the Requirement
                                           procedures for obtaining prior approval                       To Report Waste, Fraud, Abuse and
                                                                                                                                                         Department of Homeland Security
                                           for outside employment and activities.                        Corruption                                      (DHS) components, could cause a
                                           These regulations also designate                           H. Other Comments                                  reasonable person to question an
                                           components within DHS as separate                       IV. Discussion of Final Rule                          employee’s impartiality and objectivity.
                                           agencies for purposes of determining                       A. 5 CFR 4601.101 General                          Particularly in view of the breadth of
                                           whether the donor of a gift is a                           B. 5 CFR 4601.102 Designation of DHS               DHS’s programs and operations, and
                                           ‘‘prohibited source’’ and of identifying                      Components as Separate Agencies                 because DHS is comprised of numerous
                                           an employee’s agency for the regulations                   C. 5 CFR 4601.103 Prior Approval for               legacy components with varying or no
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                           governing teaching, speaking, and                             Outside Employment and Activities               supplemental ethics regulations, this
                                                                                                      D. 5 CFR 4601.104 Additional Rules for
                                           writing. This rulemaking is necessary in                      CBP Employees
                                                                                                                                                         action is both necessary and
                                           view of DHS programs and operations;                       E. 5 CFR 4601.105 Additional Rules for             appropriate. This rule will require prior
                                           DHS is comprised of numerous legacy                           FEMA Employees                                  approval of certain outside employment
                                           agencies which have varying or no                          F. 5 CFR 4601.106 Additional Rules for ICE         and activities to avoid potential
                                           supplemental ethics regulations. This                         Employees                                       conflicts of interest. This rule will also


                                      VerDate Sep<11>2014   14:51 Feb 04, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00001   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\05FER1.SGM   05FER1


                                           6160               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 24 / Friday, February 5, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                           prohibit conflicting outside employment                 and corruption; and the amount of                     employee’s assigned duties.
                                           activities in certain components.                       government resources and time required                Accordingly, under one possible
                                                                                                   to implement the rule’s provisions.                   scenario, a DHS employee who submits
                                           II. Regulatory History
                                                                                                   Other commenters generally sought                     a grant application to another
                                              On October 12, 2011, DHS, with                       clarification on the impact the rule will             government agency in the employee’s
                                           OGE’s concurrence, published for                        have on employees serving as U.S. Coast               capacity as a board member of a non-
                                           comment a notice of proposed                            Guard reservists and reservists in other              profit organization would violate a
                                           rulemaking (NPRM) to supplement the                     military services, as well as the rule’s              criminal law by signing and submitting
                                           OGE Standards for DHS employees. 76                     effect on official employee interactions              the application. Additionally, an
                                           FR 63206. The NPRM proposed                             with non-Federal entities. There were                 employee who accepts compensation for
                                           supplemental ethics rules designed to                   also comments on the agency-specific                  such an activity would also violate
                                           implement uniform ethical                               proposed regulations for employees of                 another criminal statute, 18 U.S.C. 203,
                                           requirements for all DHS employees,                     U.S. Customs & Border Protection (CBP)                which prohibits employees from
                                           many of whom were previously                            and U.S. Immigration & Customs                        accepting compensation for certain
                                           employed by 22 other Executive branch                   Enforcement (ICE) components,                         representational activities before a
                                           departments and agencies prior to                       regarding the broad nature of the                     Federal agency or court. These
                                           DHS’s formation in 2003. The NPRM                       prohibited outside employment and                     prohibitions also apply to employees
                                           also proposed certain ethical                           activities for these employees and how                holding positions with for-profit
                                           requirements specific to certain DHS                    this might affect an employee’s ability to            companies. The above scenario provides
                                           components based on the nature of their                 engage in certain routine consumer                    an illustration of the rationale behind
                                           programs and operations. Specifically,                  transactions. In the next section, we                 requiring DHS employees to generally
                                           the NPRM proposed to (1) set forth                      discuss the public comments in greater                obtain prior approval to engage in
                                           employee restrictions on the purchase of                detail and provide DHS responses.                     outside employment and activities, and
                                           certain Government-owned property; (2)                                                                        why we are not limiting the prohibition
                                           require employees to report allegations                 III. Discussion of NPRM Comments                      on outside employment to activities
                                           of waste, fraud, and abuse; (3) require                 A. Comments Regarding the Proposed                    directly related to an employee’s official
                                           employees to seek prior approval for                    Definition of ‘‘Outside Employment’’                  duties or exempting all positions with
                                           certain outside employment and                                                                                non-profit organizations. These
                                           activities; (4) prohibit employees in                     Comment: One commenter stated that                  provisions not only help manage DHS’s
                                           some DHS components from engaging in                    the definition of ‘‘outside employment’’              ethics program, they also protect
                                           certain types of outside employment                     should only include employment and                    employees from inadvertent violations
                                           activities; (5) require designated                      activities that directly relate to an                 of the law. Outside employment and
                                           components to develop instructions                      employee’s official duties, because                   activities—even those that appear to be
                                           regarding the procedures for obtaining                  outside positions that are unrelated to               unrelated to DHS’s mission or the
                                           prior approval for outside employment                   the employee’s duties will not present a              employee’s duties—may create conflicts
                                           and activities; and (6) designate                       conflict of interest. The commenter                   of interest or present other ethical
                                           components within DHS as a separate                     stated that any activity with a non-profit            considerations.
                                           agency for purposes of determining                      organization should be excluded from                    Comment: Two commenters raised
                                           whether the donor of a gift is a                        the definition, even if the activity is               constitutional concerns that the
                                           ‘‘prohibited source’’ and of identifying                compensated.                                          definition of ‘‘outside employment,’’ to
                                           an employee’s agency for the regulations                  DHS Response: DHS disagrees. DHS                    the extent that it may include a prior
                                           governing teaching, speaking, and                       notes that matters that are ‘‘related to’’            approval requirement for speaking and
                                           writing. These proposals sought to                      the DHS mission or even the employee’s                writing on matters of public concern,
                                           strengthen the integrity of DHS                         official duties are not always obvious or             acted as a prior restraint on free speech.
                                           programs and operations and give the                    intuitive. For example, employees may                 One commenter expressed concern that
                                           public greater confidence that DHS                      not necessarily be aware of broader DHS               the prior approval requirement for
                                           employees are held to a high standard                   mission involvement, grant programs,                  speaking, teaching, writing, and
                                           of ethical behavior while carrying out                  regulatory activities, and the like, which            political activity would by its nature
                                           DHS’s missions. For a more complete                     may apply to non-profit organizations.                delay the employee’s ability to engage in
                                           discussion of the proposals in the                      Moreover, there are occasions when                    such activities, and that all DHS
                                           NPRM, please refer to the preamble of                   holding a fiduciary or compensated                    employees would need to obtain prior
                                           that document available in the public                   position with a non-profit organization,              approval for almost any expressive
                                           docket for this rulemaking and in the                   or providing personal services to such                activity undertaken for compensation,
                                           Federal Register at 76 FR 63206.                        an organization, may indeed create a                  including articles or speeches on
                                              By the close of the NPRM’s public                    criminal conflict of interest for an                  matters of public concern unrelated to
                                           comment period on December 12, 2011,                    employee. This is true even if the non-               DHS’s mission of the employees’ duties.
                                           DHS received 12 comment letters. Eight                  profit organization’s mission does not                Another commenter expressed concern
                                           of the commenters expressed concern                     relate to the employee’s duties or the                that writing personal letters to a
                                           that the NPRM’s definition of ‘‘outside                 programs of the employee’s agency.                    newspaper editor or engaging in social
                                           employment’’ was overly broad. Some                       For example, all Federal employees                  media activities and blogging would be
                                           commenters stated that the definition                   are prohibited by criminal statute from               deemed to be an activity ‘‘under an
                                           impeded the constitutional rights and                   acting as an agent or attorney on behalf              arrangement with another person,’’
                                           lawful political activities of DHS                      of another in a matter in which the                   which would fall under the prior
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                           employees. Other commenters                             United States is a party or has a direct              approval requirement.
                                           addressed the necessity for the rule,                   and substantial interest before any                     DHS Response: The definition
                                           specifically the requirement to seek                    officer, employee, or court of the United             proposed in the NPRM was not
                                           prior approval for outside activities and               States. See 18 U.S.C. 205(a)(2). This rule            intended to unconstitutionally restrict
                                           employment; the requirement for                         applies regardless of whether the                     speech or expression. DHS does not
                                           employees to report waste, fraud, abuse,                representation relates to the federal                 view personal, uncompensated


                                      VerDate Sep<11>2014   14:51 Feb 04, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00002   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\05FER1.SGM   05FER1


                                                              Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 24 / Friday, February 5, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                         6161

