id
stringlengths 3
8
| text
stringlengths 11
1.18k
|
---|---|
doc-2727 | § 10.11
Revision or amendment of a standard.
(a) A published standard shall be subject to revision or amendment when it is determined to be inadequate by its Standing Committee or by the Department of one or more of the following reasons or for any other appropriate reasons:
(1) Any portion of the standard is obsolete, technically inadequate, or no longer generally acceptable to or used by the industry;
(2) The standard or any part of it is inconsistent with law or established public policy; or
(3) The standard or any part of it is being used to mislead users or consumers or is determined to be against the interest of users, consumers, or the public in general. |
doc-2728 | (b) A recipient to which this subpart applies that considers participation by students in education programs or activities not operated wholly by the recipient as part of, or equivalent to, education programs or activities operated by the recipient shall assure itself that the other education program or activity, as a whole, provides an equal opportunity for the participation of qualified handicapped persons.
(c) A recipient to which this subpart applies may not, on the basis of handicap exclude any qualified handicapped student from any course or study, or other part of its education program or activity.
(d) A recipient to which this subpart applies shall operate its program or activity in the most integrated setting appropriate.
§ 8b.22
Academic adjustments.
(a) Academic requirements. |
doc-2729 | § 30.63
Office of Management and Budget control numbers assigned pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
(a) Purpose. This subpart will comply with the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), 44 U.S.C. 3507(f), which requires that agencies display a current control number assigned by the Director of OMB for each agency information collection requirement.
(b) Display.
15 CFR section where identified and described
Current OMB control No.
§§ 30.1 through 30.99
0607-0152
§§ 30.64-30.69
[Reserved]
Subpart H—Penalties |
doc-2730 | (d) Each person who requests or receives from an agency a commitment providing for the United States to insure or guarantee a loan shall file with that agency a statement, set forth in Appendix A, whether that person has made or has agreed to make any payment to influence or attempt to influence an officer or employee of any agency, a Member of Congress, an officer or employee of Congress, or an employee of a Member of Congress in connection with that loan insurance or guarantee. |
doc-2731 | 31, 1982, as amended at 53 FR 6800, Mar. 3, 1988]
Pt. 19
PART 19—COMMERCE DEBT COLLECTION
Subpart A—General Provisions
Sec.
19.1
What definitions apply to the regulations in this part?
19.2
Why did the Commerce Department issue these regulations and what do they cover?
19.3
Do these regulations adopt the Federal Claims Collection Standards (FCCS)?
Subpart B—Procedures to Collect Commerce Debts
19.4
What notice will Commerce entities send to a debtor when collecting a Commerce debt?
19.5
How will Commerce entities add interest, penalty charges, and administrative costs to a Commerce debt? |
doc-2732 | This section shall not apply to bicyclists using officially approved bike paths on the site.
§ 265.22
Bicycle traffic.
No person shall ride a bicycle other than in a manner exercising due caution for pedestrian and other traffic. No person shall ride a bicycle on sidewalks or inside any building, nor shall any person park a bicycle on sidewalks or inside any building nor in a roadway or parking lot, provided, however, that these parking restrictions shall not apply to bicycles parked at bicycle racks located in these areas.
Subpart C—Buildings and Grounds
§ 265.31
Closing the site. |
doc-2733 | § 8a.430
Financial assistance.
(a) General. Except as provided in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section, in providing financial assistance to any of its students, a recipient shall not:
(1) On the basis of sex, provide different amounts or types of such assistance, limit eligibility for such assistance that is of any particular type or source, apply different criteria, or otherwise discriminate;
(2) Through solicitation, listing, approval, provision of facilities, or other services, assist any foundation, trust, agency, organization, or person that provides assistance to any of such recipient's students in a manner that discriminates on the basis of sex; |
doc-2734 | The Inspector General shall coordinate any investigation under this subpart with the Department of Justice, unless the Department of Justice informs the Inspector General that it does not intend to initiate criminal prosecution.
(c) All investigations under this subpart shall be conducted in such a way as to protect the privacy of former employees. To ensure this, to the extent reasonable and practical, any information received as a result of an investigation shall remain confidential except as necessary to carry out the purposes of this subpart, including the conduct of an investigation, hearing, or judicial proceeding arising thereunder, or as may be required to be released by law.
(d) The Inspector General shall report the findings of the investigation to the Director. |
doc-2735 | (3) Duplication means the making of a copy of a record, or of the information contained in it, necessary to respond to a FOIA request. Copies may take the form of paper, microform, audiovisual materials, or electronic records, among others. A component shall honor a requester's specified preference of form or format of disclosure if the record is readily reproducible with reasonable efforts in the requested form or format.
(4) Educational institution is any school that operates a program of scholarly research. A requester in this fee category must show that the request is made in connection with his or her role at the educational institution. |
doc-2736 | (4) Forfeiture penalties. In addition to any other civil penalties specified in this section, any property involved in a violation may be subject to forfeiture under applicable law.
