PRIVACY ACT OF 1974

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
19
Document Creation Date: 
December 12, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 10, 2002
Sequence Number: 
86
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 17, 1974
Content Type: 
OPEN
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4.pdf3.38 MB
Body: 
ROUTING AND RECORD SHEET SUBJECT: (Optional) FROM: OLC EXTENSION NO. 7D35 HQ 6136 DATE 18 December 1974 TO: (Officer designation, room number, and building) DATE OFFICER'S COMMENTS (Number each comment to show from whom RECEIVED FORWARDED INITIALS to whom. Draw a line across column after each comment.) 1. Attached is the text of the Privacy Act, S. 3418, as it 2. passed the Senate. Our exemption is section (j)(1). Note that section (c)(4) on 3. page S. 21813 was erroneously included in our exemption; it is 4 being dropped by the House. House passage is expected without change and the bill should go 5. to the President for signature on Friday, 20 December. 6. ST TINTL 7, Assistant Legislative Counsel 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. STATINTL 15. Approved For Releas 2002/0 /28 : CIA -RDP76 00527R000700150086-4 3-62 610 USE EDITIO S ^ SECRET ^ CONFIDENTIAL ^ INTERNAL UNCLASSIFIED USE ONLY Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R04&15-604,6y4~$ '%" - 1808 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE December 17, 1974 airmail rates, and shall further consider the competitive disadvantage to U.S. flag air carriers resulting from foreign air carriers receiving Universal Postal Union rates for the carriage of U.S. mail and the national origin mail of their own countries." Mr. CANNON. Mr. President, this amendment simply eliminates the re- quirement that the UPU be paid for car- riage of foreign mail transportation and requires that that must be a factor taken into consideration by the Civil Aeronau- tics Board in fixing the rates. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The question is on agreeing to the amend- ment. Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, I have a question of the Senator from Nevada. Would this have a salutary effect on Pan American's- Mr. CANNON. Yes. The answer to the question is that this would have a salu- tary effect. The provision that we have requires the Board to act immediately in fixing a temporary rate pending the out- come of the mail rate case that is now under consideration before the Board. The passage of this bill would result in an increased payment to Pan Am upon the determination of the fair and reason- able rate to be paid, which has to be determined by the end of this month by the Civil Aeronautics Board. In addition, it has certain policy mat- ters set forth in the bill that we have already acted on that are going to re- quire the Department of State and the Board to get off the dime and try to help the U.S. air carriers, to try to pro- hibit discrimination against U.S. air car- riers that is carried on at the present time. Mr. GOLDWATER. I thank the Sena- tor very much. Mr. CANNON. Mr. President, I move that the Senate concur in the House amendment, with the amendment that we have just submitted. Tb . SIDING OFFICER. The ques- tion is on agreeing to the motion. The motion was agreed to. PRIVACY ACT OF Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President Chair to lay before the Sen sage from the House of Rep on S. 3418. The PRESIDING OFFICE fore the Senate the amendm House of Representatives (S. 3418) to establish a Priv 1974 , I ask the ate a mes- resentatives R laid be- ents of the to the bill acy Protec- tion Commission, to provide manage- ment systems in Federal agencies and certain other organizations with respect to the gathering and disclosure of in- formation concerning individuals, and for other purposes, as follows: Strike out all after the enacting clause, and insert: That this Act may be cited as the "Privacy Act of 1974". SEC. 2. (a) The Congress finds that- (1) the privacy of an individual is di- rectly affected by the collection, mainte- nance, use, and dissemination of personal information by Federal agencies; (2) the increasing use of computers and sophisticated information technology, while essential to the efficient operations of tha Government, has greatly magnified the harm to individual privacy that can occur from any collection, maintenance, use, or dis- semination of personal information; (3) the opportunities for an individual to secure employment, Insurance, and credit, and his right to due process, and other legal protections are endangered by the misuse of certain information systems; (4) the right to privacy is a personal and fundamental right protected by the Consti- tution of the United States; and - (5) in order to protect the privacy of in- dividuals identified in information systems maintained by Federal agencies, it is neces- sary and proper for the Congress to regulate the collection, maintenance, use, and dis- semination of information by such agencies. (b) The purpose of this Act is to provide certain safeguards for an individual against an invasion of personal privacy by requiring Federal agencies, except as otherwise pro- vided by law, to- (1) permit an individual to determine what records pertaining to him are collected, maintained, used, or disseminated by such agencies; (2) permit an Individual to prevent rec- ords pertaining to him obtained by such agencies for a particular purpose from being 'used or made available for another pur- pose without his consent; (3) permit an individual to gain access to information pertaining to him in Federal agency records, to have a copy made of all or any portion thereof, and to correct or amend such records; (4) collect, maintain, use, or disseminate any record of identifiable personal informa- tion in a manner that assures that such ac- tion Is for a necessary and lawful purpose, that the information is current and accurate for its intended use, and that adequate safe- guards are provided to prevent misuse of such information; (5) permit exemptions from the require- ments with respect to records provided in this Act only in those cases where there Is an important public policy need for such exemp- tion as has been determined by specific stat- utory authority; and (6) be subject to civil suit for any dam- ages which occur as a result of willful, arbi- trary, or capricious action which violates any individual's rights under this Act. ,SEc. 3. Title 6, United States Code, is amended by adding after section 552 the fol- lowing new section: "i 552a. Records maintained on individuals "(a) DEFINITIONS.-For purposes of this section- "(1) the term 'agency' means agency as defined in section 562(e) of this title; "(2) the term 'individual' means a citizen of the United States or an alien lawfully ad- mitted for permanent residence; "(3) the term 'maintain' includes main- tain, collect, use, or disseminate; "(4) the term 'record' means any collec- tion or grouping of information about an individual that is maintained by an agency and that contains his name, or the Identify- ing number, symbol, or other identifying particular assigned to the individual; "(5) the term 'system of records' means a group of any records under the control of any agency from which information is retrieved by the name of the individual or by some identifying number, symbol, or other identifying particular assigned to the individ- ual; and "(6) the term 'statistical research or re- porting record' means a record in a system of records maintained for statistical research or reporting purposes only and not used in whole or in part in making any determina- tion about an identifiable individual, except as provided by section 8 of title 13. " (b) CONDITIONS or DISCLOSURE: NO agen- cy shall disclose any record which is con- tained in a system of records by any means of communication to any person, or to an- other agency, except pursuant to a written request by, or with the prior written consent of, the. individual to whom the record per- tains, unless disclosure of the record would be- "(1) to those officers and employees of the agency which maintains the record who have a need for the record in the perform- ance of their duties; "(2) for a routine use described under sub- section (e) (2) (D) of this section; "(3) to the Bureau of the Census for pur- poses of planning or carrying out a census or survey or related activity pursuant to the provisions of title 13; "(4) to a recipient who has provided the agency with advance adequate written assur- ance that the record will be used solely as a statistical research or reporting record, and the record is to be transferred in a form that Is not individually identifiable; "(5) to the National Archives of the United States as a record which has sufficient his- torical or other value to warrant Its con- tinued preservation by the United States Government, or for evaluation by the Ad- ministrator of General Services or his desig- nee to determine whether the record has such value; "(6) to another agency or to an Instru- mentality of any governmental jurisdiction within or under the control of the United States for a law enforcement activity if the activity is authorized by law, and if the head of the agency or instrumentality has made a written request to the agency which maintains the record specifying the partic- ular portion desired and the law enforcement activity for which the record is sought; "(7) to a person who is actively engaged In saving the life of such individual, if upon such disclosure notification is transmitted to the last known address of such individual; "(8) to either House of Congress, or, to the extent of matter within its jurisdiction, any committee or subcommittee thereof, or any joint committee of Congress or subcommit- tee of any such, joint committee; or "(9) pursuant to the order of a court of competent jurisdiction. "(c) ACCOUNTING OF CERTAIN DLsCLO- suREs.--Each agency, with respect to each system of records under its control, shall- "(1) except for disclosures made under subsection (b) (1) of this section or dis- closures to the public from records which by law or regulation are open to public inspec- tion or copying, keep an accurate account- ing of- "(A) the date, nature, and purpose of each disclosure of a record to any person or to another agency made under subsection (b) of this section; and "(B) the name and address of the person or agency to whom the disclosure is made; "(2) retain the accounting made under paragraph (1) of this subsection for at least five years after the disclosure for which the accounting Is made; "(3) except for disclosures made under subsection (b) (6) of this section, make the accounting made under paragraph (1) of this subsection available to the individual named in the record at his request; and "(4) inform any person or other agency about any correction or notation of dispute made by the agency in accordance with sub; section (d) of this section of any record that has been disclosed to the person or agency within two years preceding the making of the correction of the record of the individ- ual, except that this paragraph shall not apply to any record that was disclosed prior to the effective date of this section or for which no accounting of the disclosure is re- quired. "(d) ACCESS TO RECORDS.--Each agency that maintains a system of records shall- "(1) upon request by any individual to Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 December 17, 1971 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE State must report back to the Secretary of Transportation *yho, with the ap- involved as a condition country. The Secretary of the cretary of payments in order to compensate the, money they are forced to pay for the are necessary to create a mechanis those payments. teruational agreement of the various na- tiorLal postal administrations, including the United States, in the Universal Postal Un'on-UPU. According to testimony in our hearings, foreign flag airline com- petitors received from the U.S. Govern- ment last year a mail transportation rate over six times higher than that paid to the U.S.-flag airlines. In contrast, most other nations of the world pay their international airlines the higher, internationally agreed upon mail rate for the transportation of inter- national mail. U.S. airlines compete in passenger and cargo markets with these same airlines at rates that are agreed to by International airlines and their governments to assure international parity for similar air transport services. However, in the case of mail payments, the third major source of international airline revenue, such parity does not exist. As a result ofthis disparity in mail when the U.S. Government arranges for the movement of people or goods to or between foreign ports. The Comptroller General of the United States is author- ized to approve payments to other car- riers only when there is a showing that it was necessary to engage their services in the particular Instance. Section 6 amends section 2 of the In- ternational Travel Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2122) in order to direct the Sec- retary of Commerce to promote and en- courage travel to and from the United States on U.S. air carriers. Mr. President, the only controversy over this bill arises out of differing views on the question of postal rates paid for the international carriage of airmail- rates paid by the United States to our carriers, rates paid by the United States to. foreign carriers, and rates paid by foreign govennients to their carriers and others for the transportation of air mail. Section 4 of the House-passed bill con- tains an amendment passed on the House floor by a narrow margin which was not supported by the Senate or by the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce when it reported this bill to the House floor. The amendment Is known as the Murphy amendment or the UPU amendment to most of my col- leagues. This provision amends the Fed- deral Aviation Act to eliminate discrimi- nation which now exists in rates paid to U.S.- and foreign-flag airlines by the U.S. Postal Service for the transportation of U.S. international mail. The provision precludes payment by our own Govern- ment of mail transportation rates to U.S.-flag airlines lower than those paid to foreign-flag airlines. The Federal Aviation Act empowers the CAB to set the rate to be paid U.S.-flag airlines for the transportation of Inter- national air mail. The rate being paid today, basically unchanged since 1968, averages $0.31 per ton-mile despite sub- stantial increases in airline costs and de- spite substantial increases in postal serv- ice revenue for international mail. foreign flag airlines up to $1.73 per ton- board finds appropriate. However, the mile for letter class mail, and 57.7 cents amendment admonishes the Board in per ton-mile for all other classes of mall. setting such rates that- This higher payment is the maximum It shall take into consideration rates paid rate for the air transportation of mail for transportation of mail pursuant to the which is established periodically by in- universal postal union convention as rati- craft in foreign air transportati In estab- Iishing such rates, the Board shal ake into consideration rates paid for transportation of mail pursuant to the Universal Postal Union Convention as ratified by the United States Government, shall take into account all of the rate-making elements employed by the Universal Postal Union in fixing its Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 tine inefficiencies of s,ir carriers. In effect, we believe th U mate is all Indirect subsidy for carr g the mail which many nations choose pay their air carriers and other air car rs with- out regard to realistic costs. Ile we realize that this Indirect subsi ation provides a competitive advanta to lnanv foreign airlines. we do not beve S 21807 fled by the United States Government, shall take into account all of the rate-making elements employed by the Universal Postal Union in fixing its airmail rates and shall further consider the competitive disadvan- tage to U.S. flag air carriersresulting from foreign air carriers receiving universal postal union rates for the carriage of U.S. mail and the national origin mail of their own countries. Mr. President, we think that this is a fair and equitable amendment and will result in mail rates that are just and reasonable taking into account all car- riers' costs, including the ever-rising cost of fuel and a reasonable return on in- vestment. While we are aware that there has been considerable lobbying of the Congress by Pan American Airways and its employees over the UPU postal rate, we still do not believe that that rate is justified by the facts. We In the Com- merce Committee feel that this bill as I have proposed to amend it will be very helpful in the future in making a better competitive climate in the international area without the need for indirect sub- sidy from the international arena. . I urge my colleagues to support this bill as I have proposed to amend it and send it back to the, House in hopes that the House might accept our amendment so as to Insure final passage and Presi- dential signature this year. Now, Mr. President, there was a hold placed on the bill by both Senators Mc- GEE and PRoxMIRE. The amendment that I am offering is satisfactory to' them. The proposed amendment has been ap- proved by the Commerce Committee, as I have stated, as of this morning. Mr. President, I send the amendment to the desk and ask that It be stated. The PRESIDING-OFFICER. The clerk will report. The assistant legislative clerk read as follows; On page 4, strike section 4 In its entirety and insert in lieu thereof: "Rates for trans- portation of United States mail in foreign air transportation." that that fact requires that the Unifd xne amendmenT, is as Iouows: States indirectly subsidize its privately on page 4, strike section 4 in its entirety owned airlines. Second, If the United and insert in lieu thereof; States paid the UPU postal rates to all TES FOR TRANSPORTATION OF UNITED STATES U.S. international airlines, the rate in- AIL IN FOREIGN AIR TRANSPORTATION crease would go to the financially healthy . 4. Subsection (h) of section 406 of International carriers as well as the rela- the eras Aviation Act of 1958 (49 U.S.C. tively weak. In other words, U.S. 1376) 1 mended by inserting "(1)" Imme- carriers not now experiencing financial diately r "(h) ", and by adding at the end thereof th difficulty would receive windfall revenues "(2) following new paragraph: r under the UPU rate which we do not Breac of State taekeanall and d the h necessary a master Gener each h shall take believe are justified. and appropria actions to assure that the Accordingly, the Senate Commerce rates paid for e transportation of mail Committee today approved all amend- pursuant to the versal Postal Union Con- ment to S. 3481, as passed by the House, vention shall not higher than fair and which would strike the mandatory UPU reasonable rates for uch services. The Sec- postal rates from the House bill and sub- retary of State and e Postmaster General stitute a provision similar to the Origin al shall oppose any pres t or proposed Uni- versal Postal Union ra which are higher Senate bill. than such fair and re unable rates. In effect, the committee amendment "(3) The Civil Aeronauti Board shall act continues to leave with the CAB the re- expeditiously on any propo d changes in for U.S. carriers at a level no the current Universal Postal Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 December 17, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE gain access to his record or to any informa- tion pertaining to him which is contained in the system, permit him to review the record and have a copy made of all or any portion thereof in a form comprehensible to him; "(2) permit the individual to request amendment of a record pertaining to him and either- "(A) make any correction of any portion thereof which the individual believes is not accurate, relevant, timely, or complete; or "(B) promptly inform the individual of its refusal to amend the record in accord- ance with his request, the reason for the refusal, the procedures' established by the agency for the individual to request a re- view by the agency of that refusal, and the name and business address of the official within the agency to whom the request for review may be taken; "(3) permit any individual who disagrees with the refusal of the agency to amend his record to request review of the refusal by the official named in accordance with paragraph (2) (B) of this subsection; and if, after the review, that official also refuses to amend the record in accordance with the request, per- mit the individual to file with the agency a concise statement setting forth the reasons for his disagreement with the refusal of the agency; "(4) in any disclosure, containing infor- mation about which the individual has filed a statement of disagreement, occurring after the filing of the statement under paragraph '(3) of this subsection, clearly note any por- tion of the record which -is disputed. and, upon request, provide copies of the state- ment and, if the agency deems it appropriate, copies of a concise statement of the reasons of the agency for not making the amend- ments requested, to persons or other agen- cies to whom the disputed record has been disclosed; and "(5) nothing in this section shall allow an individual access to any information com- plied ,in reasonable anticipation of a civil action or proceeding. "(e) AGENCY REQUIREMENTS.