                                           expressions of opinion, such as writing                 ‘‘outside employment or activity.’’ As                and employment verification policies
                                           letters to newspaper editors or social                  explained above, this final rule revises              applicable to the retail industry.
                                           media or blogging activities, as being                  the definition of ‘‘outside employment’’              Although DHS does not find sufficient
                                           done under an ‘‘arrangement with                        from that in the NPRM to generally                    justification to support a broad
                                           another person’’ for purposes of the                    exempt ‘‘speaking and writing’’ unless it             exclusion for retail employment as the
                                           supplemental DHS ethics regulations.                    otherwise falls under the definition. The             commenter suggested, the rule does
                                           DHS did not intend to require prior                     revised language also refers employees                provide DHS components with the
                                           approval to engage in these types of                    to the existing regulations in 5 CFR                  discretion to exempt this type of activity
                                           uncompensated, personal expressions.                    2635.807 for further guidance on the                  under their implementing policies based
                                           Additionally, DHS did not intend these                  limitations for accepting compensation                on each component’s unique mission.
                                           regulations to adversely impact an                      for teaching, speaking and writing                    As a result, some types of outside
                                           employee’s ability to engage in or                      activities done in a personal capacity.               employment or activities may be
                                           abstain from political activities                          Comment: Some commenters raised                    excluded by an individual component’s
                                           permitted by the Hatch Act, 5 U.S.C.                    concerns that the proposed definition of              implementing instructions.
                                           7321–7326, that Act’s related                           ‘‘outside employment’’ would impact an                   Regarding the commenter’s other
                                           regulations, or relevant Executive                      employee’s ability to interact with,                  suggestion, although some DHS
                                           branch policy. Such expressions are                     prepare materials for, and/or speak to                components (specifically, CBP, FEMA,
                                           generally not the types of activities that              non-Federal entities and other                        and ICE) have determined that certain
                                           would create a conflicting financial                    organizations in an employee’s official               types of outside employment and other
                                           interest. These expressive activities are               capacity.                                             activities should be prohibited, those
                                           also not likely to involve a relationship                  DHS Response: DHS disagrees. The                   determinations do not apply DHS-wide.
                                           for an employee that, under the OGE                     regulation states that it applies to                  For example, there is no basis for
                                           Standards, would result in an                           outside employment and activities,                    broadly extending the prohibition on
                                           employee’s disqualification from                        which does not include an employee’s                  CBP employees from working for a
                                           participating in an official capacity or                activities in an official DHS capacity.               customs broker to the employees of
                                           cause a reasonable person to question an                DHS acknowledges that these comments                  other DHS components whose missions
                                           employee’s impartiality, or otherwise                   might have been precipitated due to                   do not involve customs. Moreover, it is
                                           amount to a conflicting outside                         confusion created by an errant reference              not possible to anticipate all types of
                                           employment or activity. To address the                  in the proposed rule to 5 CFR 2635.802                outside employment and other activities
                                           concerns raised by these commenters,                    (‘‘relates to an employee’s official                  that might create a potential conflict.
                                           this final rule narrows the definition of               duties’’). This final rule contains a                 Accordingly, this final rule does not
                                           ‘‘outside employment’’ from what we                     corrected reference that appropriately                adopt the commenter’s suggestion for a
                                           proposed in the NPRM. Specifically,                     cites to 5 CFR 2635.807.                              blanket list of prohibited employment or
                                           this final rule exempts ‘‘speaking and                     Comment: One commenter stated that                 activities, because such a list would
                                           writing’’ from the definition of ‘‘outside              the prior approval requirement violates               likely result in overly-broad restrictions
                                           employment,’’ provided that these                       employees’ privacy, and suggested that                for all DHS employees.
                                           activities are not combined with the                    the definition of ‘‘outside employment’’
                                                                                                   should contain a list that specifically               B. Comments Regarding the Proposed
                                           provision of additional services that                                                                         Prior Approval Requirement
                                           otherwise fall within the definition. The               excludes certain types of outside
                                           revised language also refers employees                  employment and activities that would                    Comment: One commenter stated that
                                           to the existing regulations at 5 CFR                    never be a conflict for an employee (e.g.,            the prior approval requirement was
                                           2635.807 for further guidance on the                    a holiday job at a retail store). The                 unnecessary, stating that DHS
                                           limitations for accepting compensation                  commenter also suggested that DHS                     employees are ‘‘fully capable of
                                           for speaking and writing activities done                should not require prior approval for                 determining for themselves whether an
                                           in a personal capacity. The final rule                  certain types of employment and other                 activity would conflict with their
                                           retains ‘‘teaching’’ in the definition of               activities. Finally, the commenter                    official responsibilities or otherwise
                                           ‘‘outside employment,’’ even though                     suggested that DHS should identify, in                adversely affect DHS, or create the
                                           most teaching fits within the exceptions                advance, types of employment and other                appearance of impropriety.’’ The
                                           outlined in the OGE Standards.                          activities that are always prohibited.                commenter also stated that employees
                                              Comment: Two commenters raised                          DHS Response: DHS declines to carve                would voluntarily seek ethics advice
                                           concerns that the proposed definition of                out from the ‘‘outside employment’’                   without a prior approval requirement,
                                           ‘‘outside employment’’ seemed to                        definition and the prior approval                     thus rendering the requirement moot.
                                           include uncompensated speaking. The                     requirement additional categories of                    DHS Response: DHS disagrees.
                                           commenters also suggested that DHS                      outside employment and activities                     Requiring an ethics review is a low-cost
                                           should differentiate between an                         because the employment or activity                    mechanism for avoiding serious
                                           employee speaking or writing as a                       would never pose an ethical conflict for              consequences that may accrue to
                                           representative of the agency as opposed                 any DHS employee. It is not always                    employees who would otherwise
                                           to speaking or writing on the employee’s                obvious or intuitive that a certain type              inadvertently run afoul of the rules.
                                           own behalf for compensation. The                        of outside employment activity presents               Employees are often not aware of all
                                           commenters further suggested that the                   an ethical conflict. To adopt the                     applicable ethics statutes, regulations,
                                           two exclusions should appear in the                     commenter’s scenario, working at a                    and OGE guidance that may be
                                           regulatory text within the relevant                     retail establishment may indeed pose a                implicated when engaging in outside
                                           section under separate numbers or other                 conflict for a DHS employee. For                      employment or activities. The OGE
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                           designation.                                            example, ethics rules would prohibit                  Standards establish that agencies carry
                                              DHS Response: DHS agrees that in                     outside employment at certain retail                  out an ethics program competent to
                                           general, personal expressions such as                   stores for ICE employees who inspect                  ensure the fundamental objectives of
                                           writing letters to the editor and other                 retail facilities for immigration                     providing employees with informed and
                                           uncompensated speaking and writing                      violations, or other DHS employees with               objective guidance. DHS ethics
                                           activities, should not be covered as                    official responsibilities for immigration             counselors serve as a resource for


                                      VerDate Sep<11>2014   14:51 Feb 04, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00003   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\05FER1.SGM   05FER1