Note to paragraph (b):
The Civil Monetary Penalties; Adjustment for Inflation Final Rule effective December 14, 2004, adjusted the penalty in Title 13, Chapter 9, Section 304, United States Code from $1,000 to $10,000 to $1,100 to $10,000.
[73 FR 31555, June 2, 2008, as amended at 78 FR 16382, Mar. 14, 2013]
§ 30.72
Civil penalty procedures.
(a) General. |
doc-2737 | (a) Industrial, Educational, and Commercial Entities. Certain bidders, contractors, grantees, educational, scientific, or industrial organizations may receive classified information under the procedures prescribed by the National Industrial Security Program Operating Manual.
(b) Access by historical researchers and former Presidential appointees. An individual engaged in historical research projects or who has previously occupied a policy-making position to which he or she was appointed by the President may be authorized access to classified information for a limited period, provided that the head of the component with jurisdiction over the information:
(1) Determines in writing that:
(i) Access is consistent with national security;
(ii) The individual has a compelling need for access; and
(iii) The Department's best interest is served by providing access; |
doc-2738 | (h) Notice to submitter of FOIA lawsuit. Whenever a requester files a lawsuit seeking to compel the disclosure of confidential commercial information, the component shall promptly notify the submitter. Where notification of a voluminous number of submitters is required, such notification may be accomplished by posting or publishing the notice in a place reasonably calculated to accomplish notification.
(i) Corresponding notice to requester. Whenever a component provides a submitter with notice and an opportunity to object to disclosure under paragraph (c) of this section, the component shall notify the requester that the request is being processed under the provisions of this regulation and, as a consequence, there may be a delay in receiving a response. The notice to the requester will not include any of the specific information contained in the records being requested. |
doc-2739 | (4) Individual gift parcels and humanitarian donations being lawfully exported under License Exception GFT (15 CFR 740.12(a) and (b)).
(5) Vessels and aircraft lawfully leaving the United States for temporary sojourn to or in a Country Group E:1 or E:2 country under License Exception AVS (15 CFR 740.15). |
doc-2740 | Such further proceedings shall be held only when necessary for full and fair resolution of the issues arising from the application, and shall be conducted as promptly as possible. Whether or not the position of the agency was substantially justified shall be determined on the basis of the administrative record, as a whole, which is made in the adversary adjudication for which fees and other expenses are sought.
(b) A request that the adjudicative officer order further proceedings under this section shall specifically identify the information sought or the disputed issues and shall explain why the additional proceedings are necessary to resolve the issues.
[47 FR 13510, Mar. 31, 1982, as amended at 53 FR 6799, Mar. 3, 1988]
§ 18.21
Decision. |
doc-2741 | Except as provided in paragraphs (d) and (e) of this section, §§ 8a.300 through 8a.310 apply to each recipient. A recipient to which §§ 8a.300 through 8a.310 apply shall not discriminate on the basis of sex in admission or recruitment in violation of §§ 8a.300 through 8a.310.
(d) Educational institutions. Except as provided in paragraph (e) of this section as to recipients that are educational institutions, §§ 8a.300 through 8a.310 apply only to institutions of vocational education, professional education, graduate higher education, and public institutions of undergraduate higher education.
(e) Public institutions of undergraduate higher education. |
doc-2742 | NIST representatives will visit each finalist organization. Finalists will be reviewed and assigned numeric scores using the criteria set forth in § 290.6 of these procedures assigning equal weight to each of the four categories. NIST may enter into negotiations with the finalists concerning any aspect of their proposal.
(d) Award determination. The Director of NIST or his designee shall select awardees for Center Operating Awards based upon the rank order of applicants, the need to assure appropriate regional distribution, and the availability of funds. Upon the final award decision, a notification will be made to each of the proposing organizations.
§ 290.8
Reviews of centers.
(a) Overview. |
doc-2743 | Subpart C—Special Provisions and Specific-Type Transactions
30.25
Values for certain types of transactions.
30.26
Reporting of vessels, aircraft, cargo vans, and other carriers and containers.
30.27
Return of exported cargo to the United States prior to reaching its final destination.
30.28
Split shipments.
30.29
Reporting of repairs and replacements.
30.30-30.34
[Reserved] |
doc-2744 | (b) To minimize the possibility of involving the Department in controversial issues that are not related to the Department's mission;
(c) To prevent the possibility that the public will misconstrue variances between personal opinions of Department employees and Department policy;
(d) To avoid spending the time and money of the United States for private purposes;
(e) To preserve the integrity of the administrative process; and
(f) To protect confidential, sensitive information and the deliberative process of the Department.
§ 15.14
Demand for testimony or production of documents: Department procedures. |
doc-2745 | § 285.10
Renewal of accreditation.
(a) An accredited laboratory must submit both its application for renewal and fees to NVLAP prior to expiration of the laboratory's current accreditation to avoid a lapse in accreditation.