-Each agen- cy that maintains a system of records shall-. "(1) inform each individual whom it asks to supply information, on the form which it uses to collect the information or on a separate form that can be retained by the Individual- "(A) which Federal statute or regula- tion, if any, requires disclosure of the in- formation; "(B) the principal purpose or purposes for which the information 1s intended to be used; "(C) other purposes for which the informa- tion may be used, as published pursuant to paragraph (2) (D) of this subsection; and "(D) the effects on him, if any,. of not providing all or any part of the requested information; "(2) subject to the provisions of para- graph (5) of this subsection, publish in the Federal Register at least annually a notice of the existence and character of the sys- tem of records, which notice shall Include- "(A) the name and location of the sys- tem; "(B) the categories of individuals on whom records are maintained in the system; "(C) the categories of records maintained in the system; _"(D) each routine purpose for which the records contained in the system are used or intended to be used, including the cate- gories of users of the records for each such purpose; "(E) the policies and practices of the agency regarding storage, retrievability, access controls, retention, and disposal of the records; "(F) the title and business address of the agency official who is responsible for the system of records; "(G) the agency procedures whereby an Individual can be notified at his request if the system of records contains a record pertaining to him; and "(H) the agency procedures whereby an in- dividual can be notified at his request how he can gain access to any record pertaining to him contained in the system of records, and how he can contest its content; "(3) maintain all records which are used by the agency in making any determination about any individual with such accuracy, relevance, timeliness, and completeness as is reasonably necessary to assure fairness to the individual in the determination; "(4) maintain no record concerning the political or religious belief or activity of any individual, unless expressly authorized, by statute or by the individual about whom the record is maintained: Provided, however, That the provisions of this paragraph shall not be deemed to prohibit the maintenance of any record of activity which is pertinent to and within the scope of a duly authorized law enforcement activity; and "(5) at least 30 days prior to publication of information under paragraph (2) (D) of this subsection published in the Federal Register notice of the use or intended use of the information in the system, and provide an opportunity for interested persons to sub- mit written data, views, or arguments to the agency. "(f) AGENCY RULES.-In order to carry out the provisions of this section, each agency that maintains a system of records shall promulgate rules, in accordance with the re- quirements (including general notice) of section 553 of this title, which shall- "(1) establish procedures whereby an in- dividual can be notified in response to his re- quest if any system of records named by the individual contains a record pertaining to him; "(2) define reasonable times, places, and requirements for identifying an individual who requests his record or information per- taining to him before the agency shall make the record or information available to the individual; "(3) establish procedures for the disclosure to an individual upon his request of his record or information pertaining to him, including special procedure, if deemed neces- sary, for the disclosure to an individual of medical records, including psychological rec- ords, pertaining to him; "(4) establish procedures for reviewing a request from an individual concerning the amendment of any record or information per- taining to the individual, for making a de- termination on the request, for an appeal within the agency of an initial adverse agency determination, and for whatever addi- tional means the head of the agency may deem necessary for each individual to be able to exercise fully his rights under this section; and "(5) establish fees to be charged, if any, to any individual for making copies of his record, excluding the cost of any search for and review of the record. The Office of the Federal Register shall an- nually compile and publish the rules pro- mulgated under this subsection and agency notices published under subsection (e) (2) of this section in a form available to the public at low cost. "(g) (1) CIVIL REMEDIES.-Whenever -any agency (A) refuses to comply with an indi- vidual request under subsection (d) (1) of this section, (B) fails to maintain any record concerning any individual with such accu- racy, relevance, timeliness, and completeness as is necessary to assure fairness in any de- termination relating to . the qualifications, character, rights, or opportunities of, or ben- efits to the individual that may be made on the basis of records and consequently a de- termination is made which is adverse to the S 21809 individual, or (C) fails to comply with any other provision of this section, or any rule promulgated thereunder, in such a way as to have an adverse effect on an individual, the individual may bring a civil action against the agency, and the district courts of the United States shall have jurisdiction in the matters under the provisions of this sub- section. "(2) (A) In any suit brought under the provisions of subsection (g) (1) (A) of this section, the court may enjoin the agency from withholding the records and order the production to the complainant of any agency records improperly withheld from him. In such a case the court shall determine the matter de novo, and may examine the con- tents of any agency records in camera to de- termine whether, the records or any portion thereof may be withheld under any of the ex- emptions set forth in subsection (k) of this section, and the burden is on the agency to sustain its action. - "(B) The court may assess against the United States reasonable attorney fees and other litigation costs reasonably incurred in any case under this paragraph in which the complainant has substantially prevailed. "(3) In any suit brought under the provi- sions of subsection (g) (1) (B) or (C) of this section in which the court determines that the agency acted in a manner which was will- ful, arbitrary, or capricious, the United - States shall be liable to the individual in an amount equal to the sum of- "(A) actual damages sustained by the in- dividual as a result of the refusal or failure; and "(B) the costs of the action together with reasonable attorney fees as determined by the court. "(4) An action to enforce any liability created under this section may be brought in the district court of the United States in the district in which the complainant resides, or has his principal place of business, or in which the agency records are situated, or in the District of Columbia, without regard to the amount in controversy, within two years from. the date on which the cause of action arises, except that where an agency has ma- terially and willfully misrepresented any in- formation required under this section to be disclosed to an individual and the Informs-, tion so misrepresented is material to the establishment of the liability of the agency to the individual under this section, the action may be bought at any time within two years after discovery by the individual of the misrepresentation. "(h) RIGHTS OF LEGAL GUARDIANS.-For the purposes of this section, the parent of any minor, or the legal guardian of any individ- ual who has been declared to be incompetent due to physical or mental incapacity or age by a court of competent jurisdiction, may act on behalf of the individual. - "(i) (1) CRIMINAL PENALTIES.-Any officer or employee of the United States, who by virtue of his employment or official position, has possession of, or access to, agency rec- ords which contain individually identifiable information the disclosure of which is pro- hibited by this section or by rules or regu- lations established thereunder, and who knowing that disclosure of the specific ma- terial is so-prohibited, willfully discloses the material in any manner to any person or agency not entitled to receive it, shall be fined not more than $5,000. "(2) Any person who knowingly and will- fully requests or obtains any record concern- ing an individual from an agency under false pretenses shall be fined not more than $5,000. "(j) GENERAL EXEMPTIONS.-The head of any agency may promulgate rules, in accord- ance with the requirements (including gen- eral notice) of section 553 of this title, to exempt any system of records within the Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 S 21810 Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 CONGRESSIONAL. RECORD - SENATE December 17, 1974 agency from any part of this section except subsections (b) and (e) (2) (A) through (F) and (i) if the system of records is- "(1) maintained by the Central Intelli- gence Agency; or - "(2) maintained by an agency or compo- nent thereof which performs as its principal function any activity pertaining to the en- forcement of criminal laws, including police efforts to prevent, control, or reduce crime or to apprehend criminals, and the activities of prosecutors, courts, correctional, proba- tion, pardon, or parole authorities, and which consists of (A) Information com- piled for the purpose of identifying individ- ual criminal offenders and alleged offenders and consisting only of identifying data and notations of arrests, the nature and disposi- tion of criminal charges, sentencing, con- fineinent, release, and parole and probation status; (B) information compiled for the purpose of a criminal investigation, includ- ing reports of informants and Investigators, and associated with an identifiable individ- ual; or (C) reports identifiable to an in- dividual compiled at any stage of the proc- ess of enforcement of the criminal laws from arrest or indictment through release from supervision. "(k) SPECIFIC EXEMPTIONS.-The head of any agency may promulgate rules, in accord- ance with the requirements (including gen- eral notice) of section 553 of this title, to exempt any system of records within the agency from subsections (c) (3), (d), (e) (1), (e).(3) (G) and (H), and (f) of this section if the system of records is- "(;) subject to the provisions of section 552(b) (1) of this title; "(3) investigatory material compiled for law enforcement purposes, other than ma- terial within the scope of subsection (j) (2) of this section: Provided, however, That If any individual is denied any right, privilege. or benefit that he would otherwise be entitled by Federal law, or for which he would other- wise be eligible, as a result of the mainten- ance of such material, such material shall be provided to such individual, except to the extent that the disclosure of such material would reveal the identity of a source who furnished information to the Government under an express promise that the identity of the source would be held in confidence, or, prior to the effective date of this section, under an implied promise that the identity of the source would be held in confidence; "(2) maintained in connection with pro- viding protective services to the President of the United States or other individuals pur- suant to section 3056of title 18; "(E) required by statute to be maintained and eased -solely as statistical research or re- porting records; "(f;) investigatory material compiled solely for the purpose of determining suitability, eligibility, or qualifications for Federal civil- ian employment, military service, Federal contracts, or access to classified information, but only to the extent that the disclosure of such material would reveal the identity of a source who furnished information to the Government under an express promise that the identity of the source would be held in confidence, or, prior to the effective date of this section, under an implied promise that the identity of the source would be held in confidence; "(IS) testing or examination material used solely to determine individual qualifications for appointment or promotion in the Federal service the disclosure of which would com-pmise the objectivity or fairness of the testing or examination process; or mi"(i) evaluation material used to deter- ne potential for promotion in the armed services, but only to the extent that the disclosure of such material would reveal the identity of a source who furnished In- formation to the Government under an ex- press promise that the identity of the source would be held in confidence, or, prior to the effective date of this section, under an Implied promise that the Identity of the source would be held in confidence. "(1) (1) ARCHIVAL RECORDS.-Each agency record which isaccepted by the Administra- tor of General Services for storage, process- ing, and servicing In accordance with sec- tion 3103 of title 44 shall, for the purposes of this section, be considered t:) be main- tained by the agency which deposited the record and shall be subject to the provisions of this section. The Administrator of Gen- eral Services shall not disclose the record except to the agency which maintains the record, or under rules established by that agency which are not inconsistent with the provisions of this section. "(2) Each agency record pertaining to an identifiable individual which was transferred to the National Archives of 'he United States as a record which has sufficient his- torical or other valve to warra:at its con- tinued preservation by the United States Government, prior to the effective date of this section, shall, for the purposes of this section, be considered to be maintained by the National Archives and shall not be styb- ject to the provisions of this section. "(3) Each agency record pertaining to .an identifiable individual which is trans- ferred to the National Archieves of the United States as a record which has suffi- cient historical or other value to warrant its continued preservation by the United States Government, on or after the effec- tive date of this section, shall, for the pur- poses of this section, be considered to be maintained by the National Archives and shall be subject to all provisions of this section except subsections (e) (4); (d) (2), (3), and (4); (e) (1), (2) (H) and (3); (f) (4); (g) (1) (B) and (C), and (3). "(m) (1) MORATORIUM ON THE USE OF THE SOCIAL. SECURITY ACCOUNT NUMSER.-No Fed- eral agency, or any State or local govern- ment acting in compliance with any Fed- eeal law or federally assisted program, shall deny any individual any right, benefit, or privilege provided by law by reason of such individual's refusal to disclose his social se- curity account number. (2) This subsection shall not apply- (A) with respect to any system of rec- ords in existence and operating prior to January 1, 1975; and "(B) when disclosure of a soc:.al secur).y account number is required by Federal law. "(3) No Federal agency, or any State or local government acting in compliance with any Federal law or federally assisted program, shall use the social security account number for any purpose other than for verification of the identity of an individual unless such other purpose is specifically authorized by _ Federal law. "(n) ANNUAL REPORT.-The PreEadent shall submit to the Speaker of the House and the President of the Senate, by June 30 of ea--h calendar year, a consolidated report, sep- arately listing for each Federal agency the number of records contained in any system of records which were exempted from the application of this section under the provi- sions of subsections (j) and (It) of this section during the preceding calendar year, and the reasons for the exemption ?, and such other information as indicates efforts to ad- minister fully this section.". SEC. 4. The chapter analysis of chapter 5 of title 5, United States Code, is amended ?;y inserting: "552a. Records about individuals." immediately below: "552. Public information; agency rules, opin- ions, orders, and proceedings.". SEC. 5. The amendments made by this Act shall become effective on the one hundred and eightieth day following the date of en- actment of this Act. Amend the title so as to read: "An act to amend title 5, United States Code, by adding a section 552a to safeguard in- dividual privacy from the misuse of Fed- eral records and to provide that indi- viduals be granted access to records con- cerning them which are maintained by Federal agencies." Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, on Novem- ber 21, just before the Thanksgiving re- cess, both the Senate and the House adopted in different forms-- The PRESIDING OFFICER. Will the Senator suspend briefly until the Chair gets order in the Senate. I would like to ask the Members of the Senate to please bring order to the Chamber because the Senator from North Carolina is entitled to be heard and he cannot be heard. Would those members conversing please remove themselves to the cloakroom. The Senator will continue to suspend until there is order in the Chamber. The Senator may proceed. Mr. ERVIN. On November 21, just be- fore the Thanksgiving recess, both the Senate and the House passed in differ- ent forms Federal privacy legislation. Because of the limited amount of time available between the time of the recon- vening of Congress after the recess and the end of the session of Congress mem- bers of the Government Operations Committee of the Senate and the House agreed that they would have the different versions studied by their respective staffs during the recess. After the recess the members of the staffs who had made this study reported ?to- the members of the two committees, and after that the members of the two committees met informally and agreed on the amendments that I will offer in behalf of all the original cosponsors of the privacy bill. We thought this was a better way of doing it without having a conference and I have been assured by the members of the House Government Operations Committee interested in privacy legisla- tion, that the House will accept these amendments which I propose on behalf of myself and all of the original co- sponsors of the bill. The main differences between the two versions which are reconciled here was that instead of establishing a privacy board, as the Senate bill did,, that we will have a privacy study commission to study the subject and report back to the President, to the Senate, and to the House. We also eliminated, in deference to the House, provisions of the bill dealing with the private sector and we also elim- inated some of the provisions. dealing with law enforcement agencies. Now, Mr. President, on behalf of the original cosponsors of the Senate bill and myself, I make this motion. Mr. President, I move that the Senate agree to the engrossed amendments of the House to the bill (S. 3418) to estab- lish a Privacy Protection Commission, to provide management systems in Federal agencies and certain other organiza- tions with respect to the gathering and disclosure of information concerning in- dividuals, and for other purposes, with Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 December 17, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE S 21811 the following amendments to such en- grossed amendments: In lieu of the matter proposed to be .inserted by the House to the text of the bill, insert the following amendment which I now send to the desk. