12 CFR 281; as amended
effective February 16, 2005
* 8-830
SECTION 281.1—Policy Regarding the
Government in the Sunshine ActOn September
13, 1976, there was enacted into law the Government in the Sunshine
Act, Pub. L. No. 94-409, 90 Stat. 1241 (“Sunshine Act”), established
for the purpose of providing the public with the “fullest practicable
information regarding the decision-making processes of the Federal
Government * * * while protecting the rights of individuals and the
ability of the Government to carry out its responsibilities.”
1 The Sunshine Act applies only to those federal agencies that
are defined in section 552(e) of title 5 of the United States Code
and “headed by a collegial body composed of two or more individual
members, a majority of whom are appointed to such position by the
President with the advice and consent of the Senate, and any subdivision
thereof authorized to act on behalf of the agency.”
2
The Federal Open Market Committee (“FOMC”) is a separate
and independent statutory body within the Federal Reserve System.
In no respect is it an agent or “subdivision” of the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System (“Board of Governors”). It was originally
established by the Banking Act of 1933 and restructured in its present
form by the Banking Act of 1935 and subsequent legislation in 1942
(generally see 12 USC 263(a)). The FOMC’s membership is composed of
the seven members of the Board of Governors and five representatives
of the Federal Reserve Banks who are selected annually in accordance
with the procedures set forth in section 12A of the Federal Reserve
Act, 12 USC 263(a). Members of the Board of Governors serve in an
ex officio capacity on the FOMC by reason of their appointment as
members of the Board of Governors, not as a result of an appointment
“to such position” (the FOMC) by the President. Representatives of
the Reserve Banks serve on the FOMC not as a result of an appointment
“to such position” by the President, but rather by virtue of their
positions with the Reserve Banks and their selection pursuant to section
12A of the Federal Reserve Act. It is clear therefore that the FOMC
does not fall within the scope of an “agency” or “subdivision” as
defined in the Sunshine Act and consequently is not subject to the
provisions of that act.
As explained below, the act would not require the FOMC
to hold its meetings in open session even if the FOMC were covered
by the act. However, despite the conclusion reached that the Sunshine
Act does not apply to the FOMC, the FOMC has determined that its procedures
and timing of public disclosure already are conducted in accordance
with the spirit of the Sunshine Act, as that act would apply to deliberations
of the nature engaged in by the FOMC.
In the foregoing regard, the FOMC has noted that while
the act calls generally for open meetings of multi-member federal
agencies, 10 specific exemptions from the open meeting requirement
are provided to assure the ability of the government to carry out
its responsibilities. Among the exemptions provided is that which
authorizes any agency operating under the act to conduct closed meetings
where the subject of a meeting involves information “the premature
disclosure of which would—in the case of an agency which regulates
currencies, securities, commodities, or financial institutions, be
likely to lead to significant financial speculation in currencies,
securities, or commodities.”
3
As to meetings closed under such exemption, the act requires
the maintenance of either a transcript, electronic recording or minutes
and sets forth specified, detailed requirements as to the contents
and timing of disclosure of certain portions or all of such minutes.
The act permits the withholding from the public of the minutes where
disclosure would be likely to produce adverse consequences of the
nature described in the relevant exemptions.
The FOMC has reviewed the agenda of its monthly meetings
for the past three years and has determined that all such meetings
could have been closed pursuant to the exemption dealing with financial
speculation or other exemptions set forth in the Sunshine Act. The
FOMC has further determined that virtually all of its substantive
deliberations could have been preserved pursuant to the act’s minutes
requirements and that such minutes could similarly have been protected
against premature disclosure under the provisions of the act.
The FOMC’s deliberations are currently
reported by means of a document entitled “Record of Policy Actions”
which is released to the public approximately one month after the
meeting to which it relates. The Record of Policy Actions complies
with the act’s minutes requirements in that it contains a full and
accurate report of all matters of policy discussed and views presented,
clearly sets forth all policy actions taken by the FOMC and the reasons
therefor, and includes the votes by individual members on each policy
action. The timing of release of the Record of Policy Actions is fully
consistent with the act’s provisions assuring against premature release
of any item of discussion in an agency’s minutes that contains information
of a sensitive financial nature. In fact, by releasing the comprehensive
Record of Policy Actions to the public approximately a month after
each meeting, the FOMC exceeds the publication requirements that would
be mandated by the letter of the Sunshine Act.
Recognizing the congressional purpose underlying
the enactment of the Sunshine Act, the FOMC has determined to continue
its current practice and timing of public disclosures in the conviction
that its operations thus conducted are consistent with the intent
and spirit of the Sunshine Act.