(b) On-site assessments of currently accredited laboratories are performed in accordance with the procedures in § 285.7. If deficiencies are found during the assessment of an accredited laboratory, the laboratory must follow the procedures set forth in § 285.7(e)(2) or face possible suspension or revocation of accreditation. |
doc-2746 | As used in section 201, “Public officials” is broadly defined to include officers, employees, and other persons carrying on activities for or on behalf of the Government.
.02 Section 201 also prohibits a public official's solicitation or acceptance of, or agreement to take, a bribe. In addition, it forbids offers or payments to, and solicitations or receipt by, a public official of anything of value “for or because of” any official act performed or to be performed by him.
.03 Section 201 further prohibits the offering to or the acceptance by a witness of anything of value involving intent to influence his testimony at a trial, Congressional hearing, or agency proceeding. |
doc-2747 | Subpart B—Traffic and Vehicular Regulations
§ 265.11
Inspection of license and registration.
No person may operate any motor vehicle on the site unless he holds a current operator's license, nor may he, if operating a motor vehicle on the site, refuse to exhibit for inspection, upon request of a uniformed guard, his operator's license or proof of registration of the vehicle under his control at time of operation.
§ 265.12
Speeding or reckless driving. |
doc-2748 | This part of the informed consent must be organized and presented in a way that facilitates comprehension.
(ii) Informed consent as a whole must present information in sufficient detail relating to the research, and must be organized and presented in a way that does not merely provide lists of isolated facts, but rather facilitates the prospective subject's or legally authorized representative's understanding of the reasons why one might or might not want to participate.
(6) No informed consent may include any exculpatory language through which the subject or the legally authorized representative is made to waive or appear to waive any of the subject's legal rights, or releases or appears to release the investigator, the sponsor, the institution, or its agents from liability for negligence.
(b) Basic elements of informed consent. Except as provided in paragraph (d), (e), |
doc-2749 | (2) A recipient, other than a small recipient, shall for at least three years following completion of the evaluation required under paragraph (c)(1) of this section, maintain on file, make available for public inspection, and provide to the Secretary upon request:
(i) A list of the interested persons consulted;
(ii) A description of areas examined and any problems identified; and
(iii) A description of any modifications made and of any remedial steps taken.
(3) The Secretary may, as he or she deems necessary, direct recipients to conduct additional self-evaluations, in accordance with the requirements of paragraph (c)(1) of this section. |
doc-2750 | (d) Designees hereunder are responsible for the control over and expeditious handling of claims, bearing in mind the applicable statutory time limitations for adjudications of claims.
[32 FR 3769, Mar. 7, 1967, as amended at 48 FR 31636, July 11, 1983; 63 FR 29945, June 2, 1998] |
doc-2751 | (b) Delegations of authority. The Director, National Institute of Standards and Technology has authority to promulgate regulations in this part regarding certification and accreditation. The Secretary of Commerce has delegated concurrent authority to amend the regulations regarding enforcement of the Act, as contained in subpart C of this part, to the Under Secretary for Export Administration. The Secretary of Commerce has also delegated concurrent authority to amend the regulations regarding record of insignia, as contained in subpart D of this part, to the Under Secretary for Intellectual Property and Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
[65 FR 39801, June 28, 2000]
§ 280.2
Definitions used in this subpart. |
doc-2752 | Such information shall not be available for public inspection.
(d) Information that is classified under Executive Order 12356 or any successor order shall be reported only to the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives or the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives (whichever such committees have jurisdiction of matters involving such information) and to the Committees on Appropriations of the Senate and the House of Representatives in accordance with procedures agreed to by such committees. Such information shall not be available for public inspection.
(e) The first semi-annual compilation shall be submitted on May 31, 1990, and shall contain a compilation of the disclosure reports received from December 23, 1989 to March 31, 1990. |
doc-2753 | Authority:
39 U.S.C. 3220(a)(2); 5 U.S.C. 301.
Source:
51 FR 46614, Dec. 24, 1986, unless otherwise noted.
§ 23.1
Purpose.
These regulations are intended to comply with 39 U.S.C. 3220(a)(2), and the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) guidelines (50 FR 46622), to assist in the location and recovery of missing children through the use of penalty mail. |
doc-2754 | These exemptions are necessary to ensure the proper functioning of the law enforcement activity, to protect confidential sources of information, to fulfill promises of confidentiality, to prevent interference with law enforcement proceedings, to avoid the disclosure of investigative techniques, to avoid the endangering of law enforcement personnel, to avoid premature disclosure of the knowledge of criminal activity and the evidentiary bases of possible enforcement actions, and to maintain the integrity of the law enforcement process.
(3) Investigative and Inspection Records—COMMERCE/DEPT-12. Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(j)(2), these records are hereby determined to be exempt from all provisions of the Act, except 5 U.S.C. |
doc-2755 | § 25.10
Default upon failure to file an answer.
(a) If the respondent does not file an answer within the time prescribed in § 25.9(a), the reviewing official may refer the complaint to the ALJ along with the proof of service, as provided in § 25.8(b).