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendment will be stated. The assistant legislative clerk pro- ceeded to read the amendment. Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that further reading of the amendment be dispensed with. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The amendment is as follows: In lieu of the matter proposed to be inserted- by the House to the text of the bill, Insert the following: Tha this Act may be cited as the "Privacy Act of 1974". SEc. 2. (a) The Congress finds that- (1) the privacy of an individual is directly affected by the collection, maintenance, use, and dissemination of personal information by Federal agencies; (2) the increasing use of computers and sophisticated information technology, while essential to the efficient operations of the Government, has greatly magnified the harm to individual privacy that can occur from any collection, maintenance, use, or dissemi- nation of personal information; (3) the opportunities for an individual to secure -employment, insurance, and credit, and his right to due process, and other legal protections are endangered by the misuse of certain information systems; (4), the right to privacy is a personal and fundamental right protected by the Consti- tution of the United States; and (5) in order to protect the privacy of in- dividuals identified in information systems maintained by Federal agencies, It is neces- sary and proper for the Congress to regulate the collection, maintenance, use, and dis- semination of information by such agencies. (b) The purpose of this Act is to provide certain safeguards for an individual against an invasion of personal privacy by requiring Federal agencies, except as otherwise pro- vided by law, to- (1) permit an Individual to determine what records pertaining to him are collected, maintained, used, or disseminated by such ,agencies; (2) permit an individual to prevent records pertaining to him obtained by such agencies for a particular purpose from being used or made available for another purpose without his consent; (3) permit an individual to gain access to information pertaining to him in Federal agency records, to have a copy made of all or any portion thereof, and to correct or amend such records; (4) collect, maintain, use or disseminate any record of identifiable personal informa- tion in a manner that assures that such action is for a necessary and lawful purpose, that the information is current and accurate for its intended use, and that adequate safe- guards are provided to prevent misuse of such information; (5) permit exemptions from the require- ments with respect to records provided in this Act only in those cases where there is Am important public policy need for such ex- emption as has been determined by specific statutory authority; and - (6) be subject to civil suit for any dam- ---ages which occur as a result of willful or in- ternational action which violates any indivi- dual's rights under this Act. - SEc. 3. Title 5, United States Code, is amended by adding after section 552 the fol- lowing new section: "I 552a. Records maintained on Individuals "(a) DETINITIONS.-For purposes of this section- ".(I) the term 'agency' means agency as defined in section 552(e) of this title; "(2) the term 'Individual' means a citizen of the United States or an alien lawfully ad- mitted for permanent - residence; "(3) the term `maintain' includes main- tain, collect, use, or disseminate; "(4) the term 'record' means any item, collection, or grouping of information about an individual that is maintained by an agency, including, but not limited to, his education, financial transactions, medical history, and criminal or employment history and that contains his name, or the identi- fying number, symbol, or other identifying particular assigned to the individual, such as a finger or voice print or a photograph; "(5) the term 'system 9f records' means a group of any records under the control of any agency from which information is retrieved by the name of the individual or by some identifying number, symbol, or other identifying particular assigned to the in- dividual; "(6) the term 'statistical record' means a record in a system. of records maintained for statisical research or reporting purposes only and not used in whole or in part in making any determination about an identifiable in- dividual, except as provided by section 8 of title 13. "(7) the term 'routine use, means, with .respect to the disclosure of a record, the use of such record for a purpose which is com- patible with the purpose for which It was collected. "(b) CONDITIONS Or DISCLOSURE.-No agency shall disclose any record which is con- tained in a system of records by any means of communication to any person, or to an- other agency, except pursuant to a written request by, or with the prior written consent of, the individual to whom the record per- tains, unless disclosure of the record would be- "(1) to those officers and employees of the agency which maintains the record who have a need for the record in .the performance of their duties; - "(2) required under section 552 of this title; "(3) for a routine use as defined in subsec- tion (a) (7) of this section and dbscribed un- der subsection (e) (4) (D) of this section; "(4) to the Bureau of the Census for pur- poses of planning or tarrying out a census or survey or related activity pursuant to the provisions of title 13; "(5) to a recipient who has provided the agency with advance adequate written assur- ance that the record will be used solely as a statistical research or reporting record, and the record is to be transferred in a form that is not individually identifiable; "(6) to the National Archives of the United States as a record which has sufficient his- torical or other value to warrant its con- tinued preservation by the United States Government, or for evaluation by the Admin- istrator of General Services or his designee to determine whether the record has such value; "(7) to another agency or to an instru- mentality of any governmental jurisdiction within or under the control of the United States for a civil or criminal law enforce- ment activity if the activity is authorized by law, and if the head of the agency or instru- mentality has made a written request to the agency which maintains the record specify- ing the particular portion desired and the law enforcement activity for which the record is sought; "(8) to a person pursuant to a showing of compelling circumstances affecting the health or safety of an individual if upon such disclosure notification is transmitted to the last known address of such individual; 11(9) to either House of Congress, or, to the extent of matter within its jurisdiction, any committee or subcommittee thereof, any joint committee of Congress or subcommit- tee of any such joint committee; "(10) to the Comptroller General, or any of his authorized representatives, In the course of the performance of the duties of the General Accounting Office; or "(11) pursuant to the order of a court of competent jurisdiction. "(c) ACCOUNTING Os' CERTAIN DISCLO- sUREs.-Each agency, with respect to each system of records under its control, shall- "(1) except for disclosures made under subsections (b) (1) or (b) (2) of this sec- tion, keep an accurate accounting of- "(A) the date, nature, and purpose of each disclosure of a record to any person or to another agency made under subsection (b) of tAis section; and "(B) the name and address of the person or agency to whom the disclosure is made; "(2) retain the accounting made under paragraph (1) of this subsection for at lease five years or the life of the record, whichever is longer, after the disclosure for which the accounting is made; "(3) except for disclosures made under subsection (b) (7) of this section, make the accounting made under paragraph (1) of this subsection available to the individual named in the record at his request; and "(4) inform any person or other agency about any correction or notation of dis- pute made by the agency in accordance with subsection (d) of this section of any record that has been disclosed to the person or agency if an accounting of the disclosure was made. "(d) AccESS To RECORDS.-Each agency that maintains a system of records shall- "(1) upon request by any individual to gain access to his record or to any informa- tion pertaining to him which is contained in the system, permit him and upon his re- quest, a person of his own choosing to ac- company him, to review the record and have a copy made of all or any portion thereof in a form comprehensible to him, except that ,the agency may require the Individual to furnish a written statement authorizing dis- cussion, of that individual's record in the accompanying person's presence; "(2) permit the individual to - request amendment of a record pertaining to 'him and- . - "(A) not later than 10 days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal public holi- days) after the date of receipt of such re- quest, acknowledge in writing such receipt; and "(B) promptly, either- "(1) make any correction of any portion thereof which the individual believes is not accurate, relevant; timely, or complete; or "(ii) inform the individual of its refusal to amend the record in accordance with his request, the reason for the refusal, the pro- cedures established by the agency for the in- dividual to request a review of that refusal by the head of the agency or an officer desig- nated by the head of the agency, and the name and business address of that official; "(3) permit the individual who disagrees with the refusal of the agency to amend his record to request a review of such refusal, and not later than 30 days (excluding Satur- days, Sundays, and legal public holidays) from the data - on which - the individual re- quests such review, complete such review and make a final determination unless, for good cause shown, the head of the ' agency extends such 30-day period; and if, after his review, the reviewing official also refuses to amend the record in accordance with the request, permit the individual to file with Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 S 21812 Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE December 17, 1974 the agency a concise statement setting forth the reasons for his disagreement with the refusal of the agency, and notify the indi- vidual of the provisions for judicial review of the reviewing official's determination under subsection (g) (1) (A) of this section; 4) in any disclosure, containing informa- tion about which the individual has filed a statement of disagreement, occurring after the filing of the statement under paragraph (3) of this subsection, clearly note any por- tion of the record which is disputed and provide copies of the statement and, if the agency deems it appropriate, copies of a con- cise statement of the reasons of the agency for not making the amendments requested, to persons or other agencies to whom the dis- puted record has been disclosed; and "(5) nothing In this section shall allow an individual access to any information com- piled in reasonable anticipation of a civil action or proceeding. "{e) AGENCY REQUIREMENTS.-Each agency that maintains a system of records shall- " 11) maintain in its records only such in- formation about an individual as is relevant and necessary to accomplish -a purpose of the agency required to be accomplished by statute or by executive order of the President; "12) collect Information to the greatest extent practicable directly from the subject individual when the information may result in adverse determinations about an individ- ual's rights, benefits, and privileges under Federal programs; "(3) inform each individual whom it asks to supply information, on the form which it uses to collect the information or on a separate form that can be retained by the individual- "(A) the authority (whether' granted by statute, or by executive order of the Presi- dent) which authorizes the solicitation of the information and whether disclosure of such information is mandatory or voluntary; "(B) the principal purpose or purposes for which the information is intended to he used; "(C) the routine uses which may be made of the information, as published pursuant to paragraph (4) (D) of this subsection; and "(D) the effects on him, if any, of not pro- viding all or any part of the requested in- formation; "(4) subject to the provisions of para- graph (11) of this subsection, publish in the Federal Register at least annually a notice of the existence and character of the system of records, which notice shall include- "(A) the name and location of the system; "(B) the categories of individuals on whom records are maintained in the system; "(C) the categories of records maintained in the system; "(D) each routine use of the records con- tained in the system, including the cate- gories of users and the purpose of such use; "(E) the policies and practices of the agency regarding storage, retrievability, ac- cess controls, retention, and disposal of the records; "(F) the title and business address of the agency official who is responsible for the system of records; "(a) the agency procedures whereby an individual can be notified at his request if the system of records contains a record per- taining to him; "(H) the agency procedures whereby an in- dividual can be notified at his request how he can gain access to any record pertaining to him contained In the system of records, and how he can contest its content; and "(I) the categories of sources of records in the system; "(5) maintain all records which are used by the agency in making any determination about any Individual with such accuracy, relevance, timeliness, and completeness as is reasonably necessary to assure fairness to the individual In the determination; "(6) prior to disseminating any record about an individual to any person other than an agency, make reasonable efforts to assure that such records are accurate, complete, timely, and relevant; "(7) maintain no record describing how any individual exercises rights guaranteed by the first amendment unleis expre=sly authorized by statute or by the individual about whom the record is maintained or _in- less pertinent to and within the scope of an authorized law enforcement activity; "(8) make reasonable efforts to serve ro- tice on an individual when any record on such individual is made available to any per- son under compulsory legal process when such process becomes a matter of public record; "(9) establish rules of conduct for per- sons involved in the design, developnicsnt, operation, or maintenance of any system: of records, or in maintaining any record, and instruct each such person with respect to such rules and the requirements of this ?cc- tion, including any other rules and proce- dures adopted pursuant to this section and the penalties for noncompliance: "(10) establish appropriate administrative, technical, and physical safeguards to insure the security and confidentiality of records and to protect against any anticipated threats or hazards to their sec arity or in- tegrity which could result in substantial harm, embarassment, inconvenience, or _m- fairness to any individual on whom inor- mation is maintained; and "(11) at least 80 days prior to publication of information under paragraph (4) (D) of ,this subsection, publish in the federal Reg- ister notice of any new use or intended use of the information in the system, and pro- vide an opportunity for interested pers:,ns to submit written data, views, oc arguments to the agency. "(f) AGENCY RULEs_ In order to carry cut the provisions of this section, each agency that maintains a system of records shall promulgate rules, in accordance with the requirements (including genera; notice) of section 553 of this title, which shall- "(1) establish procedures whereby an In- dividual can be notified in response to its request if any system of record; named by the individual contains a record pertaining to him; "(2) define reasonable times, places, ned requirements for identifying an individual who requests his record or information -p=er- taining to him before the agency shall make the record or information available to the individual; "(3) establish procedures for the disclosure to an individual upon his request of his rec- ord or information pertaining to him, incl tid- ing special procedure, If deemed necessary, for the disclosure to an individual of medeal records, including psychological records, per- taining to him; - "(4) -establish procedures for reviewing a request from -an individual concerning the amendment of any record or information pertaining to the individual, for making a determination on the request, fcr an appeal within the agency of an initial adverse agency determination, and for whatever ad- ditional means may be necessary for each individual to be able to exercise fully his rights under this section; and "(5) establish fees to be charged, if any, to any individual for making copies of his' record, excluding the cost of any search for and review of the record. The Office of the Federal Register shall an( nually compile and publish the rules promul- gated under this subsection and agency notices published under subsection (e) (4) of this section in a form available to the public at low cost. "(g) (1) CIVIL REMEDIES.-Whenever any agency "(A) makes a determination under sub- section (d) (3) of this section not to amend an individual's record in accordance with his request, or fails to make such review in conformity with that subsection; - "(B) refuses to comply with an individual request under subsection (d) (1) of this section; "(C) fails to maintain any record con- cerning any individual with such accuracy, relevance, timeliness, and completeness as is necessary to assure fairness in my deter- mination relating to the qualifications, char- acter, rights, or opportunities of, or bene- fits to the individual that may be made on the basis of such record, and consequently a determination Is made which is adverse to the individual; or "(D) fails to comply with any other pro- vision of this section, or any rule promul- gated thereunder, in such a way as to have an adverse effect on an individual, the individual may bring a civil action against the agency, and the district courts of the United States shall have jurisdiction in the -matters under the provisions of this subsection. "(2)(A) In any suit, brought under the provisions of subsection (g) (1) (A) of this section, the court may order the agency to amend the individual's record in accord- ance with his request or in such other way as the court may direct. In such a case the court shall determine the matter de novo. "(B) The court may assess against the United States reasonable attorney fees and other litigation costs reasonably incurred in any case under this paragraph in which the complainant has substantially prevailed. "(3) (A) In any suit brought under the provisions of subsection (g) (1) (B) of this section, the court mayenjoin the "agency from withholding the records and order the production to - the complainant of any agency records improperly withheld from him. In such a case the court shall deter- mine the matter de novo, and may examine the contents of any agency records in camera to determine whether the records or any por- tion thereof may be withheld under any of the exemptions set forth in subsection (k) of this section, and the burden is on the agency to sustain its action. "(B) The court may assess against the United States reasonable attorney fees and other litigation costsreasonably incurred in any case under this paragraph in which the complainant has substantially prevailed. "(4) In any suit brought under the pro- visions of subsection (g) (1) (C) or (D) of this - section in which the court determines that the agency acted In a manner which was intentional or willful, the United States shall be liable to the individual in an amount equal to the sum of- "(A) actual damages sustained by the in- dividual as a result of therefusal or failure. but In no case shall a person entitled to recovery receive less than the sum of $1,000; and "(B) the costs of the action together with reasonable attorney fees as determined by the court. "(5) An action to enforce any liability created under this section may be brought In the district court of the United States in thedistrict in which the complainant resides, or has his principal place of business, or in which the agency records are situated, "or in the District of Columbia, without regard to the amount in controversy, within two year from the date on which the cause of action arises, except that where an agentty has materially and willfully misrepresented any information required under this section to be disclosed to an individual and the In- formation so misrepresented is material to the establishment of the liability of the agency to the individual under this section, Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 -W,"w Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 December 17, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE the action may be bought at any time within two years after discovery by the individual of the misrepresentation. Nothing in this section shall be construed to authorize any civil action by reason of any injury sustained as the result of a disclosure of a record prior to the effective date of this section. "(h) RIGHTS OF LEGAL GUARDIANS.