                                           6162               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 24 / Friday, February 5, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                           employees and provide employees with                       Comment: One commenter stated that                 strain the resources of DHS ethics
                                           guidance and legal opinions in order to                 proposed section 4601.103(a) was                      offices.
                                           ensure that employees are aware of and                  overbroad and exceeded the DHS and                       DHS Response: DHS disagrees. DHS is
                                           follow the relevant ethics regulations                  OGE’s legal authority to establish the                aware that this final rule will result in
                                           and conflict of interest statutes. Many of              prior approval requirement. The                       employee requests for prior approval of
                                           the ethics rules, including ones that may               commenter characterized the NPRM as                   outside employment or activities to be
                                           be implicated by outside employment                     requiring prior approval for ‘‘all types of           reviewed by ethics officials at DHS
                                           and activities, include criminal                        activities.’’                                         headquarters and at the components.
                                           penalties. Violations of these laws may                    DHS Response: DHS disagrees. The                   Based on the experience of DHS ethics
                                           carry civil and criminal penalties and                  prior approval requirement applies only               officials, a number of these employee
                                           may result in termination of                            to certain types of outside employment                requests will involve outside
                                           employment. In addition, an employee                    and activities as defined in the rule.                employment or activities that require
                                           who seeks an opinion from an agency                     Additionally, section 404 of title 5 App.,            minimal analysis, are already excluded
                                           ethics official and has made full                       United States Code (U.S.C.) grants OGE                from the regulatory definition of
                                           disclosure of all relevant circumstances,               the authority to promulgate regulations               ‘‘outside employment,’’ or are (or will
                                           and relies in good faith on such an                     that govern the ethical conduct of                    be) addressed in the relevant
                                           opinion is shielded, at a minimum, from                 Executive branch employees. Further, 5                component-specific instructions or
                                           agency administrative action. See 5 CFR                 CFR 2635.803 permits agencies to                      manual. For employee requests that
                                           2635.107(b).                                            require employees to obtain prior                     require more detailed analysis by DHS
                                              Although many employees                              approval before engaging in certain                   ethics officials, DHS expects the prior
                                           voluntarily seek the guidance of an                     outside employment or activities.                     approval process to help employees
                                           agency ethics official before engaging in                  Comment: One commenter was                         avoid engaging in prohibited outside
                                           outside employment or activities, some                  concerned that the prior approval                     employment or activities. As a result,
                                           conflicts may not be obvious to                         requirement would have the unintended                 DHS employees and ethics officials will
                                           employees, thereby putting them at                      consequence of requiring members of                   encounter fewer actualized conflict
                                           unnecessary risk for potential conflicts                the military (e.g., Army and Air                      situations, which DHS expects will
                                           or violations of the law. Therefore, a                  National Guard) to obtain prior approval              offset any increased initial time
                                           regulatory requirement for employees to                 to engage in military service.                        investment on the part of DHS ethics
                                           obtain prior approval for outside                          DHS Response: DHS does not intend                  officials to process employee requests
                                           employment and other activities is not                                                                        for prior approval.
                                                                                                   to require members of the military to
                                           only in the best interest of DHS and the                seek and obtain prior approval before                 C. Comments Regarding Manuals or
                                           public, it will also help protect                       engaging in military service. In response             Instructions on Implementing the Prior
                                           employees from inadvertent missteps.                    to this comment and to avoid any                      Approval Requirement
                                              Comment: One commenter stated that                   confusion, this final rule includes a                    Comment: One commenter noted that
                                           a prior approval requirement would be                   revised definition of ‘‘outside                       the proposed rule did not discuss the
                                           a waste of time and create unnecessary                  employment or activity’’ that                         particulars of the publication of a
                                           paperwork. The commenter also                           specifically excludes military service.               ‘‘manual’’ and expressed concern
                                           questioned DHS’s motives for the prior                     Comment: One commenter questioned                  regarding non-publication within the
                                           approval requirement.                                   whether the rule would require U.S.                   specified timeline.
                                              DHS Response: For the reasons stated                 Coast Guard reservists to obtain prior                   DHS Response: DHS wishes to clarify
                                           above, the prior approval requirement                   approval for their full-time civilian jobs.           that component manuals and
                                           will help protect DHS’s interest in the                    DHS Response: DHS wishes to clarify                instructions governing employee
                                           integrity of its programs by creating a                 that a U.S. Coast Guard reservist who is              requests for approval of outside
                                           mechanism to affirmatively provide                      on voluntary active duty for a period in              employment and activities will be
                                           substantive guidance to employees in an                 excess of one hundred and thirty days                 internal DHS documents. In response to
                                           effort to avoid potential conflicts of                  is considered to be a DHS employee and                this comment, however, this final rule
                                           interest. The prior approval requirement                will be subject to the prior approval                 clarifies that the component instructions
                                           will also help employees comply with                    requirement for outside employment or                 or manuals will be issued internally
                                           the laws governing employee ethics.                     activities. A U.S. Coast Guard reservist              within 60 days of the publication of the
                                           This prior approval requirement is                      who is on active duty solely for training             final rule. Instructions will be issued
                                           consistent with similar requirements                    or who is involuntarily serving is                    consistent with each component’s
                                           promulgated by other cabinet-level                      considered to be a ‘‘Special Government               procedures for issuing internal
                                           departments.                                            Employee’’ and is not subject to the                  instructions or manuals affecting its
                                              Additionally, DHS has determined                     prior approval requirement; the majority              employees. Further, the regulation as
                                           that a uniform prior approval                           of reservists fall into one of these latter           finalized also states that, ‘‘in the
                                           requirement in the DHS supplemental                     categories. Accordingly, this rulemaking              absence of a manual or instruction
                                           ethics regulations is important for                     should have a minimal impact on the                   identifying a person designated to act
                                           establishing and maintaining                            majority of U.S. Coast Guard reservists.              upon a request for approval for outside
                                           consistency in the DHS ethics program.                     Additionally, this final rule requires             employment, the Chief Deputy Ethics
                                           The rule will eliminate discrepancies                   DHS components to issue component-                    Official at each agency shall act upon a
                                           between certain DHS employees                           specific instructions or a manual that                request.’’ The proposed rule already
                                           previously employed by legacy                           governs employee requests for approval                provided instruction on how outside
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                           agencies, who are covered by the legacy                 of outside employment or activities. The              employment requests are to be
                                           agency’s ethics rules, and employees                    U.S. Coast Guard may address matters                  processed before a specific DHS
                                           hired after DHS was created, who had                    such as the one raised by the commenter               component has issued its internal
                                           not previously been covered by a                        in its instructions or manual.                        instruction or manual.
                                           supplemental ethics regulation. This                       Comment: One commenter argued                         Comment: One commenter was
                                           rule will cover all DHS employees.                      that the prior approval requirement will              concerned that subsequent internal


                                      VerDate Sep<11>2014   14:51 Feb 04, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00004   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\05FER1.SGM   05FER1


                                                              Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 24 / Friday, February 5, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          6163

                                           agency instructions may require                         law or ethical standards, so the integrity            E. Comments Regarding Outside
                                           employees to seek prior approval for all                of the Department’s programs will still               Employment Restrictions Specific to
                                           types of outside employment, even                       be protected but the standard will not                CBP
                                           when the definition in the rule generally               unduly restrict an employee’s ability to                 Comment: One commenter argued
                                           excludes charitable agencies.                           participate in outside employment and                 that the proposed rule’s provisions
                                              DHS Response: DHS notes that the                     other activities. This standard more                  specific to CBP would unnecessarily
                                           text of 5 CFR 4601.103(c)(2) states that,               accurately reflects the basis under the               restrict CBP employees from engaging in
                                           ‘‘agencies may include in their                         OGE Standards for determining whether                 outside employment or activities.
                                           instructions or manual examples of
                                                                                                   an outside activity conflicts with an                 Specifically, the commenter suggested
                                           outside employment or activities that
                                                                                                   employee’s official duties. See generally             that DHS clarify whether a CBP
                                           are permissible or prohibited consistent
                                                                                                   5 CFR part 2635, subpart H.                           employee is prohibited from any
                                           with 5 CFR part 2635 and this part’’
                                                                                                      Comment: One commenter suggested                   employment by a company that engages
                                           (emphasis added). Accordingly, a DHS
                                                                                                   that there should be deadlines for DHS                in the listed activities, or only to the
                                           component’s instructions may not
                                           require prior approval for any activities                                                                     extent that the outside employment
                                                                                                   to act on outside employment requests.
                                           and employment that do not already fall                                                                       would relate to the prohibited activity.
                                                                                                      DHS Response: DHS disagrees. While                 For example, the commenter inquired
                                           under the regulatory definition of                      DHS ethics officials consider the time
                                           ‘‘outside employment’’ and the                                                                                whether a CBP employee would be
                                                                                                   sensitivities related to any request for              prohibited from outside employment at
                                           exclusions in 5 CFR 4601.102(d). For
                                                                                                   ethics advice, these officials must                   a law firm that conducts some customs
                                           example, because the definition in the
                                                                                                   sufficiently develop the facts                        business even if the outside
                                           rule excludes activities or personal
                                           services with non-profit organizations                  surrounding each request in order to                  employment activity is unrelated to the
                                           that are non-fiduciary and                              provide accurate ethics guidance.                     law firm’s customs business.
                                           uncompensated, a DHS component’s                        Setting uniform deadlines as the                         DHS Response: DHS disagrees with
                                           instructions may not include this type                  commenter suggests could hinder the                   the commenter’s suggestion that the
                                           of activity as one requiring prior                      provision of accurate ethics guidance.                proposed rule would unnecessarily
                                           approval in an agency instruction; to do                DHS also disagrees that a request not                 restrict CBP employees from engaging in
                                           so would require employees to seek                      answered within a specific time frame                 outside employment or activities. There
                                           prior approval for employment and                       should be presumed approved. This                     are certain types of employment and
                                           activities that are inconsistent with                   practice would not best serve the                     activities that conflict with the official
                                           regulatory definition of ‘‘outside                      interests of DHS or its employees                     duties of CBP employees and, therefore,
                                           employment.’’ Moreover, to help ensure                  because potential ethics violations                   CBP employees are prohibited from
                                           consistency with the applicable                         could subject an employee to criminal                 such outside employment and activities
                                           regulations, the DHS Designated Agency                  prosecution or administrative action                  in any circumstance. Accordingly, 5
                                           Ethics Official (DAEO) must review and                  and may disrupt ongoing operations. An                CFR 4601.104(a)(2) prohibits CBP
                                           approve the relevant component                          employee who acts in good faith in                    employees from engaging in
                                           manuals and instructions prior to                                                                             employment or business activities
                                                                                                   reliance on an opinion from an agency
                                           issuance.                                                                                                     related to importing or exporting
                                                                                                   ethics official, and has made full
                                                                                                                                                         merchandise or agricultural products, or
                                           D. Comments Regarding the Standard of                   disclosure of all relevant circumstances,
                                                                                                                                                         the entry or departure of persons into or
                                           Review of Outside Employment and                        is protected from administrative action,
                                                                                                                                                         out of the United States.
                                           Activity Requests                                       and this reliance may also be a                          In addition, there are certain types of
                                                                                                   mitigating factor in instances of                     employers with which the employment
                                             Comment: One commenter suggested
                                           that DHS adopt the standard that it will                potential civil or criminal violations. An            of a CBP employee would create a
                                           approve requests for outside                            employee who acts without an opinion                  conflict, regardless of the nature of the
                                           employment unless there is a showing                    from an ethics official in violation of the           employment activity. Thus, 5 CFR
                                           that the activity will involve prohibited               law is not afforded such protection. 5                4601.104(a)(1) prohibits a CBP
                                           conduct.                                                CFR 2635.107(b). Accordingly, a                       employee from engaging in outside
                                             DHS Response: DHS agrees. This final                  standard that would permit an                         employment activities in support of or
                                           rule changes the standard in the                        employee to act in the absence of                     on behalf of certain types of entities that
                                           proposed rule, which had provided that                  guidance from an ethics official would                generally engage in business related to
                                           DHS would approve outside                               undermine the purpose of the ethics                   CBP missions (e.g., customs,
                                           employment requests only upon a                         program and the role of the agency’s                  immigration, agriculture), even if the
                                           determination that the activity does not                ethics officials to provide guidance to               CBP employee’s actual outside
                                           involve prohibited conduct. The final                   employees that prevents violations of                 employment activity at that entity
                                           standard requires DHS to grant                          the ethics laws and regulations.                      would be apparently unrelated to any
                                           permission to engage in the activity                       Comment: One commenter suggested                   CBP mission. The rationale behind this
                                           unless the conduct is prohibited by law                 that the rule should contain criteria for             latter prohibition is that employment in
                                           or regulation, including 5 CFR part 2635                                                                      any capacity with such an entity would
                                                                                                   approval of outside employment and
                                           and this part. Considering the rights of                                                                      expose a CBP employee to an
                                                                                                   activities.
                                           employees to engage in activities and                                                                         environment in which customs,
                                           employment on their own time within                        DHS Response: DHS notes that the                   immigration, and/or agriculture issues
                                           the confines of the law, this revised                   ethics regulations in 5 CFR 2635.802                  are discussed, and also where the
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                           standard still requires the reviewing                   already contain criteria for approval of              employee may be queried or called
                                           official(s) to make an affirmative                      outside employment or any other                       upon for assistance because of the
                                           determination that the proposed activity                outside activity (and outline the                     employee’s affiliation with CBP. The
                                           or employment does or does not create                   circumstances in which an employee’s                  potential risk in this environment of
                                           a conflict of interest with the                         outside employment or activity conflicts              intermingling private and Federal
                                           employee’s job or otherwise violate the                 with the employee’s official duties).                 interests constitutes a sufficient reason