(b) Upon the referral of the complaint, the ALJ shall promptly serve on the respondent in the manner prescribed in § 25.8, a notice that an initial decision will be issued under this section.
(c) The ALJ shall assume the facts alleged in the complaint to be true and, if such facts establish liability under § 25.3, the ALJ shall issue an initial decision imposing the maximum amount of penalties and assessments allowed under the statute. |
doc-2756 | [55 FR 30145, July 24, 1990, as amended at 59 FR 666, 667, Jan. 6, 1994; 62 FR 64684, 64685, Dec. 9, 1997; 63 FR 64413, Nov. 20, 1998]
§ 295.3
Eligibility of United States- and foreign-owned businesses. |
doc-2757 | PART 24 [RESERVED]
Pt. 25
PART 25—PROGRAM
Fraud Civil Remedies
Sec.
25.1
Basis and purpose.
25.2
Definitions.
25.3
Basis for civil penalties and assessments.
25.4
Investigation.
25.5
Review by the reviewing official.
25.6
Prerequisites for issuing a complaint.
25.7
Complaint.
25.8
Service of complaint.
25.9
Answer.
25.10
Default upon failure to file an answer.
25.11
Referral of complaint and answer to the ALJ.
25.12
Notice of hearing.
25.13
Parties to the hearing.
25.14
Separation of functions. |
doc-2758 | § 10.14
Appeals.
(a) Any person directly affected by a procedural action taken by NIST or the Standard Review Committee under §§ 10.5, 10.6 or 10.7 regarding the development of a standard, by NIST or the Standing Committee under § 10.10 regarding the review of a published standard, or under § 10.11 regarding the revision of a standard, or under § 10.13 regarding the withdrawal of a standard, may appeal such action.
(b) Such appeal shall be filed in written form with the body taking the action complained of (NIST, the Standard Review Committee, or the Standing Committee) within 30 days after the date of announcement of the action. |
doc-2759 | Where the administrative law judge determines that documents containing the classified or sensitive matter need to be made available to a party to avoid prejudice, the ALJ may direct that an unclassified and/or nonsensitive summary or extract of the documents be prepared. The administrative law judge may compare the extract or summary with the original to ensure that it is supported by the source document and that it omits only so much as must remain undisclosed. The summary or extract may be admitted as evidence in the record.
(b) Arrangements for access. |
doc-2760 | (f) Charges for other services. Apart from the other provisions of this section, if a component decides, as a matter of administrative discretion, to comply with a request for special services, the component shall charge the direct cost of providing them. Such services could include certifying that records are true copies or sending records by other than ordinary mail.
(g) Charging interest. Components shall charge interest on any unpaid bill starting on the 31st calendar day following the date of billing the requester. Interest charges shall be assessed at the rate provided in 31 U.S.C. 3717 and accrue from the date of the billing until the component receives payment. |
doc-2761 | (d) The term energy efficiency means the energy use of appliances or equipment relative to their output of services, as determined through test procedures contained or identified in a final Voluntary Energy Conservation Specification published under § 9.4(e).
(e) The term consumer means the first person who purchases a new appliance or item of equipment for purposes other than resale.
(f) The term class of appliance or equipment means a group of appliances or equipment whose functions or features are similar, and whose functional output covers a range that may be of interest to consumers.
(g) The term Specification means a Voluntary Energy Conservation Specification developed under § 9.4. |
doc-2762 | § 200.105
Standard reference data.
Data on the physical and chemical properties of the large variety of substances used in science and technology need to be compiled and evaluated for application in research, development, engineering design, and commerce. The Office of Standard Reference Data (OSRD) in the NIST National Measurement Laboratory provides coordination of and access to a number of governmental and nongovernmental data centers throughout this country and the world which are responsive to user needs for data. The OSRD's present program is assembled under a series of tasks which include data for application in energy, environment and health, industrial process design, materials durability, and resource recovery. |
doc-2763 | The USPPI may authorize an agent to file the EEI on its behalf. If the USPPI or its agent prepares and files the EEI, it shall retain documentation to support the EEI filed. If the FPPI agrees to allow the USPPI to file EEI, the filing of the export transaction shall be treated as a routed export transaction. If the FPPI authorizes an agent to prepare and file the EEI, the USPPI shall retain documentation to support the information provided to the agent for preparing the EEI as specified in § 30.10 and provide the agent with the following information to assist in preparing the EEI:
(i) Name and address of the USPPI. |
doc-2764 | Pt. 291
PART 291—MANUFACTURING EXTENSION PARTNERSHIP; ENVIRONMENTAL PROJECTS
Sec.
291.1
Program description.
291.2
Environmental integration projects.
291.3
Environmental tools and techniques projects.
291.4
National industry-specific pollution prevention and environmental compliance resource centers.
291.5
Proposal selection process.
291.6
Additional requirements; Federal policies and procedures.
Authority:
15 U.S.C. § 272(b)(1) and (c)(3) and § 2781. |
doc-2765 | (Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under Control Number 0990-0260)
§ 27.116
General Requirements for Informed Consent.