-For the purposes of the section, the parent of any minor, or the legal guardian of any Indi- vidual who has been declared to be incom- petent due to physical or mental incapacity or age by a court of competent jurisdiction, may act on behalf of the individual. "(i) (1) CRIMINAL PENALTIES.-Any officer or employee of an agency, who by virtue of his employment or official position, has pos- session of, or access to, agency records which contain individually identifiable information the disclosure of which is prohibited by this section or by rules or regulations established thereunder, and who knowing that disclosure of the specific material is so prohibited, will- fully discloses the material in any manner to any person or agency not entitled to re- ceive it, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and fined not more than $5,000. "(2) Any officer or employee of any agency who willfully maintains a system of records without meeting the notice requirements of subsection (e) (4) of this section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and fined not more than $5,000. "(3) Any person who knowingly and will- fully requests or obtains any record concern- ing an individual from an agency under false pretenses shall be guilty.of a misdemeanor and fined not more than $5,000. "(j) GENERAL EXEMPTIONS.-The head of any agency may promulgate rules, in accord- ance with with the requirements (includ- ing general notice) of sections 553 (b) (1), (2), and (3), (c), and (e) of this title, to exempt any system of records within the agency from any part of this section except subsections (b), (c)(1), (2), and (4), (e)(4)(A) through (F) (e) (6), (7), (9), (10), and (11), and (1) if the system of records is- "(1) maintained by the Central Intelli- [ence Agency; or "' (2) maintained by an agency or compo- neat thereof which performs as its principal function any activity pertaining to the en- foi'fiement of criminal laws, including police effol to prevent, control, or reduce crime or to gpprehend ciriminals, and the activities of prosecutors, courts, correctional, proba- tion, pardon, or parole authorities, and which consists of (A) information compiled for. the purpose of identifying individual criminal offenders 'and alleged offenders and consist- ing only o4 identifying data and notations of arrests, ti3~e nature and disposition of crimi- nal charges, Sentencing, confinement, release, and parole and probation status; (B) infor- mation compiled for the purpose of a crimi- nal investigation, Including reports of in- formants and investigators, and associated with an identifiable individual; or (C) re- ports identifiable to an individual compiled at any stage of the process of enforcement of the criminal laws from arrest or indictment through refuse from supervision. At the time rules are adopted under this sub- section, the agency shall include in the state- ment required under section 553 (c) of this title, the reasons why the system of records is to be exempted from a provision of this section. "(k) SPECIFIC EXEMPTIONS.-The head of any agency may promulgate rules, in accord- ance with the requirements (including gen- eral notice) of sections 553(b) (1), (2) and (3), (c), and (e) of this title, to exempt any system of records within the agency from subsections (c) (3), (d), (e) (1), (e) (4) (G), (H), and (I), and (f) of this section if the system of records is "(2) investigatory material compiled for law enforcement purposes, other than mate- rial within the scope of subsection (j) (2) of this section: Provided, however, That if any individual is denied any right, privilege, or benefit that lie would otherwise be entitled by Federal law, or for which he would other- wise be eligible, as a result of the mainte- nance of such material, such material shall be provided to such individual, except to the extent that the disclosure of such material would reveal the identity of a source who fur- nished information to the Government under an express promise that the identity of the source would be held in confidence, or, prior to the effective date of this section, under an implied promise that the identity of the source would be held in confidence; "(3) maintained in connection with pro- viding protective services to the President of the United States or other individuals pursuant to section 3058 of title 18; "(4) required by statute to be maintained and used solely as statistical records; "(5) investigatory material compiled solely for the purpose of determining suitability, eligibility, or qualifications for Federal civilian employment, military service, Fed- eral contracts, or access to classified informa- tion, but only to the extent that the dis- closure of such material would eveal the identity of a source who furnished informa- tion to the Government under an express promise that the identity of the source would be held in confidence, or, prior to the effec- tive date of this section, under an implied promise that the identity of the source would be held in confidence; "(6) testing or examination material used solely to determine individual qualifications for appointment - or promotion in the Fed- eral service the disclosure of which would compromise the objectivity or fairness of the testing or examination process; or "(7) evaluation material used to deter- mine potential for promotion in the armed services, but only to the extent that the disclosure of such material would reveal the identity of a source who furnished informa- tion to the Government under an express promise that the identity of the source would be held in confidence, or,' prior to the effec- tive date of this section, under an implied promise that the identity of the source would. be held in confidence. At the time rules are adopted under this subsection, the agency shall include in the statement required under section 553(c) of this title, the reasons why the system of rec- ords is to be exempted from a provision of this section. "(l) (1) ARCHIVAL RECORDS.-Each agency record which is accepted by the Administra- tor of General Services for storage, processing, and servicing in accordance with section 3103 of title 44 shall, for the purposes of this section, be considered to be maintained by the agency which deposited the record and shall be subject to the provisions of this sec- tion. The Administrator of General Services shall not disclose the record except to the agency which maintains the record, or under rules established by that agency which are not inconsistent with the provisions of this section. "(2) Each agency record pertaining to an identifiable individual which was transferred to the National Archives of the United States as a record which has sufficient historical or other value to warrant its continued pres- eryation by the United States Government, prior to, the effective date of this section shall, for the purposes of this section, be considered to be maintained by the National Archives and shall not be subject to the pro- visions of this section, except that a state- ment generally describing such. records (modeled after the requirements relating to records subject to subsections (a) (4) (A) "(1) subject to the provisions of section through (G) of this section) shall be pub- 552(b) (1) of this title; fished in the Federal Register. S 21813 "(3) Each agency record pertaining to an identifiable Individual which is transferred to the National Archives- of the United States as a record which has sufficient historical or other value to warrant its continued pres- ervation by the United States Government, on or after the effective date of this section, shall, for the purposes of this section, be considered to be maintained by the National Archives and shall be exempt from the re- quirements of this section except subsections (e) (4) (A) through (0) and (e) (9) of this section. "(m) GOVERNMENT CONTRACTORS.-when an agency provides by a contract for the operation by or on behalf of the agency of a system of records to accomplish an agency function, the agency shall, consistent with its authority, cause the requirements of this section to be applied to such system. For purposes of subsection (1) of this section any such contractor and any employee of such contractor, if such contract is agreed to on or after the effective date of this sec- tion, shall be considered to be an employee of an agency. "(n) MAILING LISTS.-An individual's name and address may not be sold or rented by an agency unless such action is specifically au- thorized by law. This provision shall not be construed to require the withholding of names and addresses otherwise permitted to be made public. "(o) REPORT ON NEW SYSTEMS.-Each agency shall provide adequate advance no- tice to Coiigress and the Office of Man- agement and Budget of any proposal to es- tablish or alter any system of records in or- der to permit an evaluation of the probable or potential effect of such proposal on the pri- vacy and other personal or property rights of individuals or the disclosure of infor- mation relating to such individuals, and its effect on the preservation of the constitu- tional principles of federalism and separa- tion of powers. "(p) ANNUAL REPORT.-The President shall submit to the Speaker of the House and the President of the Senate, by June 30 of each calendar year, a consolidated report, separately listing for each Federal agency the number of records contained in any sys- tem of records which were exempted from the application of this section under the provisions of subsections (j) and (k) of this section during the preceding calendar year, and the reasons for the exemptions, and. such other information as indicates efforts to administer fully this section. "(q) EFFECT OF OTHER LAWS.-NO agency shall rely on any.' exemption contained in section 552 of this title to withhold from an individual any record which is otherwise accessible to such individual under the pro- visions of this section.". SEC. 4. The chapter analysis of chapter 5 of title 5, United States Code, is amended by inserting: . "552a. Records about individuals." immediately below:. "552. Public information; agency rules, opin- ions, orders, and proceedings.". SEC. B. (a) (1) There is established a Pri- vacy Protection Study Commission (here- inafter referred to as the "Commission") which shall be composed of seven members as follows: (A) three appointed by the President of the United States, (B) two appointed by the President cf the. Senate, and (C) two appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives. Members of the Commission shall be chosen from among persons who, by reason of their knowledge and expertise in any of the follow- ing areas-civil rights and liberties, law, social sciences, computer technology,. busi- ness, records management, and State and local government-are well qualified for serv- ice on the Commission. . Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 S 21814 CONGRESSIONAL. RECORD -SENATE December 17, 197: (2) The members of the Commission shall and other symbols to identify individuals in violate an Individual's right of privacy, elect a Chairman from among themselves. data banks and to gain access to, integrate, should be prohibited by statute from col- (3) Any vacancy in the membership of or centralize information systems and flee; lection by Federal agencies; and the Commission, as long as there are four and (4) upon request, prepare model legisla- members in office, shall not impair the (D) the matching and analysis of statis- tion for use by State and local governments power of the Commission but shall be filled tical data, such as Federal census data, with in establishing procedures for handling, in he same manner in which the original other sources of personal data, such as auto- maintaining, and disseminating personal in- appointment was made. mobile registries and telephone directo ies, formation at the State and local level and (4) A quorum of the Commission shall in order to reconstruct individual responses provide such technical assistance to State consist of a majority of the members, except to statistical questionnaires for commercial and local governments as they may require that the Commission may establish a lower or other purposes, in a way which tea rlts in the preparation and implementation of number as a quorum for the purpose of in a violation of the implied or explicitly such legislation. taking testimony. The Commission is au- recognized confidentiality of such infor na- (e) (1) The Commission may, in carrying thorized to establish such committees and Lion. out its functions-under this section, conduct delegate such authority to them as may be (2) (A) The Commission may include Ii. its such inspections, sit and act at such times necessary to carry out its functions. Each examination personal information activities and places, hold such hearings, take such member of the Commission, Including the in the following areas: medical; insurance; testimony, require by subpena the attend- Chairman, shall have equal responsibility - education; employment and personnel; credit, ance of such witnesses and the production and authority in all decisions and actions banking and financial institutions; credit of such books, records, papers, correspond- of the Commission, shall have full access to bureaus; the commercial reporting indussry; ence, and documents, administer such oaths, all information necessary to the performance cable television and other telecommunca- have such printing and binding done, and of their functions, and shall have one vote. tiors media; travel, hotel, and entertainment make such expenditures as the Commission Action of the Commission shall be deter- reservations; and electronic check process- deems advisable. A subpena shall be issued mined by a majority vote of the members 1ng. only upon an affirmative vote of a majority present. The Chairman (or a member desig- (13, The Commission shall include in its of all members of the Commission. Subpenas noted by the Chairman to be acting Chair- examination a study of- shall be issued under the signature of the man) shall be the official spokesman of the (1) whether a person engaged _n interstate Chairman or any member of the Commission Commission in its relations with the Con- commerce who maintains a mailing list designated by the Chairman and shall be gress, Government agencies, other persons, should be required to remove an individual's served by any person designated by the and the public, and, on behalf of the Com- name and address from such list upon re- Chairman or any such member. Any mem- mis.sion, shall see to the faithful execution quest of that individual; her of the Commission may administer oaths I of the administrative policies and decisions (ii) whether the Internal Revenue Ser"ice or affirmations to witnesses appearing be- of the Commission, and shall report there- should be prohibited from transferring in- fore the Commission. on to the Commission from time to time or dividually indentifiable data to other ag'n- as (2) (A) Each department, agency, and in the Commission may direct. ties and to agencies of State governments; strumentality of the executive branch of th: (5) (A) Whenever the Commission sub- . (iii) whether the Federal Government Government is authorized to furnish to the mits any budget estimate or request to the should be liable for general damages in- Commission, upon request made by the President r the office of Management mat a copy curred by an individual as the result of a Chairman,, such information, data, reports Budget, It shall concurrently py willful or intentional violation of the pr(-vi- and such other assistanceas the Commission of that request to Congress. sions of sections 552a (B) Whenever the Commission submits (g) (1) (C:) or (D) of deems necessary to carry out its functions title 5, United States Code; and under nder this 'section. Whenever the head head of any legislative recommendations, or testa- (iv) whether and how the standards for any such department, agency, or instrumen- mor.y, or comments on legislation to the security and - confidentiality of records re- tality submits a report pursuant to section President or Office of Management and oulred under section 552a (e) (10) of such 552a(o) of title 5, United States Code, a copy Budget, shall concurrently transmit or a title should be applied when a record is of such report shall be transmitted to the copy thereof to the Congress. disclosed to a person other than an ages cy Commission. agercy of the authority to require U td States have raby (C) The Commission may study such (B) In carrying out its functlol,, and ex- aut foex- authority to legislative recommendations, Commission to - other personal information activities neces- ercising its powers under this section, the mi its or comments latti- sary to carry out the congressi:onaI policy Commission may accept from any suc,)1 de- fioer or agy n she United ion, tto o a rt tsubn of- embodied in this Act, except that the Com- partment, agency, independent trumen-of ap proval, comments, or review, prior to the mission shall not investigate information tality, or other person any individl. tUy jde&,. submission of such recommen, r review prior tet- systems maintained by religious organl-'a- tifiable data If such data is necescar bons. carry out such powers acrd funct y to mony, or comments to the Congress. (3) In conducting such study, the Com-+ (b) The Commission shall- case In which the Commission mission shah-- (1 i make a study of the data banks, auto- (A) determine what laws, Executive ord,=rs, such information, it shall a the p .; 1a$ mated data processing programs, and in- which it is used only for upon p regulations, directives, and judicial decisions which t is provided, and upon ~ liar formation systems of governmental, regional, govern the activities under study and the of that purpose such inform ba and private organizations, in order to deter- on extent to which they are consistent with ~ ire destroyed or returned to such tih ~l mine the standards and procedures in force rights of privacy, due process of law, and i*&eAt. for the protection of personal information; sonn, te. other guarantees lnthe Constitution; son from independent which hich it it is is obtained, as as q ,per (B) determine to what extent goves?n- uRliate (3) The Commission shalln haw (2) recommend to the President and the mental and private information systems t,:~_ Congress the extent, if any, to which the affect Federal-State relations or the pr n- pr requirements and principles of section 552a ciple of separation of powers; ( ) executive appoint and director, the sucji nsation of of title 5, United States Code, should be ape (C) examine the standards and criteria staff personnel , and ess r y, wit on t plied to the information practices of those as may be nfchout governing g programs, policies, and practices regard ard to dersoth the provisions of title ; ,wititle 5, United tion, or an zatio s voluntary adoption ad mi such tree relating to the collection, soliciting, process- States Code, governing appointments in the org Ing, use, access, Integration, dissemination, competitive service, and without regard to such otherslegislative and n recommendations as it ancdi transmission of personal information; chapter 51 and subchapter III of chapter 53 may determine to be necessary to protect the of such title relating to classification and rivac of individuals while meetin the (D) to the maximum extent