                                      VerDate Sep<11>2014   14:51 Feb 04, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00005   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\05FER1.SGM   05FER1


                                           6164               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 24 / Friday, February 5, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                           to restrict such employment in any                      employee involvement in such activities               final rule to mirror the language in
                                           capacity with these entities engaging in                that would not conflict with their                    Executive Order 12674 of April 12, 1989
                                           operations regulated by CBP. Finally,                   official duties or CBP’s mission, this                (as modified by Executive Order 12731)
                                           we note that the Department of the                      final rule includes clarifying language to            and the general principle at 5 CFR
                                           Treasury supplemental ethics regulation                 that effect in the regulatory text.                   2635.101(b)(11). The final rule requires
                                           included substantially the same                                                                               employees to ‘‘disclose waste, fraud,
                                                                                                   F. Comments Regarding Outside
                                           restriction for former Customs Service                                                                        abuse, and corruption to appropriate
                                                                                                   Employment Restrictions Specific to ICE
                                           employees prior to CBP’s reorganization                                                                       authorities, such as the DHS Office of
                                           under DHS.                                                 Comment: One commenter argued                      Inspector General.’’ DHS emphasizes the
                                              Following review of the proposed                     that the proposed restriction on ICE                  responsibility of DHS employees to be
                                           regulatory text, DHS has included a                     employees to privately engage in                      stewards of Government funds and to
                                           number of revisions in this final rule.                 employment or activities related to the               protect the integrity of DHS programs
                                           DHS intends the revisions to improve                    importation or exportation of                         and operations.
                                           clarity without sacrificing important                   merchandise is overly broad.                             Comment: Two commenters suggested
                                           controls over potentially problematic                   Specifically, the commenter expressed                 that DHS provide greater specificity in
                                           employee activities.                                    concern that the rule as proposed would               the regulations regarding the
                                              Comment: One commenter argued                        prohibit ICE employees from mailing:                  appropriate authorities to whom
                                           that the proposed restriction on CBP                    (1) Gifts to a relative overseas (or                  employees should report suspected
                                           employees to privately engage in                        receiving gifts from overseas) since the              violations.
                                           employment or activities related to the                 package would require inspection; and                    DHS Response: The NPRM proposed
                                           importation or exportation of                           (2) merchandise to a buyer overseas                   to require employees to report suspected
                                           merchandise is overly broad.                            after a lawful online auction.                        violations to ‘‘appropriate authorities,
                                           Specifically, the commenter argued that                    DHS Response: Assuming that the                    such as the Office of the Inspector
                                           the provision would prohibit CBP                        commenter’s examples are unrelated to                 General.’’ DHS believes this language
                                           employees from: (1) Purchasing                          the operation of a business by an                     provides both sufficient specificity and
                                           products online that would be shipped                   employee, DHS does not intend the                     flexibility to cover the large number of
                                           from outside the United States; (2)                     provision to cover the types of personal              reporting chains of authority throughout
                                           buying products while on vacation that                  transactions highlighted by the                       DHS. Certain DHS components also
                                           would be shipped back to the United                     commenter. DHS intends the rule to                    maintain internal offices of internal
                                           States; or (3) sending a non-monetary                   cover outside employment in the nature                affairs, inspections, audits, or
                                           gift to a friend, relative, or charity                  of conducting business activities—this                professional responsibility, which
                                           outside the United States.                              does not include personal, routine                    would also be appropriate authorities
                                              DHS Response: DHS does not intend                    consumer transactions unrelated to the                for these purposes.
                                           this provision to cover the types of                    operation of a business. In response to                  Comment: One commenter stated that
                                           personal transactions highlighted by the                this comment, DHS has revised the                     the proposed rule would require
                                           commenter. DHS intends the provision                    regulatory language in this final rule so             employees to have sufficient in-depth
                                           to cover outside employment in the                      that it now includes the word                         knowledge of laws or regulations to
                                           nature of conducting transactions for a                 ‘‘business,’’ to clarify the scope of the             render legal determinations on whether
                                           business purpose, not the personal use                  restriction.                                          violations have occurred. The same
                                           of an employee. In response to this                        Additionally, in response to this                  commenter suggested that a requirement
                                           comment, DHS has revised the                            comment and the CBP-specific comment                  to report ‘‘suspicions’’ creates the
                                           regulatory language in this final rule so               referenced above, DHS also reviewed                   potential for abuse and erroneous
                                           that it now includes the word                           the ICE-specific provisions in the                    reporting, and therefore, DHS should
                                           ‘‘business’’ to clarify that the restriction            regulatory text to determine whether                  consider requiring employees to report
                                           does not apply to personal transactions                 additional clarifications would be                    information that gives rise to ‘‘probable
                                           similar to those highlighted by the                     appropriate. As a result of that review,              cause,’’ a standard used by law
                                           commenter.                                              this final rule includes revisions in                 enforcement in certain contexts.
                                              Additionally, in response to this                    parallel with the CBP-specific revisions                 DHS Response: DHS disagrees with
                                           comment, DHS conducted a broader                        described above.                                      both comments. Employees are capable
                                           review of the CBP provisions in the                                                                           of detecting waste, fraud, abuse, or
                                           regulatory text to determine whether                    G. Comments Regarding the                             corruption based on common sense and
                                           similar clarifications would be                         Requirement To Report Waste, Fraud,                   personal observation. Reporting such
                                           appropriate. As a result of that review,                Abuse, and Corruption                                 suspicions imposes no requirement on
                                           this final rule includes another revision                  Comment: One commenter suggested                   an employee to interpret the law or
                                           to the provision that prohibits CBP                     that DHS employees should be required                 regulations, investigate, or make any
                                           employees from engaging in outside                      to report not just suspected violations of            determinations on the legal or other
                                           employment activities related to                        laws or regulations regarding waste,                  substantive merits of a potential
                                           agriculture matters. As proposed, the                   fraud, abuse, and corruption, but also                allegation. Under the final rule,
                                           rule would have generally restricted                    lawful activities as well that may                    employees are responsible for alerting
                                           CBP employees from engaging in                          constitute suspected waste, fraud,                    the appropriate authorities of a
                                           outside employment or activities with a                 abuse, or corruption.                                 suspected violation. Trained
                                           business or other entity that engages in                   DHS Response: The proposed rule                    investigators within DHS are able to
                                           services related to ‘‘agriculture matters.’’            required employees to ‘‘report                        conduct investigations to determine the
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                           Regarding this regulatory provision,                    immediately any suspicions of                         merits of employee reports.
                                           DHS only intends to restrict CBP                        violations of law or regulation involving                Comment: One commenter suggested
                                           employees from engaging with                            Department of Homeland Security                       that there should be a list of the types
                                           businesses or entities that deal with                   programs or operations to appropriate                 of alleged fraud, waste, abuse, and
                                           agricultural matters that relate to CBP’s               authorities, such as the Office of the                corruption that should be reported.
                                           mission. To avoid restricting CBP                       Inspector General.’’ DHS has revised the              Another commenter requested more