(a) General. General requirements for informed consent, whether written or oral, are set forth in this paragraph and apply to consent obtained in accordance with the requirements set forth in paragraphs (b) through (d) of this section. Broad consent may be obtained in lieu of informed consent obtained in accordance with paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section only with respect to the storage, maintenance, and secondary research uses of identifiable private information and identifiable biospecimens. |
doc-2766 | § 273.3
General policy.
The Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988 (Pub. L. 100-418, section 5164) amended the Metric Conversion Act of 1975 to, among other things, require that each Federal agency, by a date certain and to the extent economically feasible by the end of the fiscal year 1992, use the metric system of measurement in its procurements, grants, and other business-related activities, except to the extent that such use is impractical or is likely to cause significant inefficiencies or loss of markets to United States firms, such as when foreign competitors are producting competing products in non-metric units. |
doc-2767 | (f) Authorizing an agent. In a power of attorney or other written authorization, authority is conferred upon an agent to perform certain specified acts or kinds of acts on behalf of a principal (see 15 CFR 758.1(h) of the EAR). In cases where an authorized agent is filing EEI to the AES, the agent shall obtain a power of attorney or written authorization from a principal party in interest to file the information on its behalf. A power of attorney or written authorization should specify the responsibilities of the parties with particularity and should state that the agent has authority to act on behalf of a principal party in interest as its true and lawful agent for purposes of creating and filing EEI in accordance with the laws and regulations of the United States. |
doc-2768 | Participant means any entity that is identified as a recipient, subrecipient, or contractor on an award to a joint venture under the Program.
Person will be deemed to include corporations and associations existing under or authorized by the laws of the United States, the laws of any of the Territories, the laws of any State, or the laws of any foreign country.
Program or TIP means the Technology Innovation Program.
Recipient means an organization receiving an award directly from NIST under the Program.
Small-sized business means a business that is independently owned and operated, is organized for profit, has fewer than 500 employees, and meets the other requirements found in 13 CFR part 121. |
doc-2769 | (2) During the declassification review of information under appeal the DAS may overrule previous determinations in whole or in part if continued protection in the interest of national security is no longer required. If the DAS determines that the information no longer requires classification, it shall be declassified and, unless it is otherwise exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act, released to the requester. The DAS shall advise the original reviewing component of his or her decision.
§ 4a.8
Access to classified information by individuals outside the Government.
(a) Industrial, Educational, and Commercial Entities. Certain bidders, contractors, grantees, educational, scientific, or industrial organizations may receive classified information under the procedures prescribed by the National Industrial Security Program Operating Manual. |
doc-2770 | (d) The application may also include any other matters that the applicant wishes the adjudicative officer to consider in determining whether and in what amount an award should be made.
(e) The application shall be signed by the applicant or an authorized officer or attorney of the applicant. It shall also contain or be accompanied by a written verification under oath or under penalty of perjury that the information provided in the application is true and correct.
[47 FR 13510, Mar. 31, 1982, as amended at 53 FR 6799, Mar. 3, 1988]
§ 18.12
Net worth exhibit. |
doc-2771 | § 50.50
Request for certification.
(a) Upon request, the Census Bureau certifies certain statistical materials (such as the population and housing unit counts of government entities, published tabulations, maps, and other documents). The Census Bureau charges customers a preset fee for this service according to the kind of certification requested (either an impressed document or an attestation) and the level of difficulty involved in compiling it (easy, moderate, or difficult, determined according to the resources expended) as well as the set cost of the data product (e.g., report or map) to be certified. Certification prices are shown in the following table: |
doc-2772 | The final approval of selected proposals and award of assistance will be made by the NIST Grants Officer as described in the Federal Register notice announcing the competition. The award decision of the NIST Grants Officer is final.
§ 296.21
Evaluation criteria.
A proposal must be determined to be competitive against the Evaluation Criteria set forth in this section to receive funding under the Program. Additionally, no proposal will be funded unless the Program determines that it has scientific and technical merit and that the proposed research has strong potential for meeting identified areas of critical national need. |
doc-2773 | 5402(1)(B)).
(2) Petitions should be submitted to: FQA Document Certifications, NIST, 100 Bureau Drive, Gaithersburg, MD 20899.
(3) The Director, NIST, shall approve such petition if the document provides equal or greater rigor and reliability as compared to ISO/IEC Guide 58, including revisions from time to time. A petition shall contain sufficient information to allow the Director, NIST, to make this determination.
(e) Electronic copies of ISO/IEC Guides may be purchased through the American National Standards Institute (ANSI), Internet: http://www.ansi.org. Copies of the relevant ISO/IEC Guides are available for inspection in the U.S. |
doc-2774 | (c) Any member of the committee casting a negative ballot shall have the right to support an objection by furnishing the chairman of the committee and the Department with a written statement setting forth the basis for the objection. The written statement of objection shall be filed within 15 days after the date of the meeting during which the voting on the standard was accomplished, or, in the case of a letter ballot, within the time limit established for the return of the ballot. |
doc-2775 | (17) 16 U.S.C. 2465(a), Antarctic Protection Act of 1990,6
violation, maximum from $184,767 to $189,427.
