Document
Records Schedules; Availability and Request for Comments
The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) publishes notice of certain Federal agency requests for records disposition authority (records schedules). We publish not...
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Public Comment Procedures
We are publishing notice of records schedules in which agencies propose to dispose of records they no longer need to conduct agency business. We invite public comments on these records schedules, as required by 44 U.S.C. 3303a(a), and list the schedules at the end of this notice by agency and subdivision requesting disposition authority.
In addition, this notice lists the organizational unit(s) accumulating the records or states that the schedule has agency-wide applicability. It also provides the control number assigned to each schedule, which you will need if you submit comments on that schedule.
We have uploaded the records schedules and accompanying appraisal memoranda to the
regulations.gov
docket for this notice as “other” documents. Each records schedule contains a full description of the records at the file unit level as well as their proposed disposition. The appraisal memorandum for the schedule includes information about the records.
We will post comments, including any personal information and attachments, to the public docket unchanged. Because comments are public, you are responsible for ensuring that you do not include any confidential or other information that you or a third party may not wish to be publicly posted. If you want to submit a comment with confidential information or cannot otherwise use the
regulations.gov
portal, you may contact
request.schedule@nara.gov
for instructions on submitting your comment.
We will consider all comments submitted by the posted deadline and consult as needed with the Federal agency seeking the disposition authority. After considering comments, we may or may not make changes to the proposed records schedule. The schedule is then sent for final approval by the Archivist of the United States. After the schedule is approved, we will post on
regulations.gov
a “Consolidated Reply” summarizing the comments, responding to them, and noting any changes we made to the proposed schedule. You may elect at
regulations.gov
to receive updates on the docket, including an alert when we post the Consolidated Reply, whether or not you submit a comment. If you have a question, you can submit it as a comment, and can also submit any concerns or comments you would have to a possible response to the question. We will address these items in consolidated replies along with any other comments submitted on that schedule.
We will post schedules on our website in the Records Control Schedule (RCS) Repository, at
https://www.archives.gov/records-mgmt/rcs,
after the Archivist approves them. The RCS contains all schedules approved since 1973.
Background
Each year, Federal agencies create billions of records. To control this accumulation, agency records managers prepare schedules proposing retention periods for records and submit these schedules for NARA's approval. Once approved by NARA, records schedules provide mandatory instructions on what happens to records when no longer needed for current Government business. The records schedules authorize agencies to preserve records of continuing value in the National Archives or to destroy, after a specified period, records lacking continuing administrative, legal, research, or other value. Some schedules are comprehensive and cover all the records of an agency or one of its major subdivisions. Most schedules, however, cover records of only one office or program or a few series of records. Many of these update previously approved schedules, and some include records proposed as permanent.
Agencies may not destroy Federal records without the approval of the Archivist of the United States. The Archivist grants this approval only after thorough consideration of the records' administrative use by the agency of origin, the rights of the Government and of private people directly affected by the Government's activities, and whether or not the records have historical or other value. Public review and comment on these records schedules is part of the Archivist's consideration process.
Schedules Pending
1. Department of Agriculture, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, Regionalization (DAA-0463-2022-0001).
2. Department of Commerce, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Creating Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconductors (CHIPS) Loans Loan Guarantee and Other Transaction Agreement Records (DAA-0167-2023-0001).
3. Department of Energy, Southeastern Power Administration, Power Operations Program (DAA-0388-2024-0005).
4. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Inspector General, Records of the Immediate Office of the Inspector General (IG) of Health and Human Services (DAA-0468-2024-0002).
5. Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, Antitrust International Section Records (DAA-0060-2022-0035).
6. Department of Transportation, Federal Aviation Administration, Airworthiness Directives and Alternate Methods of Compliance (DAA-0237-2023-0009).
7. Department of Transportation, Office of the Secretary of Transportation, Records of the Executive Secretariat (DAA-0398-2024-0005).
8. Department of the Treasury, Internal Revenue Service, Informant Information (DAA-0058-2024-0007).
9. Library of Congress, Agency-wide, Inspector General 2024 updates (DAA-0297-2024-0013).
10. Peace Corps, Agency-wide, Peace Corps Social Media and websites (DAA-0490-2024-0004).
William P. Fischer,
Acting Chief Records Officer for the U.S. Government.