cai:ae, General Schedule pay rates, but at rates not p y g collect and utilize findings, reports, , studies, in excess of the maximum rate for GS-18 of legitimate needs of government and society hearing transcripts, and recommendations of the General Schedule under section 5332 of for information. governmental, legislative and private bodies, such title; and (c) (1) In the- course of conducting the institutions, organizations, and individuals study required under subsection (b) (1) of which pertain to the problems under study (B) procure temporary aas in uth rized this section, and in its reports thereon, the by the Commission. services to the same extent as is authorized section 3109 of title 5, United States Commission may research, examine, and (d) In addition to its other fu:ctions the Code. analyze- Commission may- C(A) interstate transfer of information (1) request assistance of the heads of The Commission may delegate any of its about individuals that is undertaken through appropriate departments, agencies, and in- functions to such personnel of the Commis- manual files or by computer or other elec- strumentalities of the Federal Government, sion as the Commission may designate and tronic or telecommunications means; of State and local governments, and otter may authorize such successive redelegations (B) data banks and information programs persons in carrying out its functions under of such functions as it may deem desirable. and systems the operation of which signifi- this Act; (4) The Commission is authorized- cantly or substantially affect the enjoyment (2) upon request, assist Federal agencies (A) to adopt, amend, and repeal rules and of the privacy and other personal and prop- In complying with the requirements of sec- regulations governing the manner of its erty rights of individuals; tion 552a of title 5, United States Code; operations, organization, and personnel; (C) the use of social security numbers, (3) determine what specific categories of (B) to enter into contracts or other license plate numbers, universal identifiers, information, the collection of which would arrangements or modifications thereof, with Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 December 17, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE any government, any department, agency, or independent instrumentality of the United States, or with any person, firm, association, or corporation, and such contracts or other arrangements, or modifications thereof, may be entered into without legal consideration, without performance or other bonds, and without regard to section 3709 of the Revised Statutes, as amended (41 U.S.C. 5) ; (c) to make advance, progress, and other payments which the Commission deems necessary under this Act without regard to the provisions of section 3648 of the Revised Statutes, as amended (31 U.S.C. 529); and (D) to take such other action as may be necessary to carry out its functions under this section. (f) (1) Each member of the Commis- sion who is an offictr or employee of the United States shall serve wtihout additional compensation, but shall continue to receive the salary of his regular position when engaged in the performanec of the duties vested in the Commission. (2) A member of the Commission other than one to whom paragraph (1) applies etiyll receive per diem at the maximum daily rate for OS-18 of the General Schedule when engaged in the actual performance of the duties vested in the Commission. (3) All members of the Commission shall be reimbursed for travel, subsistence, and other necessary expenses incurred by them in the, performance of the duties vested in the Commission. (g) The Commission shall, from time to time, and in an annual report, report to the President and the Congress on its activities in carrying out the provisions of this see- tion. The Commission shall make a final re- port to the President and to the Congress on its findings pursuant to the study re- quired to be made under subsection (b) (1) of this section not later than two years from the date on which all of the members of the Commission are appointed. The Com- mission shall cease to exist thirty days after the date on which its final report is sub-. Initted to the President and the Congress. (h) (1) Any member, officer, or employee of the Commission, who by virtue of his employment or official position, has posses- sion of, or access to, agency records which contain individually, identifiable informa- tion the disclosure of which is prohibited by this section, and who knowing that that disclosure of the specific material is so pro- hibited, willfully discloses the material in any manner to any person or agency not en- titled to receive it, shall be fined not more than $5,000. (2) Any person who knowingly and will- fully requests or obtains any record con- cerning an individual from the Commission under false pretenses shall be fined not more than $5,000. SEC. 6. The Office of Management and Budget shall- (1) develop guidelines and regulations for the use of agencies in implementing the provisions of section 552a of title.5, United States Code, as added by section 3 of this Act; and (2) provide continuing assistance to and oversight of the implementation of the pro- visions of such section by agencies. SEC. 7. (a) (1) It shall be unlawful for any Federal, State or local government agency to deny to any individual any right, bene- fit, or privilege provided by law because of such individual's refusal to disclose his social security account number. (2) The provisions of paragraph (1) of this subsection shall not apply with respect to- (A) any disclosure which is required by Federal statute, or (B) the disclosure of a social security number to any Federal, State, or local agency maintaining a system of records in existence and operating before January 1, 1975, if such disclosure was required under statute or regulation adopted prior to such date to verify the identity of an individual. (b) Any Federal, State,.or local govern- ment agency which requests an individual to disclose his social security account number shall inform that individual whether that disclosure Is mandatory or voluntary, by what. statutory or other authority such num- ber is solicited, and what uses will be made of it. SEC. 8. The provisions of this Act shall be effective on grid after the date of enactment, except that the amendments made by sec- tions 3 and 4 shall become effective 270 days following the day on which this Act is en- acted. SEC. 9. There is authorized to be appropri- ated to carry out the provisions of section 5 of this Act for fiscal years 1975, 1976, and 1977 the sum of $1,500,000, except that hot more than $760,000 may be expended during any such fiscal year. In lieu of the engrossed amendment to the title, insert the following: 'Amend the title so as to read: "An Act to amend title 5, United States Code, by adding a section 552a to safeguard individual pri- vacy from the misuse of Federal records, to provide that individuals be granted access to records concerning them which are main- tained by Federal agencies, to establish a Pri- vacy Protection Study Commission, and for other purposes." Mr. ERVIN. We preserve most of the essential elements of the Senate bill with these few minor changes. I have been asked by the distinguished Senator from Louisiana, as chairman of the Finance Committee, the question whether these amendments would inter- fere with the practice of the Internal Revenue Service in furnishing informa- tion to the State taxing authorities and to congressional committees, and my as- surance is that that will not be inter- fered with in any respect whatever. I would like to address more specifi- cally some other questions raised about how the bill will work with respect to tax information and tax returns. Spe- cifically, the questions relate to the ability of the IRS to disclose tax infor- mation under the provision of the bill that allows disclosure for a routine use under a purpose which is compatible with the purpose for which the informa- tion is collected. State and local tax agencies now heavily rely an Federal tax information and investigations when State agencies enforce their tax laws. For example, when the IRS sets up a deficiency against a taxpayer who lives in a State, the IRS frequently sends information on this deficiency to the State, or local, tax agency. The States use this information in collecting their own taxes. This infor- mation may be sent before the State it- self conducts any tax investigation on the individual. Under the bill, this is intended to con- stitute a routine use for a purpose com- patible with the purpose for which the information was collected, so the IRS could continue to send this information to the State and local tax agencies as is presently done. Also, the IRS sends to State, and lo- cal, tax agencies the Federal tax returns of individuals who live in the State so the State agency can check to see if the S 21815 individual has reported the same income and deductions on his Federal and State, or local, tax returns. Again, the States rely on this information in enforcing their own tax laws. Also, this informa- tion may be sent to a State before it conducts a tax investigation on its own. Under the bill, it is intended that this would be a routine use for a purpose compatible with the purpose for which the information is collected so the IRS can continue to send tax information to State and local tax agencies in this way. The IRS, of course, provides tax infor- mation on individuals to the Justice De- partment when the Justice Department is preparing a tax case against the in- dividual. This inforiiiation is used by the Justice Department in investigating and preparing tax cases and also is disclosed in court as the Justice Department pre- sents evidence against the individual. This disclosure both to the Justice De- partment and in court.would represent a routine use of the tax information compatible with the purpose for which it was collected and this disclosure would continue to be possible under the provi- sions of the bill. Under the bill tax returns and other tax information can-as under present law-be disclosed to the tax committees of the Congress-the Senate Finance Committee, the House Ways and Means Committee, and the Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. Under the bill this information can also continue to be disclosed to the staffs of these committees, as under present law. Under the bill an agency can disclose tax returns to either House of Congress or to committees of Congress-to the ex- tent of matters within their jurisdiction. Since tax returns can be disclosed by an agency to the Senate and House, it is intended that-as under present law- the committees which have received tax returns can also disclose them to the Senate or House, just as the Joint Com- mittee on Internal Revenue Taxation did with the tax information on President Nixon. I have also prepared an analysis of these amendments which I submit en- titled "Analysis of House and Senate Compromise Amendments to the Federal Privacy Act," which explains the pro- visions of the amendments. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that this statement be printed at this point in the RECORD. . There being no objection, the analysis was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: ANALYSIS OF HOUSE AND SENATE COMPROMISE AMENDMENTS TO THE FEDERAL PRIVACY ACT The establishment of a Privacy Protection Study Commission. Only the Senate bill pro- vided for an oversight and study commission to assist in the implementation of the act and to explore areas concerned with indi- vidual privacy-which have not been included in the provisions of this legislation. The compromise measure will establish a Privacy Protection Study Commission of seven members instead of the five provided in the Senate bill. Three of these members will be appointed by the President, two by the President of the Senate, and two by the Speaker of the House of Representatives. The membership should be represenata- Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 S -21816 Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE December 17, 1974 tive of the public at large who, by reason of their knowledge and expertise in the areas of civil rights and liberties, law, social sci- ences, and complete technology, business, and State and local government are well qualified for service on the Commission. While there is no statutory requirement, the Committees could expect that no more than flu members of the Commission could be members of one political party. 3t is intended that this commission, which wi'l serve for a period of two years, will be solely a study commission. In that capacity it is hoped the commission can assist the Executive Branch and the Congress in their examination of Federal government activi- ties-and their impact on privacy as well as representatives of State and local govern- ments and the private sector who are at- tempting to deal with this Important problem. The scope of the commission's study au- thority is outlined specifically within the legislation. In subsection (c) (2) (b), the commission is directed to examine certain issues which are not included in the com- promise between the House and Senate bill, such as a requirement that a person main- taining mailing lists remove an individual's name upon request; the question of prohib- iting the transfer of individually identifiable data from the Internal Revenue Service to other agencies and to Senate governments; a question of whether the Federal govern- ment should be liable for general damages occuring from a willful or intentional viola- tion of the provisions of (g) (1), (C) or (D) or this act; and the extent to which require- ments for security and confidentiality of rec- ords maintained under this act should be applied to a person other than an agency. The commission shall from time to timd and in an annual report, report to the Con- gre:us and to the President on Its activities, and it shall submit a final report of its findings two years from the date the mem- bers of the commission are appointed. Ia addition, the commission is authorized to provide necessary technical assistance and prepare model legislation upon request for State and local governments interested in adopting privacy legislation. Strict stand- ards and penalties are placed 'upon com- mission members and employees with regard to the handling and unl#wful distribution of information about individuals which it re- ceives in the course of carrying out its functions. While the provisions of the rest of this act do not go into effect until 270 days from the date of enactment, the commission is authorized to go into effect immediately upon the appointment of its members in order that some of its work may be available to the Congress and the Executive Branch by the time the remainder of the legislation becomes effective. ROUTINE USE The House bill contains a provision not provided for in the Senate measure exempt- ing certain disclosures of information from the requirement to obtain prior consent from the subject when the disclosure would be for a "routine use". The compromise would define "routine use" to mean; "with respect to the disclosure of a record, the use of such records for a purpose which is compatible with the purpose for which it was collected." Where the Senate bill would have placed tight restrictions upon the transfer of-per- sonal Information between or outside Fed- eral agencies, the House bill, under the rou- tine use provision, would permit an agency to describe its routine uses In the Federal Reg:ester and then disseminate the irfforma- tion without the consent of the individual or without applying the standards of ac- cursacy, relevancy, timeliness or completeness so long as no determination was being made about the subject. The compromise definition should serve- as a caution to agencies to think out in ad- vance what uses it will make of informa[on. This act is not intended to impose us due burdens on the transfer of information to the Treasury Department to complete pay- roll checks, the receipt of information by the Social Security Administration to complete quarterly posting of accounts, cr other .uch housekeeping measures and necessarily fre- quent interagency or intra-agency trans-fern of information. It is, however, intended to discourage the unnecessary exchange of in- formation to another person or to agencies who may not be as sensitive to the colled-Aug agency's reasons for using and interpresing the material. INFORMATION ON POLITICAL ACTIVTTM3 The House bill tells agencies that they may not maintain a record concerning the poli- tical or religious beliefs or activities of any individual unless maintenance of the record would be authorized expressly by statute or by the individual about whom the record is maintained. The House bill goes on to pro. vide that this subsection is not deemed. to prohibit the maintenance of any retort, or activity which is pertinent to and -within the scope of a duly authorized law enfo-?ce- ment-activity. The Senate- bill constitutes a prohibition against agency programs established- for the purpose of collecting or maintaining In- formation about how individuals exercise First Amendment rights unless the agency head specifically determines that the pro- grarn Is required for the administration of a statute. The compromise broadens the House pro- visions application to all First Amendment rights and directs the prohibition against the maintenance of records. However, as in the House bill, it does permit the mainte- nance, use, collection or dissemination of these records which are expressly authorized by statute or the Individual subject or are pertinent to a duly authorized law enforce- ment activity. CONFIDENTIAL SOURCES OF INFOR 5ATION The compromise provision for themairte- nance of information received from con- fidential sources represents an acceptance of the House language after receiving an assurance that. In no instance would that language deprivean individual from know- ing of the existence of any information main- tained in a record about him which was re= ceived from a "confidential source." The agencies would not be able to claim that dis- closure of even a small part of a particular item would reveal the identity of a confiden- tial source. The confidential :information would have to be characterized in some gen- eral way. The fact of the item's existence. and a general characterization of that item would have to be made known to the in- dividual in every case. Furthermore, the acceptance of this sec- tion in no way precludes an individual from knowing the substance and source of con- fidential information, should that informa- tion be used to deny him a promotion it a government job or access to classified re- formation or some other right, benefit or privilege for which he was entitled to bring legal action when the government wished to base any part of its legal case on that information. Finally, it is important to nose that the House provision would require that all fu- ture promises of confidentiality to sources of information be expressed and not implied promises. Under the authority to prepare guidelines for the administration of this act it is expected that the Office of Manage- ment and Budget will work closer with agen- cies to insure that Federal investigators make sparing use of the ability to make express promises of confidentiality. STANDARDS APPLIED TO DISSEMINATION OUTSIDL ? THE GOVERNMENT H.R. 16373 requires that all records which are used by an agency in making any deter- mination about an individual be maintained with such accuracy, relevance, timeliness and completeness as is reasonably necessary to assure fairness to the individual in the deter- mination. S. 3418 goes much further and re- quires that agenda apply these standards at any time that access is granted to the file, material is added to or taken from the file, or at any time it is used to make a deter- mination affecting the subject of the file. The difference between these two measures represents a difference in philosophy regard- ing the handling of personal information. The Senate measure is designed to comple- ment the requirement that agencies main- tain only information which is relevant and necessary to accomplish a statutory purpose. The standard of relevancy should be that statutory basis for an information program which is now set forth in (e) (1) of the com- promise measure. By