(18) 16 U.S.C. 3373(a), Lacey Act Amendments of 1981 (1981):
(i) 16 U.S.C. 3373(a)(1), violation, maximum from $26,409 to $27,075.
(ii) 16 U.S.C. 3373(a)(2), violation, maximum from $660 to $677.
(19) 16 U.S.C. 3606(b)(1), Atlantic Salmon Convention Act of 1982,7
violation, maximum from $184,767 to $189,427. |
doc-2776 | (c) Demand means a request, order, or subpoena for testimony or documents for use in a legal proceeding.
(d) Department means the United States Department of Commerce and its constituent agencies.
(e) Document means any record, paper and other property held by the Department, including without limitation, official letters, telegrams, memoranda, reports, studies, calendar and diary entries, maps, graphs, pamphlets, notes, charts, tabulations, analyses, statistical or informational accumulations, any kind of summaries of meetings and conversations, film impressions, magnetic tapes and sound or mechanical reproductions. |
doc-2777 | (a) General. The agency shall operate each program or activity so that the program or activity, when viewed in its entirety, is readily accessible to and usable by individuals with handicaps. This paragraph does not—
(1) Necessarily require the agency to make each of its existing facilities accessible to and usable by individuals with handicaps; or
(2) Require the agency to take any action that it can demonstrate would result in a fundamental alteration in the nature of a program or activity or in undue financial and administrative burdens. |
doc-2778 | Commerce entities will certify to the Bureau of the Fiscal Service, in writing, that the Commerce debt is valid, delinquent, legally enforceable, and that there are no legal bars to collection by offset. In addition, Commerce entities will certify their compliance with the requirements described in this part.
(b) Non-centralized administrative offset for Commerce debts. (1) When centralized administrative offset through the Treasury Offset Program is not available or appropriate, Commerce entities may collect past-due, legally enforceable Commerce debts through non-centralized administrative offset. See 31 CFR 901.3(c). In these cases, Commerce entities may offset a payment internally or make an offset request directly to a Federal payment agency. |
doc-2779 | (d) Failure to appear. If a party fails to appear in person or by counsel at a scheduled hearing, the hearing may nevertheless proceed, and that party's failure to appear will not affect the validity of the hearing or any proceedings or action taken thereafter.
[61 FR 50558, Sept. 26, 1996. Redesignated and amended at 65 FR 39802, June 28, 2000]
§ 280.215
Interlocutory review of rulings. |
doc-2780 | (3) As used in paragraph (g)(1) of this section, the phrase:
(i) Physical or mental impairment means:
(A) Any physiological disorder or condition, cosmetic disfigurement, or anatomical loss affecting one or more of the following body systems: Neurological; musculoskeletal; special sense organs; respiratory, including speech organs; cardiovascular; reproductive; digestive; genito-urinary; hemic and lymphatic; skin; and endocrine; or
(B) Any mental or psychological disorder, such as mental retardation, organic brain syndrome, emotional or mental illness, and specific learning disabilities;
(C) The term “physical or mental impairment” includes, but is not limited to, such diseases and conditions as orthopedic, visual speech and hearing impairments, cerebral palsy, |
doc-2781 | In general, recipients should have available for the department racial and ethnic data showing the extent to which members of minority groups are beneficiaries of federally assisted programs. In the case in which a primary recipient extends Federal financial assistance to any other recipient, or under which a recipient is obligated to obtain or to cooperate in obtaining the compliance of other parties subject to this part, such other recipients or other parties shall also submit such compliance reports to the primary recipient or recipients as may be necessary to enable them to carry out their obligations under this part.
(c) Access to sources of information. |
doc-2782 | (22) 16 U.S.C. 5010, North Pacific Anadromous Stocks Act of 1992,9
violation, maximum from $184,767 to $189,427.
(23) 16 U.S.C. 5103(b)(2), Atlantic Coastal Fisheries Cooperative Management Act,10
violation, maximum from $184,767 to $189,427.
(24) 16 U.S.C. 5154(c)(1), Atlantic Striped Bass Conservation Act,11
violation, maximum from $184,767 to $189,427.
(25) 16 U.S.C. 5507(a), High Seas Fishing Compliance Act of 1995 (1995), violation, maximum from $160,484 to $164,531. |
doc-2783 | 8c.41-8c.48
[Reserved]
8c.49
Program accessibility: Discrimination prohibited.
8c.50
Program accessibility: Existing facilities.
8c.51
Program accessibility: New construction and alterations.
8c.52-8c.59
[Reserved]
8c.60
Communications.
8c.61-8c.69
[Reserved]
8c.70
Compliance procedures.