                                      VerDate Sep<11>2014   14:51 Feb 04, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00006   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\05FER1.SGM   05FER1


                                                              Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 24 / Friday, February 5, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                         6165

                                           specific definitions of the terms                       impact on a substantial number of small               delegated authority by the DHS
                                           ‘‘waste,’’ ‘‘fraud,’’ ‘‘abuse,’’ and                    entities (76 FR 63207).                               Designated Agency Ethics Official
                                           ‘‘corruption,’’ and questioned whether                     In addition, DHS does not believe this             (DAEO) to manage and coordinate the
                                           the requirement to report suspicions of                 rulemaking would increase government                  ethics programs within DHS’s
                                           waste applied to de minimis forms of                    costs. To the extent that additional prior            components and offices.
                                           waste (e.g., wasting small amounts of                   approval of outside employment
                                                                                                   activities increases the number of                    B. 5 CFR 4601.102 Designation of DHS
                                           office supplies).
                                              DHS Response: Due to the breadth                     reviews by DHS ethics officials of                    Components as Separate Agencies
                                           and scope of incidents of possible                      proposed outside employment, this                        This section identifies certain
                                           waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption, it                 increased volume is expected to be                    components within DHS as separate
                                           would be impractical to provide a                       offset with fewer conflict situations for             agencies for the purposes of the
                                           comprehensive list, and it would also                   ethics officials and employees. In                    provisions governing prior approval for
                                           serve to limit the incidents to those on                summary, this rule only regulates DHS                 outside activities, accepting gifts from
                                           the list when other actions may go                      employees, is not expected to increase                non-Federal sources, outside teaching,
                                           unreported but still qualify as a                       government costs, and is expected to                  speaking, and writing activities, and
                                           violation. As stated above, DHS expects                 reduce the number of conflict                         issuing prior approval instructions. For
                                           employees to use common sense when                      situations—and therefore, reduce the                  those specified purposes, DHS has
                                           considering whether they have observed                  costs associated with potentially lengthy             designated eight DHS components as
                                           reportable waste, fraud, abuse, or                      investigations and corrective actions—                separate agencies and has designated
                                           corruption. Additionally, DHS has                       within DHS. The rule is also expected                 the remainder of the DHS components
                                           issued guidelines to assist employees                   to result in substantial additional                   as a single agency. For the limited
                                           regarding how, when, and where to                       benefits, including enhanced                          purpose of issuing prior approval
                                           report such allegations. An employee                    transparency into prior approval                      instructions, DHS has designated the
                                           who is unsure about whether there is a                  requirements and stronger public                      Office of Inspector General as a separate
                                           reporting requirement may consult an                    confidence in the integrity of DHS                    agency. To avoid confusion when
                                           agency ethics official or the                           programs and operations.                              reading this preamble together with the
                                           Department’s Office of Inspector                                                                              regulatory text, the discussion in this
                                                                                                   IV. Discussion of Final Rule                          Section IV. will refer to the DHS
                                           General.
                                              Comment: One commenter suggested                       Aside from the changes made in                      components as ‘‘agencies,’’ consistent
                                           that the rule should also require an                    response to comments discussed in                     with the regulatory text of this final
                                           employee to report a new arrest or                      Section III., this final rule adopts the              rule.
                                           charge.                                                 proposals from the NPRM. The                             In addition, paragraph (c) of this
                                              DHS Response: This rule deals                        following discussion provides a                       section explains the applicability of
                                           primarily with outside employment and                   summary of the provisions in the final                these requirements to detailed
                                           waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption.                    rule.                                                 employees within DHS (i.e., an
                                           Matters such as employee arrest records                                                                       employee from one agency temporarily
                                                                                                   A. 5 CFR 4601.101 General                             working for another agency). An
                                           are personnel matters (i.e., under the
                                           Office of Security of the Chief Human                      This section identifies to whom the                employee on detail from his/her
                                           Capital Officer) and are outside the                    supplemental regulations apply. It also               employing agency to another agency for
                                           scope of this rulemaking.                               cross-references to other ethics                      a period in excess of 30 calendar days
                                                                                                   regulations and guidance applicable to                is subject to the supplemental
                                           H. Other Comments                                       DHS employees—including regulations                   regulations and instructions of the
                                             Comment: One commenter suggested                      on financial disclosure, financial                    agency to which the employee is
                                           that DHS take measures to ensure that                   interests, and employee responsibilities              detailed rather than the employing
                                           there are ethical boundaries on                         and conduct—and implementing DHS                      agency. For example, if a U.S. Customs
                                           corporations and their level of influence               guidance and procedures issued in                     and Border Protection (CBP) employee
                                           over national policies.                                 accordance with the OGE Standards.                    is detailed to U.S. Immigration and
                                             DHS Response: This rule deals                            This section further defines the term              Customs Enforcement (ICE) for 60 days,
                                           primarily with outside employment and                   ‘‘agency designee’’ as it appears in 5                the CBP employee will be subject to
                                           waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption.                    CFR 2635.102(b), to identify those                    ICE’s supplemental regulations and
                                           Matters that deal with the ethical                      persons within DHS who are designated                 instructions during the period of the
                                           boundaries on private corporations and                  to act on requests and make                           detail with ICE.
                                           their level of influence over national                  determinations relating to 5 CFR part
                                                                                                   2635 and this part. The section also                  C. 5 CFR 4601.103 Prior Approval for
                                           policies are outside the scope of this
                                                                                                   defines the term ‘‘outside employment’’               Outside Employment and Activities
                                           rulemaking.
                                             Comment: One commenter suggested                      and lists the types of employment and                   This section requires employees to
                                           that Executive Order 12866 requires                     activities that would require prior                   obtain written approval prior to
                                           DHS to conduct a cost-benefit analysis                  approval. It also lists activities for                engaging in any outside employment
                                           reviewed by OMB for this rulemaking.                    which prior approval is not required,                 and activities, as defined by the rule.
                                             DHS Response: While the NPRM was                      such as the uncompensated activities                  The prior approval requirement is an
                                           not identified as a significant regulatory              (other than the reimbursement of                      integral part of DHS’s ethics program.
                                           action as defined by section 3(f) of                    expenses) on behalf of a charitable or                The prior approval requirement is
                                           Executive Order 12866, DHS did                          nonprofit organization that do not                    necessary to ensure that an employee’s
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                           consider the costs and benefits of this                 involve fiduciary duties and do not                   participation in certain outside
                                           rulemaking. This rule only regulates                    relate to the employee’s official duties              employment does not adversely affect
                                           DHS employees and imposes no direct                     as defined by 5 CFR 2635.807. In                      operations within the employing agency
                                           costs on the private sector. Accordingly,               addition, this section defines the term               or place the employee at risk of
                                           the NPRM certified the proposed rule                    ‘‘Chief Deputy Ethics Official’’ as the               violating applicable Federal conduct
                                           would not have a significant economic                   person (or persons) within DHS                        statutes and regulations. In addition,


                                      VerDate Sep<11>2014   14:51 Feb 04, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00007   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\05FER1.SGM   05FER1