adopting this section, the Senate hoped to encourage a periodic re- view of personal information contained to Federal records as those records were used or disseminated for any purpose. The House provision 'would have applied these important standards for maintenance of information in records at any time a de. termination is made about an individual. The House bill goes on to permit additional "routine uses" of information which may not rise to the threshhold of an "agency de- termination" without requiring that the in- formation be upgraded to meet these stand- ards. The compromise amendment would adopt the section of the House bill applying the standards of accuracy, relevance, timeliness and completeness at the time of a determi- nation. It would add the additional require- ment, however, that prior to the dissemina- tion of any record about an individual to any person other than an other agency, the send- ing agency shall make a reasonable -effort to assure that the record is accurate, complete, timely, and relevant. This proviso was in- cluded because Federal agencies would be governed by a requirement to clean up their records- before a determination is made and limited by a requirement to publish each routine use of information In the Federal Register, but the use of information by per- sons outside the Federal government would not be governed by this act. Therefore, agen- cies are directed to be far more careful about the dissemination of personal information to persons not governed by the enforcement provisions of this bill. THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT AND PRIVACY Perhaps the most difficult task in drafting Federal privacy legislation was that of de- terminingthe proper balance between the public's right to know about the conduct of, their government and their equally impor- tant right to have information which is per- sonal to them maintained with the greatest degreeof confidence by Federal agencies. The House bill made no specific provision for Freedom of Information Act requests of ma- terial which might contain information pro- tected by the Privacy Act. Instead, in the committee report on the bill, it recognized that: "This legislation would have an effect on subsection (b) (6) of the Freedom of Infor- mation Act (8 U.S.C., Section 552) which states that the provisions regarding disclo- sure of information to the public shall not apply to material 'the disclosure of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted In- vasion of personal privacy.' H.R. 16373 would make all individually identifiable Informa- tion in government files exempt from public disclosure. Such disclosure could be made available to the public only pursuant to rules Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 December 17, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE: S 21817 published by agencies In the Federal Register permitting the transfer of particular data to persons other than the individuals to whom they pertain." The committee report went on to express a desire that agencies continue to make cer- tain individually identifiable records open to the public because such disclosure would be In the public interest. - The Senate bill reflected the position of an earlier draft of the House measure in Sec'Eion 205 (b) where it provided that noth- in in the act shall' be construed to permit th'e withholding of any personal information wich is otherwise required to be disclosed by law or any regulation thereunder. This wsection was intended as specific recognition of the need to permit disclosure under the Freedom. of Information Act. The compromise amendment would add an additional condition of disclosure to the House bill which prohibits disclosure with- out written request of an individual unless disclosure of the record would be pursuant to Section 552 of the Freedom of Information Act. This compromise is designed to preserve the status quo as interpreted by the courts regarding the disclosure of personal infor- mation under that section. A related amendment taken from the Sen- ate bill would prohibit any agency from re- lying upon any exemption contained in Sec- tion 552 to withhold from an individual any record which is otherwise accessible to such individual under the provisions of this sec- tion. CIVIL REMEDIES Under the House bill an individual would be permitted to seek an injunction against an agency only to produce his record upon a failure of an agency to comply with his request. An individual would be able to sue for damages only if an agency failed to main- tain a record about him with such accuracy, relevance, timeliness and completeness as would be necessary to assure fairness and a determination about him, and consequently an adverse determination was made. A suit for damages would also be in order against an agency if it fails' to comply with any other provision of this act in such a way to have an adverse effect on the individual. Under the Senate bill Injunctive relief would be available to an individual to en- force any right granted to him. And an in- dividual would be permitted to sue for dam- ages for any action or omission of an officer or employee of the government who violates a provision of the act. The standard for recovery of damages un- der the House bill would have rested on the determination by a court that the agency acted in a manner which was willful, arbi- trary, or capricious. The Senate bill would have permitted recovery against an agency on a finding that the agency was negligent in handling his records. These amendments represent a compromise between the two positions, permitting an individual to seek injunctive relief to correct or amend a record maintained by an agency. In a suit for damages, the amendment re- flects a belief that a finding of willful, arbi- trary, or capricious action is too harsh a standard of proof for an individual to exer- cise the rights granted by this legislation. Thus the standard for recovery of damages was reduced to "willful or intentional" ac- tion by an agency. On a continuum between negligence and the very high standard of willful, arbitrary, or capricious conduct, this standard is viewed as only somewhat greater than gross negligence. Both the House and Senate bills povided for an individual to recover reasonable at- torney fees and costs of, litigation. The com- promise amendments adopt the standard of the House bill permitting the court to award attorney fees and reasonable costs to an in- dividual where the complainant has sub- stantially prevailed, in an injunctive action. Fees would be required to be paid with any award of damages. ACCESS AND CHALLENGE TO RECORDS The House bill would apply a standard of promptness to agency considerations of re- quests for access to records and requests to challenge or correct those records. In addi- tion, it allows the individual to request a review of a refusal to correct a record by the agency official named in its public notice of information systems. The Senate bill requires the agency to make a determination with respect to an in- dividual's request for a record change within 60'days of the request and to permit him a hearing within 30 days of a request for one, with extension for good cause permitted. The individual would have the option of a formal or informal hearing procedure within the agency upon a refusal of a request to correct or amend a record. The compromise amend- ment would require the agency to respond within 10 working days to acknowledge an individual's request to amend a record. Fol- lowing acknowledgement, the agency must promptly correct the information which the individual believes Is not accurate, relevant, timely or complete or inform the individual of its refusal. If the individual disagrees with the re- fusal of the agency to amend his record, the agency shall conduct a review of that refusal within 30 working days, provided than an extension may be obtained for good cause. We expect that agency heads will conduct these reviews themselves or assign officers of the rank of Deputy Assistant Secretary or above to review them. The House bill would not have permitted a Federal District Court to review de novo an agency's refusal to amend a record. The compromise adopts the Senate provision which would require a de novo review. of such refusal and to order a correction where merited. Finally, the compromise requires that in any disclosure of information sub- ject to disagreement that the agency include with the disclosure a notation of any dispute over the information or a copy of any state- ment submitted by the individual stating his reasons for disagreement with the Information. ,,. ACCOUNTING FOR DISCLOSURES Section c of the House bill requires an agency to ,inform any person or another agency about a correction or notation of dispute regarding a record that has been dis- closed to that person or agency within two years before making the correction or nota- tion. It would not apply if no accounting of the disclosure had been required. No such limitation was placed upon accounting for disclosures In the Senate bill and the Com- promise measure would require any person or agency receiving, the record at any time before a notation or dispute is made to be notified if an accounting of the disclosures were made. The House bill requires an agency to main- tain an accounting for disclosures for only five years. The Senate bill places no limita- tion on the length of time for maintaining such disclosures. The compromise amend- ment would require maintaining of the dis- closure for five years or the life of the rec- ord, whichever is longer. LIMITATIONS ON THE TYPES OF INFORMATION COLLECTED. AND THE USE OF THIRD PARTY INFORMATION The Senate bill requires Federal agencies to maintain only such information about an, individual as is relevant and necessary to accomplish a statutory purpose of the agen- cy. The House bill did not address this issue. The compromise amendment modifies the Senate provision to permit the collection of information which would be required to accomplish not only a purpose set out by a statute but also a purpose outlined by a Presidential Executive Order. The provision is included to limit the col- lection of extraneous information by Federal agencies. It requires that a conscious deci- sion be made that the information is re- quired to meet the needs of an agency as dictated by a statute. Agencies should for- mulate as precisely as possible the policy objectives to be served by a data gathering, activity before it is undertaken. It is hoped that multiple requests for information will be reduced and that agencies will collect no more sensitive personal information than Is necessary. The Senate bill- also requires agencies to collect information to' the greatest extent practicable directly from the subject when that information could result in an adverse determination about an Individual's rights and benefits and privileges under a Federal program. The House bill had no provision, but the compromise amendment accepts the Senate. language. This section is designed to discourage the collection of personal in- formation from third party sources and therefore to encourage the accuracy of Fed- eral data gathering. It supports the principle that an individual should to the greatest extent possible be in control of information about him which is given to the government. This may not be practical in all cases for financial or logistical reasons or because of other statutory requirements. However, it is a principle designed to insure fairness in information collection which should be in- stituted wherever possible. ARCHIVAL RECORDS The House bill provides that records ac- cepted by the Administrator of General Services for temporary storage and servicing shall be considered for purposes of this act, to be maintained by the agency which de- posits the records. Records transferred to the National Archives after the effective date of this Act for purposes of historical preserva- tion are considered to be maintained by the Archives and are subject only to limited provisions of the Act. Records transferred to the National Archives before the effective date of this Act are not subject to the provi- sions of this Act. The Senate bill provides that records ac- cepted by the Administrator of General Serv- ices for temporary storage and servicing shall be considered, for purposes of this Act, to be maintained by the agency which deposits the records. All records transferred to the Na- tional Archives for purposes of historical preservation are considered to be maintained by the Archives and are subject only to those provisions of this Act requiring annual pub- lic notice of the existence and character of the information systems maintained by the Archives, establishment of appropriate safe- guards to insure the security and integrity of preserved personal information, and promul- gation and implementation of rules to in- sure the effective enforcement of those safe- guards. The compromise amendment subjects rec- ords transferred to the National Archives for historical preservation to a modified. require- ment for annual public notice. It is intended that the notice provision not be applied sep- arately and speef cally to each of the many thousands of separate systems of records transferred to the Archives prior to the ef- fective date of this Act, but rather that a more general description be provided which pertains to meaningful groupings of record systems. However, record systems transferred to the Archives after the effective date of this Act are individually subject to the specific notice provisions. This coverage is intended to support and encourage improvements in the organization and cataloging of records maintained by the Archives, both to make authorized access to such records simpler and Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 S 21818 Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE December 17, 1 9 74 to insure broader application to Archival records of safeguards for data security and confidentiality. MORATORIUM ON THE USE OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY ACCOUNT NUMBER The House bill provides that a Federal agency, or a State or local government act- ing in compliance with Federal law or a federally assisted program, is prohibited from denying to individuals rights, benefits or privileges by reason of refusal to disclose the social security account number. Any such governmental agency is further pro- hibited fronf utilizing the social security account number for purposes apart from verification of individual identity except where another purpose is specifically au- thorized by law. Exempt from these prohibi- tions are systems of records in existence and operating prior to January 1, 1975. Ex- emption is further granted where disclosure of a social security account number is re- quired by Federal law. The Senate bill provides that a Federal agency, or a State or local government, is prohibited from- denying to individuals rights, benefits or privileges by reason of refusal to disclose the social security account number. Persons engaged in the business of commercial transactions or activities are prohibited from discriminating against any individual in the course of such activities by reason of refusal to disclose the social security account number. Exempt from these prohibitions are systems of records in existence and operating prior to January 1, 1975. Also exempt are disclosures of the so- cial security account number required by Federal law. This section further provides that any Federal, State or local government agency or any person who requests an indi- vidual to disclose his-social-security number shall inform that individual whether that disclosure is mandatory or voluntary, by what statutory or other authority such number is solicited, what uses will be made of it, and what rules of confidentiality will govern it. The compromise amendment changes the House language by broadening the coverage of State and local governments so as to pro- hibit any new activity by such a government that would condition a right, benefit or privilege upon an individual's disclosure of his social security account number. To clarify the intent of the Senate and House, the grandfather clause of this section was re-stated to exempt only those govern- mental uses of the social security account number continuing from before January 1, 1975, pursuant to a prior law or regulation that, for purposes of verifying identity, re- quired individuals to disclose their social security account number as a condition for exercising a right, benefit, or privilege. Thus, for illustration, after January 1, 1975, it will be unlawful to commence operation of a State or local government procedure that requires individuals to disclose their social security account number in order to register a motor vehicle, obtain a driver's license or other permit, or exercise the right to vote in an election. The House section was amended to include the Senate provision for informing an individual requested to dis- close his social security account number of the nature, authority and purpose of the request. This provision is intended to permit an individual to make an informed decision whether or not to disclose. the social security account number, and it is intended to bring recognition to, and discourage, unnecessary or improper uses of that number. MAILING LISTS - The Senate bill prohibits the sale or rental of an individual's name and address by a Federal agency unless such action is specifi- cally authorized by law. This section further provides that upon written request of any In- dividual, any person engaged in interstate commerce who maintains a mailing list shall remove the individual's name and address from such list. The compromise amendment accepts the Senate prohibition of the sale or rental of mailing lists by Federal agencies. Names and addresses associated with other personal in- formation obtained by Federal agencies pur- suant to statute or executive order, or by unauthorized means, are thus not permitted to be sold or rented to the publio. Public dis- closure of mailing lists by authority of Sec- tion 552(b), the Freedom of Infcrmatign Act, or by authority of other Federal law, is not prohibited. Public disclosure would be per- mitted in certain other circumstances w',ere the agency determines that the potential for adverse effects from such disclosure on the privacy or other rights of persons on a trail- ing list are inconsequential wad that the benefits likely to- accrue to such persons and to the general public are clear and signifi- cant. In this regard, a directive from, the OfficeOf Management and Budget forbidding disclosure by Federal agencies of a person's name absent his specific conse:it woulc be relevant to the intent of this subsection. RULEMAKING PROCEDURES FOR MAKING EXEMPTIONS To obtain an exemption from certain pro- visions of this Act under the House hill, agencies entitled to those exemptions Would berequired to public notice of the proposed exemptions in the Federal Register pursuant to Section 553 of the Administrative Proce- dures Act permitting comments. to be ?ub- mitted in writing for inclusion in the Reword with such exemptions. The Senate bill applied a much more stringent standard and would have required agencies to hold adjudicatory hearings as provided in APA Sections 556 and 557. 