Authority:
29 U.S.C 794.
Source:
53 FR 19277, May 27, 1988, unless otherwise noted.
§ 8c.1
Purpose. |
doc-2784 | (c) If a Federal law enforcement agency suspects and notifies the Director that a building failure being investigated by a Team under the Act may have been caused by a criminal act, the Team, in consultation with the Federal law enforcement agency, will take necessary actions to ensure that evidence of the criminal act is preserved and that the original evidence or copies, as appropriate, are turned over to the appropriate law enforcement authorities.
Information Created Pursuant to an Investigation
§ 270.340
Information created by investigation participants who are not NIST employees.
Unless requested sooner by the Lead Investigator, at the conclusion of an investigation, each investigation participant who is not a NIST employee shall transfer any original information they created pursuant to the investigation to NIST. |
doc-2785 | When requested by the Standard Review Committee, the Department shall appoint one voting member from among the representatives of the Federal agencies, other than the Department of Commerce. All other representatives of Federal agencies on the Standard Review Committees shall be advisory nonvoting members. (Alternates to committee members may be designated by the Department.) When deemed appropriate by the Department, project funds under § 10.2 may be made available to assure participation by consumer interests on the committee at required meetings.
(b) A Standard Review Committee may remain in existence for a period necessary for the final development of the standard, or for 2 years, whichever is less.
(c) The Department shall be responsible for the organization of the committee. Any formal operating procedures developed by the committee shall be subject to approval by the Department. |
doc-2786 | If the Federal payment agency is another Commerce entity, the Commerce entity making the request shall do so through the Deputy Chief Financial Officer as described in § 19.20(c) of this part. At least thirty (30) days prior to offsetting internally or requesting a Federal agency to offset a salary payment, Commerce entities will send notice to the debtor in accordance with the requirements of § 19.4 of this part. When referring a Commerce debt for offset, Commerce entities will certify to the payment agency, in writing, that the Commerce debt is valid, delinquent and legally enforceable in the amount stated, and there are no legal bars to collection by salary offset. In addition, Commerce entities will certify that all due process and other prerequisites to salary offset have been met. |
doc-2787 | (i) Atlanta Regional Office, EDA, U.S. Department of Commerce, 401 West Peachtree Street NW., Suite 1820, Atlanta, Georgia 30308; Ph.: (404) 730-3006.
(ii) Austin Regional Office, EDA, U.S. Department of Commerce, 504 Lavaca Street, Suite 1100, Austin, Texas 78701; Ph.: (512) 381-8165.
(iii) Chicago Regional Office, EDA, U.S. Department of Commerce, 111 North Canal Street, Suite 855, Chicago, Illinois 60606; Ph.: (312) 353-8143.
(iv) Denver Regional Office, EDA, U.S. |
doc-2788 | (3) DOC will limit any deferral to the particular recipient and particular program or activity or part of such program or activity DOC finds in violation of these regulations. DOC will not base any part of a deferral on a finding with respect to any program or activity of the recipient which does not, and would not in connection with the new funds, receive Federal financial assistance for DOC.
§ 20.16
Hearings, decisions, post-termination proceedings.
Certain DOC procedural provisions applicable to Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 apply to DOC enforcement of these regulations. They are found in 15 CFR Part 8, § 8.12 and § 8.13. |
doc-2789 | (4) Educational institution is any school that operates a program of scholarly research. A requester in this fee category must show that the request is made in connection with his or her role at the educational institution. Educational institutions may include a preschool, a public or private elementary or secondary school, an institution of undergraduate higher education, an institution of graduate higher education, an institution of professional education, or an institution of vocational education A Department component may seek verification from the requester that the request is in furtherance of scholarly research and agencies will advise requesters of their placement in this category. Verification may be supported by a letter from a teacher, instructor, or professor written on the institution's letterhead or from an institutional email address and in which the body of the email outlines the research to be conducted. |
doc-2790 | (3) Where personal service, mailing, or delivery has been unsuccessful, service may also be effected by publication in the Federal Register.
(e) Witness fees. Witnesses will be entitled to the same fees and mileage as are paid to witnesses in the courts of the United States.
(f) Failure to obey a subpoena. If a person disobeys a subpoena issued by the Director under the Act, the Attorney General, acting on behalf of the Director, may bring civil action in a district court of the United States to enforce the subpoena. The court may punish a failure to obey an order of the court to comply with the subpoena as a contempt of court.
[68 FR 4694, Jan. |
doc-2791 | 501(c)(3)), or, in the case of a tax-exempt organization not required to obtain a ruling from the Internal Revenue Service on its exempt status, a statement that describes the basis for the applicant's belief that it qualifies under such section; or
(2) It states that it is a cooperative association as defined in section 15(a) of the Agricultural Marketing Act (12 U.S.C. 1141j(a)) and includes a copy of its charter or articles of incorporation.
(c) The application shall state the amount of fees and expenses for which an award is sought.