                                           6166               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 24 / Friday, February 5, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                           prior approval is necessary to avoid the                circumstances. In addition, the                       DHS Office of Inspector General or
                                           appearance that an outside employment                   employee is disqualified from                         similar office are found in related DHS
                                           or activity was obtained through a                      participating in an official capacity in              and agency instructions. This regulation
                                           misuse of the employee’s official                       any particular matter involving such                  complements but does not displace
                                           position and to address a number of                     person or the person’s employer unless                those responsibilities.
                                           other potential ethics concerns.                        authorized to do so by the agency
                                              Because DHS provides money in the                                                                          V. Regulatory Analyses
                                                                                                   designee, with the advice and clearance
                                           form of grants and contracts, and                       of the CBP Chief Deputy Ethics Official.              A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
                                           engages in enforcement, regulatory, and
                                                                                                   E. 5 CFR 4601.105 Additional Rules                       This rule is not a ‘‘significant
                                           security functions across a multitude of
                                                                                                   for FEMA Employees                                    regulatory action’’ under section 3(f) of
                                           industry sectors, requiring prior
                                                                                                                                                         Executive Order 12866, Regulatory
                                           approval is necessary to ensure that the                  This section prohibits certain FEMA
                                                                                                                                                         Planning and Review, as supplemented
                                           public will have confidence in the                      employees, except Special Government
                                                                                                                                                         by Executive Order 13563, Improving
                                           integrity of DHS programs and                           Employees, both intermittent and non-
                                                                                                                                                         Regulation and Regulatory Review, and
                                           operations. In fulfilling its mission, DHS              intermittent, from being employed by a
                                           would be hindered if members of the                                                                           does not require an assessment of
                                                                                                   FEMA contractor. It also provides the
                                           public did not have confidence in DHS                                                                         potential costs and benefits under
                                                                                                   procedures for requesting a waiver of
                                           employees’ ability to act impartially                                                                         section 6(a)(3) of that Order.
                                                                                                   this restriction.
                                           while performing their official duties.                                                                       Accordingly, the Office of Management
                                              Section 4601.103(a) requires                         F. 5 CFR 4601.106 Additional Rules                    and Budget has not reviewed it. As
                                           employees to obtain approval from the                   for ICE Employees                                     discussed previously, this rule only
                                           DHS employee’s agency for certain                          This section prohibits ICE employees,              regulates DHS employees and
                                           outside employment and activities, with                 except Special Government Employees,                  consequently does not impose any
                                           or without compensation, unless the                     from being employed by, or from                       additional direct costs on the private
                                           employing agency issues an instruction                  engaging in activities in support of or on            sector. In addition, DHS does not
                                           or manual exempting such outside                        behalf of, an entity that engages in a                believe this rulemaking would increase
                                           employment or activities. Section                       trade or business performing specified                government costs. To the extent that
                                           4601.103(b) describes the standard the                  customs, immigration, or agriculture                  additional prior approval of outside
                                           agency must follow for approval of                      activities or services. This section also             employment activities increases the
                                           requests for outside employment and                     requires an ICE employee with a spouse,               number of reviews by DHS ethics
                                           activities. Section 4601.103(c) describes               a relative who is a financial dependent               officials of proposed outside
                                           the responsibilities of DHS agencies for                or household member, or another                       employment, this increased volume is
                                           issuing instructions to employees on                    household member or financial                         expected to be offset with fewer conflict
                                           how to request prior approval of outside                dependent who is employed in a                        situations—and therefore, reduce the
                                           employment and activities.                              position that the ICE employee is                     costs associated with potentially lengthy
                                              Because Special Government                           prohibited from occupying to notify his               investigations and corrective actions—
                                           Employees may serve at DHS only for a                   or her agency designee in writing of the              within DHS. The rule is also expected
                                           limited time during a 365-day period                    above-described employment                            to result in substantial additional
                                           and for a limited purpose (such as                      circumstances. In addition, the                       benefits, including enhanced
                                           service on a Federal Advisory                           employee is disqualified from                         transparency into prior approval
                                           Committee or service as a consultant),                  participating in an official capacity in              requirements and stronger public
                                           the nature of their service to DHS does                 any particular matter involving such                  confidence in the integrity of DHS
                                           not require that they be subject to the                 person or the person’s employer unless                programs and operations.
                                           prior approval requirement for outside                  authorized to do so by the agency                     B. Small Entities/Regulatory Flexibility
                                           employment and activities or the                        designee, with the advice and clearance               Act
                                           additional restrictions applicable to                   of the ICE Chief Deputy Ethics Official.
                                           CBP, Federal Emergency Management                                                                                Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act
                                           Agency (FEMA), or ICE employees                         G. 5 CFR 4601.107 Prohibited                          (5 U.S.C. 601–612), DHS has considered
                                           described below.                                        Purchases of Property                                 whether this rule will have a significant
                                                                                                     This section prohibits the purchase by              economic impact on a substantial
                                           D. 5 CFR 4601.104 Additional Rules                      employees of certain Government                       number of small entities. The term
                                           for CBP Employees                                       property under the control of, seized by,             ‘‘small entities’’ comprises small
                                              This section prohibits CBP                           forfeited, under the direction of, or                 businesses, not-for-profit organizations
                                           employees, except Special Government                    incident to, the employee’s agency. It                that are independently owned and
                                           Employees, from being employed by, or                   also sets forth the exception and waiver              operated and are not dominant in their
                                           from engaging in, activities in support of              provisions under this section.                        fields, and governmental jurisdictions
                                           or on behalf of, an entity that engages in                                                                    with populations of less than 50,000.
                                           a trade or business performing specified                H. 5 CFR 4601.108 Reporting Waste,                    DHS certifies that this rule would not
                                           customs, immigration, or agriculture                    Fraud, Abuse, and Corruption                          have a significant economic impact on
                                           activities or services.                                    This section requires all DHS                      a substantial number of small entities,
                                              This section also requires a CBP                     employees to report allegations of waste,             because it would only directly affect
                                           employee with a spouse, a relative who                  fraud, abuse, or corruption to the                    DHS employees.
                                           is a financial dependent or household                   appropriate authorities within DHS,
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                                                                                                                         List of Subjects in 5 CFR Part 4601
                                           member, or another household member                     such as the DHS Office of Inspector
                                           or financial dependent who is employed                  General or the appropriate Office of                    Conflict of interests, Government
                                           in a position that the CBP employee is                  Internal Affairs or Office of Professional            employees.
                                           prohibited from occupying to notify his                 Responsibility. Employee                                For the reasons set forth in the
                                           or her agency designee in writing of the                responsibilities for reporting suspicions             preamble, DHS, with the concurrence of
                                           above-described employment                              of violations of law or regulation to the             the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, is


                                      VerDate Sep<11>2014   14:51 Feb 04, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00008   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\05FER1.SGM   05FER1


                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 24 / Friday, February 5, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                         6167

                                           amending title 5 of the Code of Federal                   explanatory ethics-related guidance and               and related regulations relating to
                                           Regulations by adding chapter XXXVI,                      to establish procedures necessary to                  partisan political activities.
                                           consisting of part 4601, to read as                       implement 5 CFR part 2635 and this                      (iv) Military service. Outside
                                           follows:                                                  part.                                                 employment does not include state or
                                                                                                        (d) Definitions—(1) Agency designee                Federal military service protected by the
                                           Title 5—Administrative Personnel                          as used in this part and in 5 CFR part                Uniformed Services Employment and
                                                                                                     2635 means an employee who has been                   Reemployment Rights Act.
                                           CHAPTER XXXVI—DEPARTMENT OF
                                           HOMELAND SECURITY
                                                                                                     identified in an instruction or manual                  (v) Additional restrictions for certain
                                                                                                     issued by an agency under paragraph (c)               employees. Employees of the Federal
                                           PART 4601—SUPPLEMENTAL                                    of this section to make a determination,              Emergency Management Agency, U.S.
                                           STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT                              give an approval, or take other action                Customs and Border Protection, and
                                           FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE                                      required or permitted by this part or 5               U.S. Immigration and Customs
                                           DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND                                    CFR part 2635 with respect to another                 Enforcement should also refer to the
                                           SECURITY                                                  employee.                                             agency-specific provisions in this part
                                                                                                        (2) Outside employment or activity as              relating to outside employment.
                                           Sec.                                                      used in this part means any form of non-                (3) Chief Deputy Ethics Official as
                                           4601.101 General.                                         Federal employment, business activity,                used in this part means the persons
                                           4601.102 Designation of DHS components                    business relationship, or other covered               delegated authority by the DHS DAEO
                                                as separate agencies.
                                                                                                     activity as identified in this section,               to manage and coordinate the ethics
                                           4601.103 Prior approval for outside
                                                employment and activities.                           involving the provision of personal                   programs within the DHS components
                                           4601.104 Additional rules for U.S. Customs                services by the employee, whether or                  pursuant to the DAEO’s authority in 5
                                                and Border Protection (CBP) employees.               not for compensation. It includes, but is             CFR 2638.204.
                                           4601.105 Additional rules for Federal                     not limited to, personal services as an                 (4) ‘‘Special Government Employee’’
                                                Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)                   officer, director, employee, agent,                   as used in this part has the same
                                                employees.                                           attorney, advisor, consultant, contractor,            meaning as in 18 U.S.C. 202(a).
                                           4601.106 Additional rules for U.S.                        general partner, trustee, or teacher.
                                                Immigration and Customs Enforcement                  There are several exclusions and                      § 4601.102 Designation of DHS
                                                (ICE) employees.                                                                                           components as separate agencies.
                                                                                                     limitations to the definition as described
                                           4601.107 Prohibited purchases of property.                                                                        (a) Pursuant to 5 CFR 2635.203(a),
                                           4601.108 Reporting waste, fraud, abuse, and               immediately below.
                                                                                                        (i) Speaking and writing activities.               DHS designates each of the following
                                                corruption.
                                                                                                     Outside employment generally does not                 components as a separate agency for
                                             Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301, 7301, 7353; 5                  include speaking and writing activities               purposes of the regulations in subpart B
                                           U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of                                                                        of 5 CFR part 2635 governing gifts from
                                                                                                     so long as they are not combined with
                                           1978); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989                                                                     outside sources, including determining
                                           Comp., p. 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55              the provision of other services that do
                                           FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR                fall within this definition, such as the              whether the donor of a gift is a
                                           2635.105, 2635.203(a), 2635.403(a), 2635.702,             practice of law and other outside                     prohibited source under 5 CFR
                                           2635.703, 2635.802(a), 2635.803,                          employment or activities covered by                   2635.203(d); for purposes of the
                                           2635.807(a)(2)(ii).                                       paragraph (d)(2)(ii)(A) through (D) of                regulations in § 4601.103(c) of this part
                                                                                                     this section. Employees who wish to                   governing the establishment of
                                           § 4601.101       General.                                                                                       procedures for obtaining prior approval
                                                                                                     engage in compensated speaking or
                                              (a) Applicability. In accordance with 5                writing in a personal capacity are                    for outside employment; for purposes of
                                           CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this                     subject to the provisions of 5 CFR                    the regulations in § 4601.103(c) of this
                                           part apply to employees of the                            2635.807 and are encouraged to seek                   part governing the designation of
                                           Department of Homeland Security                           additional guidance from an agency                    officials; and for the purposes of the
                                           (DHS) and supplement the Standards of                     ethics official.                                      regulations in 5 CFR 2635.807 governing
                                           Ethical Conduct for Employees of the                         (ii) Nonprofit and other organizations.            teaching, speaking, and writing:
                                           Executive Branch (OGE Standards) in 5                     Outside employment does not include                     (1) Federal Emergency Management
                                           CFR part 2635.                                            participation in the activities of a                  Agency (FEMA);
                                              (b) Cross-references to other ethics                   nonprofit charitable, religious,                        (2) Federal Law Enforcement Training
                                           regulations and guidance. In addition to                  professional, social, fraternal,                      Center;
                                           the OGE Standards in 5 CFR part 2635                      educational, recreational, public service,              (3) Transportation Security
                                           and this part, DHS employees are                          or civic organization, unless the                     Administration;
                                           subject to the Executive branch financial                 participation involves:                                 (4) U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
                                           disclosure regulations contained in 5                        (A) Acting in a fiduciary capacity,                Services;
                                           CFR parts 2634, the Executive branch                         (B) Providing professional services for              (5) U.S. Coast Guard;
                                           financial interests regulations contained                 compensation,                                           (6) U.S. Customs and Border
                                           in 5 CFR part 2640, the Executive                            (C) Rendering advice for                           Protection (CBP);
                                           branch employee responsibilities and                      compensation other than the                             (7) U.S. Immigration and Customs
                                           conduct regulations contained in 5 CFR                    reimbursement of expenses, or                         Enforcement (ICE); and
                                           part 735, and DHS guidance and                               (D) An activity relating to the                      (8) U.S. Secret Service.
                                           procedures on employee conduct,                           employee’s official duties as defined in                (b)(1) DHS will treat employees of
                                           including those issued under paragraph                    5 CFR 2635.807(a)(2)(i)(A) through (E),               DHS components not designated as
                                           (c) of this section.                                      to include activities relating to any                 separate agencies in paragraph (a) of this
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                              (c) DHS agency instructions. Prior to                  ongoing or announced policy, program,                 section, including employees of the
                                           issuance, the DHS Designated Agency                       or operation of the employee’s agency as              Office of the Secretary, as employees of
                                           Ethics Official (DAEO) must approve                       it is defined at 5 CFR 4601.102.                      the remainder of DHS. For purposes of
                                           any internal instructions or manuals                         (iii) The Hatch Act. Outside                       the regulations in subpart B of 5 CFR
                                           that DHS agencies, as designated in                       employment does not include activities                part 2635 governing gifts from outside
                                           § 4601.102 of this part, issue to provide                 otherwise permissible by the Hatch Act                sources, including determining whether