(d) The application may also include any other matters that the applicant wishes the adjudicative officer to consider in determining whether and in what amount an award should be made. |
doc-2792 | Occasionally, effective communication of results by NIST to the scientific community requires that a proprietary instrument, product, or material be identified in an NIST publication. Reference in an NIST publication, report, or other document to a proprietary item does not constitute endorsement or approval of that item and such reference should not be used in any way apart from the context of the NIST publication, report, or document without the advance express written consent of NIST.
§ 200.114
Fees and bills.
(a) In accordance with 15 U.S.C. 271 et seq., fees are charged for all measurement services performed by NIST, unless waived by the Director, or the Director's designee, when deemed to be in the interest of the Government. |
doc-2793 | App. 2160(f) (prohibition of use of confidential information for purposes of speculation) (Business and Defense Services Administration and any other primary operating unit affected); and
(d) Certain provisions of Pub. L. 89-136, the Public Works and Economic Development Act of 1965, e.g., section 711 (restriction on employing certain EDA employees by applicants for financial assistance), and section 710(b) (embezzlement), false book entries, sharing in loans, etc., and giving out unauthorized information for speculation). |
doc-2794 | (c) For purposes of computing the waiting period under paragraph (b)(1) of this section, a single point of contact is presumed to have received written notification 5 days after the date of mailing of such notification.
§ 13.11
Obligations in interstate situations.
(a) The Secretary is responsible for:
(1) Identifying proposed Federal financial assistance and direct Federal development that have an impact on interstate areas;
(2) Notifying appropriate officials and entities in states which have adopted a process and which select the Department's program or activity. |
doc-2795 | This incorporation by reference was approved by the Director of the Federal Register in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR part 51. Copies may be obtained from the IHS Inc., 15 Inverness Way East, Englewood, CO 80112, www.global.ihs.com, Phone: 800.854.7179 or 303.397.7956, Fax: 303.397.2740, Email: global@ihs.com. A copy is available for inspection in the Office of the Chief Counsel for NIST, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Telephone: (301) 975-2803, or at the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). |
doc-2796 | § 8b.21
Treatment of students.
(a) General. No qualified handicapped student shall, on the basis of handicap, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or otherwise be subjected to discrimination under any academic research, occupational training, housing, health insurance, counseling, financial aid, physical education, athletics, recreation, transportation, other extracurricular, or other post secondary education aid, benefits, or services to which this subpart applies. |
q-0 | What is classified as dunnage in the context of international freight transportation? |
q-1 | EEI filings must distinguish between domestic and foreign goods despite sharing HS codes. |
q-2 | A journalist preparing to submit a FOIA request can increase the likelihood of success by specifying the desired records in detail. |
q-3 | Who can get the census details of someone who's died when sorting out their estate? |
q-4 | What strategies can compliance officers employ to ascertain that citations for filing and exemption legends are conspicuously displayed on transportation documentation? |
q-5 | Students with disabilities who make the grade should get the same shot at sports and classes as everyone else. |
q-6 | What are the obligations of a designated department official in ensuring compliance with regulatory mandates? |
q-7 | Is it possible for clients to obtain complimentary preliminary consultations from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) regarding issues pertaining to measurements? |
q-8 | What happens if you don't pay your bills on time? |
q-9 | Admin Law Judges get their jobs according to Section 3105 of Title 5 in the U.S. Code. |
q-10 | Guide on declaring export goods properly. |
q-11 | When one government department gives money to another federal agency, that agency has to follow the department's specific rules about that cash so that the goals of the financial help are met. |
q-12 | When do you gotta file that Electronic Export Info if stuff sharing the same product number hits a certain value, regardless of whether it's local or international? |
q-13 | Which entities are responsible for the implementation and enforcement of regulations pertaining to commerce and trade? |
q-14 | What factors affect the calculation of civil penalties for regulatory breaches? |
q-15 | Pub. L. 89-136 bars EDA employees from working for financial aid applicants. |
q-16 | How should maternity leave be handled? |
q-17 | How often should employees be updated on regulatory changes? |
q-18 | Who can deny a spec request? |
q-19 | What are the constituents of a broadly understood manifestation of informed consent? |
q-20 | Who is responsible for conducting assessments? |
q-21 | The Department of Commerce is authorized to designate the performance attributes of CPILP, contingent upon the acquiescence of the respective agency. |
q-22 | Who is responsible for ensuring that buildings are accessible for entry? |
q-23 | What does conformity assessment entail? |
q-24 | The Census Bureau is authorized to provide the Electronic Export Information to the United States Principal Party in Interest or their designated representative. |
q-25 | What's in section 8b.17? |
q-26 | The procurement of monetary support from federal institutions imposes a non-negotiable condition upon the beneficiaries thereof, mandating the equitable provision of requisite aids and services to individuals with disabilities, thereby prohibiting any form of discriminatory practice in the allotment of said provisions. |
q-27 | Do folks who invent stuff at work get paid royalties? |
q-28 | Export shipments need commercial invoices and packing lists. |
q-29 | Is IRB approval needed for literary criticism? |
Subsets and Splits