                                      VerDate Sep<11>2014     14:51 Feb 04, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00009   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\05FER1.SGM   05FER1


                                           6168               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 24 / Friday, February 5, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                           the donor of a gift is a prohibited source              and are not likely to involve conduct                 her agency designee when any of the
                                           under 5 CFR 2635.203(d); for purposes                   prohibited by statute or Federal                      following circumstances exist:
                                           of the regulations in § 4601.103(c) of                  regulation, including 5 CFR part 2635                    (i) The spouse of the CBP employee is
                                           this part governing the establishment of                and this part. Agencies may include in                employed in a position that the CBP
                                           procedures for obtaining prior approval                 their instructions or manual examples of              employee would be prohibited from
                                           for outside employment; for purposes of                 outside employment or activities that                 occupying by paragraph (a) of this
                                           the regulations in § 4601.103(c) of this                are permissible or prohibited consistent              section;
                                           part governing the designation of                       with 5 CFR part 2635 and this part.                      (ii) A relative (as defined in 5 CFR
                                           officials; and for purposes of the                        (3) In the absence of a manual or                   2634.105(o)), who is financially
                                           regulations in 5 CFR 2635.807 governing                 instruction identifying a person                      dependent on or who is a member of the
                                           teaching, speaking, and writing, DHS                    designated to act upon a request for                  household of the CBP employee, is
                                           will treat the remainder of DHS as a                    approval for outside employment, the                  employed in a position that the CBP
                                           single agency that is separate from the                 Chief Deputy Ethics Official at each                  employee would be prohibited from
                                           components designated as separate                       agency shall act upon a request.                      occupying by paragraph (a) of this
                                           agencies in paragraph (a) of this section.                                                                    section; or
                                              (2) For the limited purposes of                      § 4601.104 Additional rules for U.S.                     (iii) Any person, other than the
                                           establishing procedures for obtaining                   Customs and Border Protection (CBP)                   spouse or relative of the CBP employee,
                                                                                                   employees.                                            who is financially dependent on or who
                                           prior approval for outside employment
                                           and designating officials pursuant to                      The following rules apply to                       is a member of the household of the CBP
                                           § 4601.103(c) of this part, DHS will treat              employees of CBP, except Special                      employee, is employed in a position
                                           the DHS Office of Inspector General as                  Government Employees, and are in                      that the CBP employee would be
                                           a separate agency.                                      addition to §§ 4601.101 through                       prohibited from occupying by paragraph
                                              (c) An employee on detail from his or                4601.103 and §§ 4601.107 and 4601.108                 (a) of this section.
                                           her employing agency to another agency                  of this part:                                            (2) The CBP employee shall be
                                           for a period in excess of 30 calendar                      (a) Prohibitions on outside                        disqualified from participating in an
                                           days is subject to the supplemental                     employment and activities. (1) No CBP                 official capacity in any particular matter
                                           regulations and instructions of the                     employee shall be employed by or                      involving the individuals identified in
                                           agency to which he is detailed rather                   engage in activities in support of or on              paragraph (b)(1) of this section, or the
                                           than his or her employing agency.                       behalf of a customs broker; international             employer thereof, unless the agency
                                                                                                   carrier; bonded warehouse; foreign trade              designee, with the advice and clearance
                                           § 4601.103 Prior approval for outside                                                                         of the CBP Chief Deputy Ethics Official,
                                           employment and activities.
                                                                                                   zone as defined in 15 CFR 400.2;
                                                                                                   cartman; law firm engaged in the                      authorizes the CBP employee to
                                             (a) General requirement for approval.                                                                       participate in the matter using the
                                                                                                   practice of customs, immigration, or
                                           A DHS employee, other than a Special                                                                          standard in 5 CFR 2635.502(d), or the
                                                                                                   agriculture law; entity engaged in the
                                           Government Employee, shall obtain                                                                             waiver provisions in 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1),
                                                                                                   enforcement of customs, immigration, or
                                           prior written approval before engaging                                                                        as appropriate.
                                                                                                   agriculture law; importation or
                                           in any outside employment or activity
                                                                                                   exportation department of a business; or
                                           (as defined by § 4601.101 of this part),                                                                      § 4601.105 Additional rules for Federal
                                                                                                   business or other entity which engages                Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
                                           with or without compensation, unless
                                                                                                   in services related to agriculture matters            Employees.
                                           the employee’s agency has exempted the
                                                                                                   where such agriculture matters relate to
                                           outside employment or activity (or                                                                               The following rules apply to
                                                                                                   CBP’s mission.
                                           category or class of outside employment                                                                       employees of FEMA, except Special
                                           or activity) from this requirement by an                   (2) No CBP employee shall, in any                  Government Employees, and are in
                                           instruction or manual issued pursuant                   private capacity, engage in employment                addition to §§ 4601.101 through
                                           to paragraph (c) of this section.                       or a business activity related to the                 4601.103 and 4601.107 and 4601.108 of
                                             (b) Standard for approval. Approval                   importation or exportation of                         this part:
                                           shall be granted unless it has been                     merchandise or agricultural products                     (a) Prohibited outside employment
                                           determined that the outside                             requiring inspection (other than a                    (intermittent employees). Except as
                                           employment is expected to involve                       personal, routine consumer transaction                provided in paragraph (c) of this
                                           conduct prohibited by statute or Federal                unrelated to the operation of a                       section, no intermittent FEMA
                                           regulation, including 5 CFR part 2635                   business), or the entry of persons into or            employees hired under the authority of
                                           and this part.                                          departure of persons from the United                  42 U.S.C. 5149, which includes all
                                             (c) Agency responsibilities. (1) With                 States.                                               Disaster Assistance Employees or
                                           the approval of the DHS DAEO, each                         (3) No CBP employee shall engage in                Stafford Act Employees and Cadre of
                                           agency as set forth in § 4601.102 of this               outside employment or activities for a                On-Call Response Employees, shall be
                                           part shall issue internal instructions or               non-profit or other organization that                 employed by a current FEMA contractor
                                           a manual governing the submission of                    involve assisting persons with matters                while a FEMA employee, whether or not
                                           requests for approval of outside                        related to the entry of persons or                    they are on activated status.
                                           employment and activities and                           merchandise into or the departure of                     (b) Prohibited outside employment
                                           designating appropriate officials to act                persons or merchandise from the United                (non-intermittent employees). Except as
                                           on such requests not later than May 5,                  States, or matters related to obtaining               provided in paragraph (c) of this
                                           2016.                                                   temporary or permanent residency,                     section, no non-intermittent FEMA
                                             (2) The instructions or manual may                    citizenship, adjustment of status, or                 employee shall be employed by a
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                           exempt particular outside employment                    other immigration-related benefits.                   current FEMA contractor.
                                           or activities (or categories or classes of                 (b) Restrictions arising from                         (c) Waivers. The FEMA Chief Deputy
                                           outside employment or activities) from                  employment of the spouse, relatives,                  Ethics Official or his or her agency
                                           the prior approval requirement of this                  members of the employee’s household,                  designee may grant a written waiver of
                                           section if such outside employment or                   or financial dependents. (1) A CBP                    any prohibition in paragraphs (a) and (b)
                                           activities would generally be approved                  employee shall notify in writing his or               of this section with the DAEO’s


                                      VerDate Sep<11>2014   14:51 Feb 04, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00010   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\05FER1.SGM   05FER1


                                                              Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 24 / Friday, February 5, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                               6169

                                           concurrence. To grant the waiver, the                   her agency designee when any of the                   employee’s impartiality, or create the
                                           FEMA Chief Deputy Ethics Official or                    following circumstances exist:                        appearance that the employee has used
                                           his or her agency designee must                            (i) The spouse of the ICE employee is              his or her official position or nonpublic
                                           determine that the waiver is consistent                 employed in a position that the ICE                   information for his or her personal gain.
                                           with 5 CFR part 2635 and not otherwise                  employee would be prohibited from
                                           prohibited by law; that the prohibition                 occupying by paragraph (a) of this                    § 4601.108 Reporting waste, fraud, abuse,
                                                                                                                                                         and corruption.
                                           is not necessary to avoid the appearance                section;
                                           of misuse of position or loss of                           (ii) A relative (as defined in 5 CFR                 Employees shall disclose waste, fraud,
                                           impartiality; and that the waiver will                  2634.105(o)) who is financially                       abuse, and corruption to appropriate
                                           not undermine the public’s confidence                   dependent on or who is a member of the                authorities, such as the DHS Office of
                                           in the employee’s impartiality and                      household of the ICE employee is                      Inspector General.
                                           objectivity in administering FEMA                       employed in a position that the ICE                   Jeh Charles Johnson,
                                           programs. A waiver under this                           employee would be prohibited from                     Secretary.
                                           paragraph may impose appropriate                        occupying by paragraph (a) of this
                                                                                                                                                         Walter M. Shaub, Jr.,
                                           conditions, such as requiring execution                 section; or
                                                                                                      (iii) Any person, other than the                   Director, U.S. Office of Government Ethics.
                                           of a written disqualification statement.
                                                                                                   spouse or relative of the ICE employee,               [FR Doc. 2016–01318 Filed 2–4–16; 8:45 am]
                                           § 4601.106 Additional rules for U.S.                    who is financially dependent on or who                BILLING CODE 9110–9B–P
                                           Immigration and Customs Enforcement                     is a member of the household of the ICE
                                           (ICE) employees.
                                                                                                   employee, is employed in a position
                                              The following rules apply to                         that the ICE employee would be
                                           employees of ICE, except Special                        prohibited from occupying by paragraph                FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
                                           Government Employees, and are in                        (a) of this section.                                  CORPORATION
                                           addition to §§ 4601.101 through                            (2) The ICE employee shall be
                                           4601.103 and 4601.107 and 4601.108 of                   disqualified from participating in an                 12 CFR Part 339
                                           this part:                                              official capacity in any particular matter
                                              (a) Prohibitions on outside                          involving the individuals described in                RIN 3064–AE27
                                           employment and activities. (1) No ICE                   paragraph (b)(1) of this section or the
                                           employee shall be employed by or                        employer thereof, unless the agency                   Loans in Areas Having Special Flood
                                           engage in activities in support of or on                designee, with the advice and clearance               Hazards
                                           behalf of a customs broker; international               of the ICE Chief Deputy Ethics Official,              AGENCY:  Federal Deposit Insurance
                                           carrier; bonded warehouse; foreign trade                authorizes the ICE employee to                        Corporation.
                                           zone as defined in 15 CFR 400.2;                        participate in the matter using the
                                           cartman; law firm engaged in the                                                                              ACTION: Correcting amendment.
                                                                                                   standard in 5 CFR 2635.502(d), or the
                                           practice of customs, immigration or                     waiver provisions in 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1),             SUMMARY:   This document contains a
                                           agriculture law; entity engaged in the                  as appropriate.                                       correction to the final regulations which
                                           enforcement of customs, immigration or
                                                                                                                                                         were published in the Federal Register
                                           agriculture law; importation department                 § 4601.107    Prohibited purchases of
                                                                                                   property.                                             of Tuesday, July 21, 2015 (80 FR 43216).
                                           of a business; or business or other entity
                                                                                                                                                         The regulations related to Loans in
                                           which engages in agriculture matters                       (a) General prohibition. Except as
                                                                                                                                                         Areas Having Special Flood Hazards.
                                           where such agriculture matters relate to                provided in paragraph (c) of this
                                           ICE’s mission.                                          section, no DHS employee may                          DATES: Effective February 5, 2016.
                                              (2) No ICE employee shall, in any                    purchase, directly or indirectly,                     FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                           private capacity, engage in employment                  property that is:                                     Navid Choudhury, Counsel, Consumer
                                           or a business activity related to the                      (1) Owned by the Federal Government                Compliance Section, Legal Division,
                                           importation or exportation of                           and under the control of the employee’s               (202) 898–6526 or nchoudhury@
                                           merchandise or agricultural products                    agency, unless the sale of the property               fdic.gov; or John Jackwood, Senior
                                           requiring inspection (other than a                      is being conducted by the General                     Policy Analyst, Division of Depositor
                                           personal, routine consumer transaction                  Services Administration; or                           and Consumer Protection, (202) 898–
                                           unrelated to the operation of a                            (2) Seized or forfeited under the                  3991or jjackwood@fdic.gov.
                                           business), or the entry of persons into or              direction or incident to the functions of             SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                           the departure of persons from the                       the employee’s agency.
                                           United States.                                             (b) Designated separate components.                Background
                                              (3) No ICE employee shall engage in                  For purposes of this section, the                       The final regulations that are the
                                           outside employment or activities for a                  employee’s agency is the relevant                     subject of this correction implement
                                           non-profit or other organization that                   separate agency component as set forth                certain provisions of the Biggert-Waters
                                           involve assisting persons with matters                  in § 4601.102 of this part.                           Flood Insurance Reform Act of 2012 and
                                           related to the entry of persons or                         (c) Waiver. Employees may make a                   the Homeowner Flood Insurance
                                           merchandise into or the departure of                    purchase prohibited by paragraph (a) of               Affordability Act of 2014.
                                           persons or merchandise from the United                  this section where a written waiver of
                                           States, or matters related to obtaining                 the prohibition is issued in advance by               Need for Correction
                                           temporary or permanent residency,                       the agency designee with the clearance                  As published, the final regulations
                                           citizenship, adjustment of status, or                   of the DAEO or his or her designee. A                 contain an error which may prove to be
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                           other immigration-related benefits.                     waiver may only be granted if it is not               misleading and needs to be clarified.
                                              (b) Restrictions arising from                        otherwise prohibited by law or
                                           employment of spouse, relatives,                        regulation and the purchase of the                    List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 339
                                           members of the employee’s household,                    property will not cause a reasonable                    Flood insurance, Reporting and
                                           or financial dependents. (1) An ICE                     person with knowledge of the particular               recordkeeping requirements, Savings
                                           employee shall notify in writing his or                 circumstances to question the                         associations.


                                      VerDate Sep<11>2014   14:51 Feb 04, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00011   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\05FER1.SGM   05FER1



Document Created: 2016-02-05 00:17:45
Document Modified: 2016-02-05 00:17:45
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesThis rule is effective March 7, 2016.
ContactFerne L. Mosley, Deputy Ethics Official, Department of Homeland Security, 202-447-3302, email: [email protected]
FR Citation81 FR 6159 

2025 Federal Register | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy
USC | CFR | eCFR