'rhe compromise agreement would no longer re- quire full adjudicatory preceeding -by any agency seeking an exemption permitted under the act. However, agencies would ,till be required to publish notice of a proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register and could not waive the 30 day period for such publica- tion. In addition it is specifically provided in this act that agencies obtaining such ex- emptions state the reasons why the system of records is to be exempted. Should ob- jection be filed with the Commission to any rulemaking exemption, It is expected ttiat the agency would respond specifically to each objection In setting forth its reason in support of the exemption. DUTIES OF THE OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET Under the Senate bill the Priwwacy Protec- tion Commission was directed to develop model guidelines and conduct certain over- sight of the implementation of this Act to Federal agencies. Since the compromise amendment would change the scope of .au- thority of the commission, it wcs felt there remained a need for an agency within the government to develop guidelines and regu- lations for agencies to use in implementing the provisions of the Act and to provide con- tinuing assistance to and oversight of the implementation of the provisions of this Act by the-agencies. This function has been assigned. to _he Office of Management and Budget. REPORTS ON NEW SYSTEMS Under the Senate bill the Privacy Pro- tection Commission was to have a central role in evaluating proposals to establish or alter new systems of information in the Fed- eral government. If the commission had de- termined that such a proposal was not in compliance with the standards established by the Senate bill the agency which prepared the report could not proceed to establish or modify an information system for 60 days in order to give the Congress and the President an opportunity to review that re- port and the commission's recommendations. The compromise amendment still would require that agencies provide adequate ad- vance notice to the Congress and to the Of- fice of Management and Budget oi any pro- posal to establish or alter a system of records in order to permit an evaluation cif the 'pri- vacy impact of that proposal. Irk addition to the privacy impact, consideratlpn sho a:id be given to the effect the proposal .may have on our Federal system and on the $eparatidn of powers between the three branches cif government. These concerns are expressed iii connection with recent proposals by thc; Gen- eral Services Administration and Depart- ment of Agriculture to establish-a giant data facility for the storing and sharing .of In- formation between those and perhaps other departments. The language in tl a Senate report on pages 64-66 reflects the Cgnceyn at- tached to the inclusion of this laiigiz:age in S. 3418. The acceptance of the compromise amend- ment does not question the motivation or need for improving the Federal government's data gathering and handling capabilities. It does express a concern, however, that the office charged with central management and oversight of Federal activities and the Con- gress have an opportunity to examine the impact of new or altered data systems on Our citizens, the provisions for confiden- tiality and security in those systems and the extent to which -the creation of the system will alter or change interagency or intergov- ernmental relationships related to informa- tion programs. GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS The Senate bill would have extended its provisions outside the Federal government only to those contractors, grantees or par- ticipants in agreements with the- Federal gov- ernment, where the purpose of the contract. grant or agreement was to establish or alter an information system. It addressed a con- cern over the policy governing the sharing of Federal criminal history information with State and local government law enforcement -agencies and for the amount of money which has been spent through the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration for the purchase of State and local government criminal in- formation systems. The compromise amendment would now permit Federal law enforcement agenciesto determine to what extent their information systems would be covered by the Act and to what extent they will extend that coverage to those with which they share that infor- mation or resources. At the same time it is recognized that many Federal agencies contract for the op- eration of systems of records on behalf of the agency in order to accomplish an agency function. It was provided therefore that such contracts if agreed to on or after the effective date of this legislation shall provide that those contractors and any employees of those contractors shall be considered to be em- ployees of an agency and subject to the pro- visions of the legislation. DEFINITION OF RECORD The definition of the term "Record' as provided in the House bill has been expanded to assure the intent that a record can in- clude as little as one descriptive item about an individual and that such records may in- corporate but not be limited to information about an individual's education, financial transactions, medical history, criminal or employment records, and that they may con- tain his name, or the identifying number, symbol, or other identifying particularly as- signed to the individual, such as a finger or voice print or a photograph. The amended Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 December 17, 197k CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE S 21819 ?i definition was adopted to more closely re- Mr. President, I am pleased to note that I wish to acknowledge also the valuable con flect the definition of "personal informa- the compromise which has been reached be- tributions of the Committees special con- tion" as used in the Senate bill. tween the Senate and the House on this pri- sultant, Professor Alan F. Westin of Colum- DEFINITION OF THE TERM AGENCY vacy legislation will provide for the estab- bia University, whose testimony in June and Some questions have been raised regard- lishment of a Privacy Protection Study expert counsel through the summer provided ing the applicability of H.R. 16373 and S. Commission. While the scope of the com- the basis for policy judgments and for de- 3418 to the U.S. Postal Service, the Postal mission's authority is not as broad as we tailed amendment of the bill in order that a Rate Commission and similarly related en- had sought in the Senate bill, it should workable proposal could be reported to the as an important function in provid- Senate. Professor Christopher Pyle of the titles. H.R. 16373 defines "agency" to mean an agency as defined in Section 552(e) of Title V. S. 3418 defines the term "Federal agency" to mean any department, agency, instru- mentality, or establishment in the Execu- tive Branch of the Government of the United States and includes any officer or employee thereof. A compromise agreement adopts the def- inition by reference to section 552(e) as provided in H.R. 16373. It is the Intention of the House and Senate that the Federal Pri- vacy Act clearly apply to the Postal .Service, the Postal Rate Commission, and government corporations or government controlled cor- porations now in existence or which may be created in the future as provided in Public Law 93-502, the amendments to the Free- dom of Information Act. While Section 410(a) of Title 39 of the U.S. Code exempts the Postal Service and Postal Rate Commission from legislation generally applicable to Federal agencies, barring a clear expression of Congressional intent to the contrary, is the considered in- tent of the committees which consider this legislation that it should apply to the Postal Service and Postal. Rate Commission, not- withstanding the operation of Title 39 Sec- tion 14(a) of the United States Code. Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, I have also ' prepared a statement giving credit to members of the Government Operations Committee, and another statement giv- ing credit to members of the Subcom- mittee on Constitutional Rights, which worked on privacy matters for many years,, commending them for their work. I would like to ask unanimous consent these be printed in the RECORD at this point. There being no objection, the state- ments were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: STATEMENT TO MEMBERS OF THE GOVERNMENT OPERATION COMMITTEE Mr. President, S. 3418 represents the cul- mination of many months of work by the Committee on Government Operations to fashion legislation that will guarantee the rights of all Americans with respect to the gathering, use, and disclosure of information about them by the Federal Government. Again, I want to express my gratitude to two members of this committee who have helped make this legislation possible Senator Percy from Illinois, the ranking minority member, and- Senator Muskie from Maine, the chairman of the Subcommittee on Inter- governmental Relations. Their efforts, and that of their staffs have been indispensible in helping to reach the compromise reflected in the amendments adopted by the Senate today. Great credit also is due to Senator Ribicoff, Senator Javits and the other cosponsors of this legislation as well as to all the members of the Committee on Government Opera- tions. Without their many valuable contribu- kind and caliber of information about prob- lems related to privacy in the public and private sectors which are needed to make informed decisions. I believe that this bill also strengthens the ability of the individual to enforce the rights granted to him under this act from the provisions which were contained in the House measure. Finally the compromise bill contains the minimum recommendations made for pro- tecting privacy and for establishing rules of due process for the Government's use of computer technology for personal data sys- tems. It is in keeping, with the recommenda- tion of the Committee on Government Opera- tions which stated the purpose of the Sen- ate bill is to: Promote government respect for the pri- vacy of citizens by requiring all departments and agencies of the executive branch and their employees to observe certain constitu- tional rules in the computerizing, collection, management, use and disclosure of personal information about individuals. It is to promote accountability, responsi- bility, legislative oversight,, and open gov- ernment with respect to the use of computer technology in the personal information sys- tems and data banks of the Federal gov- ernment and with respect to all of its other manual or mechanized files. It is designed to prevent the kind of il- legal, unwise, over-broad, investigation and record surveillance or law-abiding citizens which has resulted in recent years from ac- tions of some over-zealous investigators, from the curiosity of some government admini- strators, and from the wrongful disclosure and use of personal files held by Federal agencies. It is to prevent the secret gathering of information or the creation of secret infor- mation systems or data banks on Americans by employees of the departments and agencies of the Executive branch. It is designed to set in motion a long- overdue evaluation of the needs of the Fed- eral government- to acquire and retain per- sonal information on Americans, by requir- ing stricter review within agencies or criteria for collection and retention of such infor- mation. It is also to promote observance of valued principles of fairness and individual privacy by those who develop, operate and admini- ster other major institutional and organiza- tional data banks of government and society. While this is a momentous day for the Sen- ate, it's work in the field of privacy is not completed with the adoption of this legis- lation. It will require aggressive oversight by the Committee on Government Operations, and I would hope that Senator Muskie through his Subcommittee on Intergovern- mental Relations, and that Senator Percy, as the ranking minority member of the Com- mittee on Government Operations, will con- tinue to exercise their leadership in this re- gard. tions, we would have been unable to develop STATEMENT TO MEMBERS OF THE SUBCOMMITTEE the sensible bill that the committee reported - ON CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS unanimously to the Senate. Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, when the Senate Finally; the Committee wishes to express approved S. 3418 in November, I paid tribute appreciation for the valuable time and effort to the contributions of the members and the devoted to the drafting of this legislation by staff of the Government Operations Com- Mr. Bill Ticer, in the office of the Senate mittee and to t he staffs of the members of Legislative Counsel. - the Committee who had worked on the bill. John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, also. rendered valuable assistance to the Committee, as he has during his service as a consultant of the Constitutional Rights Subcommittee. Much credit is also due to Lawrence Baskir, former chief counsel of the Constitutional Rights Subcommittee, Mark Gitenstein, pres- ent chief Counsel of the Subcommittee, Irene Margolis, Dorothy Glanzer and the rest of the Subcommittee staff who helped immeas- urably in the development of the bill and report during the joint hearings and study. Furthermore, no person who has walked on Capitol Hill merits greater commenda- tion in this connection than Marcia Mac- Naughton, who served for a substantial, time on the staff of the Subcommittee on Consti- tutional Rights and made herself most knowledgeable in respect to privacy and the threats to it. During past months she left the academic world temporarily to aid the Senate Committee' on Government Opera- tions in the drafting of S. 3418. I believe the comprehensive hearings and studies of the Constitutional Rights Sub- committee have helped to provide the Con-. grass with an excellent basis for this and other needed legislation in years to come. I hope- the many published volumes of the result of the Subcommittee's work on pri- vacy, computers and data banks will aid, those working on this subject in the future. The members who serve on that Subcommit- tee have made many contributions to the protection of privacy by their sponsorship of legislation and their support and partici- pation of the investigations and reports which were needed to draft legislation. They have also provided the Executive Branch with the background and information for reports and action to protect privacy and I hope officials in all federal departments and agen- cies will continue to take advantage of this research and this documentation of public concern over governmental incursion on in- dividual freedoms. Since the Senate and the House passed their respective privacy bills, Jim Davidson has labored tirelessly to reconcile their varying provisions and thus make the en- actment of legislation to protect the rights of privacy of Americans possible. I will al- ways be grateful to him for his most help- ful assistance to me. Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, I would urge all Members of. the Senate to sup- port these amendments- with my assur- ance that I have been informed by the. House that the House will immediately take them and send the bill to the White House and we will have, for the first time in the history of our Nation, some effec- tive privacy legislation. Mr. PERCY. Mr. President, the com- promise privacy bill we bring before the Senate today is a remarkable achieve- ment. It marks the culmination of more than 10 years of concern and attention by the Congress to the fundamental issue of personal privacy. It represents the continuing efforts by the distinguished senior Senator from North Carolina (Mr. ERVIN) to cultivate that concern and I believe this legislation is a fine tribute to Senator ERVIN's work. I would like to strongly commend the staff of the Government Operations Com- mittee In their efforts to produce a com- Approved For Release 2002/01/28 :. CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 S21820 Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE December 17, 1974 promise with the House. Their diligent efforts have been quite crucial to the successful resolution of extremely diffi- cult policy differences. In this regard, I would like to give a special commenda- tion and extend my appreciation to M. Bill Ticer, office of the Senate Legislative Counsel, for his dedicated assistance to the committee staff during the past d months. I understand that his partiei?? pation was of immense value in clarify.. Ing difficult portions of the legislation. I also commend Congressman MOOR- -HEAD' Of Pennsylvania, Congressman ERLENBORN, and Congressman GOLD. WATER for their diligent efforts in con- nection with this legislation. I am pleased to note that the com?? promise which has been reached does in- elude a provision for a 2-year Privacy Protection Study Commission. While this Commission does not retain some of the enforcement powers afforded to it in the Senate-passed bill, S. 3418, I believe that It is certainly equipped to perform the functions intended by the Senate. The Commission will be responsible for as- sembling experts in the fields of com- puter science, law, social sciences, busi- ness, and Government to study and rec onmlend solutions to privacy problems not adequately addressed by this bill. I believe that the Commission will serve to keep focused attention on this im- portant issue of public policy so that Federal agencies, State and local govern- ments, and private organizations will continue to implement the basic prin- ciples of fair treatment for personal data contained in this bill. I am pleased that the compromise bill contains the provision, introduced by Senator GOLDWATER and myself, to limit abuses of the social security number. I look forward to a more final solution to the problems associated with this num- ber, which is widely used as a universal identifier in this country. The Privacy Protection Study Commission will study the problem and bring back to the Con- gress policy recommendations on this matter. Finally, I am pleased that Congress has acted with authority to establish, across the board In the Federal Government, fundamental protections of personal pri- vacy. The challenge now rests with the Federal agencies to adopt regulations and implement procedures to carry out the intent of this statute. We Intend to work with the agencies and we hope that they will cooperate fully, in return, withthe Government Operations Committees of both Houses, in their oversight capacity, and with the Privacy Protection Study Commission, In its study capacity. Mr. MUSKIE. Mr. President, this is a momentous day for the Senate and for every citizen of this country on whom the Government maintains a record. The compromise agreement which has been worked out between the Senate and - the House under the able leadership of the chairman of the Committee on Gov- ernment Operations, Mr. ERVIN, repre- sents the first major assault on the inva- sion of privacy in recent decades. . Mr. President, I would like to note the outstanding work in the development of this bill by Mr. James H. Davidson, of the staff of my Subcommittee on Iliter- governmental Relations, who has spent countless hours working on this legisla- tion. The passage of this legislation will rightfully earn for this Congress the rep- utation as the Privacy Congress. While the courts have begun to recog- nize the capacity and the practices of the government to invade the privacy of its citizens, it is the responsibility of the Congress to develop the legislative pro- teelion against those invasions. The Federal Privacy Act draws upon the constitutional and judicial recogni- tion accorded to the right of privacy and translates it into a system of procedural and substantive safeguards against ob- trusive Government information-gather- ing practices. Until now we have allowed techno- logical advances In Federal recordkeep- ing to outpace our efforts to control and safeguard the information-we have col- lected. This act would restore balance against those advances by adding new protections for every citizen. I am pleased to notethat this act has developed an important balance between the rights of privacy of each of our citi- zens and the public need for disclosure of Government materials under the Free- dom of Information Act. Mr. President, this legislation incor- porates fundamental rights of fair in- formation practices into Federal infor- mation systems. It is an Important be- ginning. And I hope to be able to follow the implementation of this act in the next Congress through the 'work of my Subcommittee on Intergovernmental Relations. Mr. BROCK. Will the Senator yield? Mr. ERVIN. I yield to the Senator from Tennessee. Mr. BROCK. Mr. President, may I take a moment to express my gratitude to the Senator from North Carolina for his leadership in a matter in which I have had, as so many others have had, a great, continuing, and growing concern. The privacy bill Is a much-needed piece of reform legislation which I am proud to have sponsored. - There Is no questionabout the abuse of personal privacy in this country, and it is growing at a geometric rate each year. I understand, for exan:;ple, that it is presently possible to have every tele- phone in America bugged. Privacy is not a privilege, it is a basic right, a fundamental freedom which is deeply rooted in our American heritage. It is the ability to be secure in our homes, persons, and papers. We simply must take firm and specific action to protect the people of this Nation from the erosion of their personal libertie=. This bill, which addresses itself to the use and abuse of Federal data banks, es- tablishes several basic standards. First, only relevant personal information can be collected, and the individual must. be informed as to which data i s required, which is voluntary, why it is needed, and under which authority. Second, cnly timely data may be maintained and dis- seminated, and access to, and security of, the data must be regulated. Addition- ally, the nature of all data banks must be announced. Individuals will have ac- cess to inspect their records and must be told the source of the data and how it is used. Finally, information challenged by an individual must be reinvestigated and, where proper, modified or corrected. I personally want to express my great debt to the Senator from North Caro- lina for his efforts to remedy this problem. We did have differences with the House, but the compromise is an effort to deal with those differences in a very frank and very healthy way. I appreciate the result of the labors of the gentleman and I want him to know it. Mr. ERVIN. I thank my friend from Tennessee and want to commend him for the work he did in the Government Operations Committee in this legislation. Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays on the motion. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second? There is a sufficient second. The yeas and nays were ordered. Mr. ERVIN. I yield the floor. Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from Nebraska. Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, I yfelc to the Senator from West Virginia, re-, serving my right to the floor, for a brief statement. AMENDMENT OF THE SOLID WASTI DISPOSAL ACT Mr. RANDOLPH. Mr. President, I"-- port from the Committee on Public Works H.R. 16045, and ask unanimous consent for its immediate consideration. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill will be stated by title. The assistant legislative clerk read as follows: A bill (H.R. 16045) to amend the Solid Waste Disposal Act to authorize appropria- tions for fiscal years 1975 and 1976 and to make certain technical and conforming changes, reported with an amendment. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection to the consideration of the bill. There being no objection, the Senate proceeded to consider the bill (H.R. 16045) which had been reported from the Committee on Public Works with an amendment to strike out all after the enacting clause and Insert: That paragraph (2) of subsection (a) of section 216 of the Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended (87 Stat. 11), is amended-by striking "and not to exceed $76,000.000 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1974." and in- serting in lieu thereof ", not to exceed $76,- 000,000 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1974, and not to exceed $76,000,000 for the fis- cal year ending June 30, 1975." The amendment was agreed to. The amendment was ordered to be engrossed and the bill to be read a third time. The bill was read the third time, and passed. The title was amended so as to read: "To amend the Solid Waste Disposal Act Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 December 17, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE S 21821 to authorize appropriations for fiscal year 1975." ORDER OF BUSINESS Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. Will the Sen- ator from Nebraska yield for 30 seconds without losing his right to the floor? Mr. HRUSKA. I am happy to yield. Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. With ' the understanding his remarks not be inter- rupted in the RECORD. Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. Mr. President, for the information of the Senators, following this rollcall I would anticipate another measure that will be coming up that would very likely generate another rollcall. I thank the Senator. PRIVACY ACT OF 1974 The Senate continued with the con- sideration of the message from the House of Representatives on the bill (S. 3418) to establish a Privacy Protection Com- mission, to provide management systems in Federal agencies and certain other organizations wtih respect to the gather- ing and disclosure of information con- cerning individuals, and for other purposes. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from Nebraska. Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, I rise to suggest that the consideration of the in- stant bill, S. 3418, pursuant to the mo- tion of the Senator from North Carolina, is not exactly in keeping with the better traditions of this body regarding con- sideration of legislative of this gravity. I am not going to take very long, but I would like to recite briefly the chronology of this legislation and what we are doing here today. Last month, Mr. President, S. 3418 was approved by this body and sent to the other body. The bill, incidentally, as passed by the Senate, was about 40 printed pages in length. The House also passed a measure, at approximately the same time, H.R. 16373, which dealt with the question of privacy individuals' records. While many provi- sions of the House and Senate bill were similar, the Senate version contained provisions establishing a privacy com- mission, with far reaching powers, and providing extensive coverage of law en- forcement records, features not found in the House bill. The other body took the Senate bill S. 3418, and, upon consideration thereof, voted to strike all but the enacting clause and insert entirely in place therein the text of H.R. 16373, which consisted of approximately 20 printed pages. Appar- ently, the members of the Senate Gov- ernment Operations Committee were dis- pleased with the House version. There was contact established between the staff of the Government Operations Committee of the Senate and the staff of the Government Operations Committee of the House. There emanated there- from, Mr. President, the text and the substance of the motion now pending by way of an -amendment to the House bill, which I understand was completed yesterday. This text, Mr. President, was sub- mitted to my, office less than 24 hours ago. it consists of approximately 40 pages of typewritten material. It is in many respects from the bill as passed by the Senate in the original instance. And it is different than the text of the bill that was approved by the other body. In addition to that text, I was fur- nished by the very courteous and dis- tinguished Senator from North Carolina with a copy-of his remarks, consisting of an analysis of House and Senate com- promise amendments to the Federal Privacy Act. Let me suggest, Mr. President, that this occurred about 24 hours ago. I be- lieve I received these remarks probably at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon and the actual text of the amendment shortly. after 6 p.m. We adjourned the Senate, Mr. Presi- dent, at about 6:40 p.m. yesterday. We convened at 9:30, as I remember it. I have been in committee most of the day. I started my first committee meeting at 9:30 this morning. I know all of my colleagues have been very busy in the later part of this ses- sion, in the closing hours of this session. I make no apology for the fact that I did not have time to read and to study this bill, nor the remarks of the Senator from North Carolina. I did impose upon my staff for the consumption on their part of a little midnight oil. I find, Mr. President, it is not quite as easy to ex- plain the lack of difference between the House bill and the compromise bill as we might imagine. There are some things that are of real substance. There are some items that are of very substantial difference; and, in my judgment, some items, on the basis of this staff analysis, that would bear close study and scrutiny, and which should receive a little more deliberate treatment than a mere consideration of the motion of amendment as proposed, and which we are considering now. Let me suggest, Mr. President, first of all there is the suggestion, and there is the representation made, that the law enforcement files are exempted. Of course, that was one of our original ob- jections to the bill as approved by the Senate. When I say "our" I mean those who are interested with me in the preservation of the integrity of law en- forcement' files, particularly the inves- tigatory files, and to prevent a. com- promise thereof. As I suggested at that time, the area of law. enforcement files is of such com- plexity that it should not be dealt with on the same terms as civil records. I believe it can be readily understood that criminal justice or law enforcement in- formation gives rise to problems requir- ing treatment different from that of in- formation used to carry out the social, health, or money benefit programs in which the Government may be involved. Law enforcement records should be treated in separate legislation. The Senate Constitutional Rights Subcommittee presently has such legis- lation before it, S. 2963 and S. 2964. Many 'hours of hearings and research have gone into perfecting the provisions of this legislation in order to strike a proper and equitable balance between the individual's rights to privacy and society's interest in receiving good and effective law enforcement. This legislation, represented by S. 2963 and S. 2964, is well along and near resolution. It is expected that similar legislation will be reported to the Sen- ate floor early next year. It is my under- standing that the Members in the House similiarly expect to act ox} legislation dealing with law enforcement files early in the next Congress. It is further my understanding that this was the reason that H.R. 16373 contained an exemption from most of its provisions for criminal law enforcement files and records, an exemption which I found acceptable. The staff compromise we have before us in the form of the amendment in question, however, narrows the law en- forcement exemption, by making addi- tional provisions of the bill applicable to law enforcement. For example, the requirement that an accounting of all disclosures of a record be kept for a period of 5 years, "or for the life of the record, whichever is the longer" would now be applied to law enforcement files. It should be noted that the statute of limitations for civil suits related to im- properly disclosed records is only 2 years. The provision that all future disclosures of the record be accompanied by notice of disputes as to its accuracy is also ap- plied to law enforcement records. Similarly, law enforcement would be covered by the requirement that pro- posed rulemaking hearings be held with respect to a statement of the routine uses to which records would be subject. The expanded coverage of the law en- forcement files is objectionable as a mat- ter of principle, and may raise serious practical problems of which we may be unaware after only a brief study of the amendment. Mr. PERCY. Would my distinguished colleague mind just a brief comment? If the distinguished Senator from Nebraska has finished the history of what hap- pened on this legislation, I think for pur- poses of accuracy it would be well to make one insertion. Mr. HRUSKA. I will yield briefly for that purpose. I do not want to detain the Senate too long. I shall cite one other example of detriment in the proposed amendment. Then I shall put the rest of this statement into the RECORD. If it is a brief comment, I will be happy to yield. Mr. PERCY. I very much appreciate the deep interest that our distinguished colleague has taken in this legislation. It would be, I believe, unfair to the Senate to assume, however, that what has resulted is a result only of staff dis- cussions between the House and Senate. Obviously, on this legislation, as in most legislation, staff has done a great deal of work. But we cannot overlook the fact that Senator ERVIN and myself, as the chairman and the ranking minority member of the Senate Government Op- erations Committee, and Congressman MOORHEAD of Pennsylvania, and Con- gressman ERLENBORN, of Illinois, as the House Foreign Operations and Govern- Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 S 21822 Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE December 17, 1974 merit Information Subcommittee chair- man and the ranking minority member of the House Government Operations Committee, met together for a very ex- tended session to discuss our respective bills. We worked out compromises. We nego- tiated differences. We came to an accord. and we put the stamp of approval oftwc Senators and two Congressmen, repre- senting the chairmen and ranking mem- bers of the respective committees, before it was brought before the Senate today. I believe that this one additional point would update and complete the historical account of this legislation up to this point. I thank my distinguished colleague. Mr. HRUSKA. I am happy to accept that supplement to the description of the history of this bill, Mr. President. It was not my intention to exclude from the consideration of the amendment be- fore us the participation by members of the committee. But the bulk of the work, I am confident, was done by the staff. Many of the changes pertaining to law enforcement may have been inadvert- ently included with a full realization of their total effect. Mr. President, -I am just going to out- line one other change. That has to do with the access to law enforcement rec- ords intelligence information by the pri- vacy commission. The compromise with which we are now confronted would create a seven-member study commission with a broad mandate to examine pri- vacy considerations as applied, Mr. Pres- ident, to Federal, State, and private records. The study commission would have full access to all information relating to the performance of their function, and it could Issue subpenas as to enforce its request for information. I am concerned, Mr. President, that individual's rights may be offended by fishing expeditions by the commission into the raw back- ground files maintained by the Govern- ment and into other particularly sen- sitive law enforcement and intelligence records. [ feel the compromise gives the com- mission too broad authority to examine Government records under the language in the bill. - I ask unanimous consent, Mr. Presi- dent, that this memorandum, which was prepared by staff and- from which I have quoted, and which I have checked with the text of the bill and its proposed compromise, be printed in the RECORD at this point. There being no objection, the memo- randum was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: MEMORANDUM The "final" staff compromise which Is now before the Senate presents real-prob- lenns for law enforcement generally. Exemption of law -enforcement files. H.R. 16.373 contained an exemption from most of its provisions for criminal law enforcement files and records. It was acceptable in this regard. The staff compromise narrows the law enforcement exemption, thus making additional provisions of the bill applicable to law enforcement. For example, the re- quirement that an accounting of all dis- closures of a- record be kept for a period of five years "or the life of the record wh ich- ever Is longer" would now be applied to law enforcement files. (Note that the statu?.e of limitations for civil suits relating to improp- erly disclosed records Is only two years). The provision that all future disclosures of the record be accompanied by notice of disputes as to its accuracy is also applied to law en- forcement records. Compare p. 24 with page 9. Similarly, law enforcement would be cov- ered by the requirement that proposed rule making hearings be held with respect to a statement of the "routine uses" to which such records would be subject. p. 17. The expanded coverage of law enforcement files Is objectionable as a matter of principle and may raise serious practical problems. New provisions concerning law enforce- ment. The staff compromise defines records as including not only collections of infoi!na- tion about Individuals but also an "item" of information about an individual. The intent of this change Is not clear but it could be read so broadly as to include any single piece of paper bearing an individual's name within the meaning of record even though it may be filed as part of an investigatory file on a corporation or on some other Indi- vidual. This would, among other things, re- quire that- annual notice of ouch "Items" be published in the Federal Register. See ?3(a)(4) [p.51 The new definition of record also includes a reference to fingerprints, voice prints and photographs. The same reference is not. In- chided, however, in the description of those law enforcement files which may be exempted from provisions of the bill such as Individual access to records or limitations on disclosure without the individual's consent. While it would be ludcrous to Interpret the bill to re- quire a fugitive's consent before his ph.oto- graph is displayed on a wanted roster, the bill literally has this effect. Moreover, it may be read to permit individual access to photo- graphs or voice prints in an investigatory file even though access to the file Itself is not permitted by the bill. 3(a) (4) [p. 5] "Routine" exchanges of inforrmation among government agencies--see 3(a) (7) [p. 6] 3 (b) (3) [p. 6]-are permitted by the bill so long as annual notice describi:ig such rou- tine exchanges is published. We were suc- cessful in obtaining a flower explanation of routine exchange In the House which would be helpful to law enforcement. The bill, how- ever, has added a definition of "routine use" which may present problems for law enforce- ment. "Routine" use is defined as that which is compatible wtih the purpose or which. the information was originally collected. There may be numerous exchanges of information with the FBI that are now undertaken by non-law enforcement agencies which would not fall within the scope of this definition, for example, Information concerning possible civil disturbance activities. If such exchanges do not fall within the definition of routine use then it would be necessary to- secure the consent of the individual before furnishing it to the FBI or It would be necessary for the Director to make a written request for the information. Since the information is of -;he sort nor- mally brought to our attention only when it is voluntarily provided to us, the provision for requesting such records is virtually meaningless. Among the new provisions added to the staff compromise is a requirement that be- fore disseminating a record the agency must assure that the record is accurate, com- plete, timely and relevant. No standard is provided as to the proper application of these terms. The provision Is applicable to law enforcement files as well as all other records. It would, of course, put the burden on the Identification Division no assure the completeness and relevance, as well as ac- curacy, of all rap sheets before disserrina- tion. Moreover, it would appear to require that investigatory files be accurate, complete, timely and relevant before they are dis- seminated regardless of the purpose of the dissemination. Presumably this would even apply to old Investigatory records made available pursuant to the historic records policy adopted under the Freedom of In- formation Act.-See ? 3(e) (6) p. 16 Access to law enforcement records. The staff compromise would create a seven mem- ber study commission with?a broad mandate to examine privacy considerations as applied to federal, state and private records.. The study commission would have "full access to all information relating to the performance of their functions" and could issue sub- poenas to enforce its requests for informa- tion. This could include requests for "raw files" and other sensitive law enforcement and intelligence records. The staff compro- mise, we feel, gives the Commission top broad authority to examine government records. [p. 381 ? 5(e) (1) Civil law enforcement problems. The bill requires that whenever an agency seeks in- formation from an individual it must in- form him of the source of Its authority to seek the information, the purpose for which it Is sought, routine uses- that may be made of it, and the effects of not providing the in- formation. Criminal law enforcement is exempt from these provisions but civil law enforcement is not. In certain cases such as civil frauds, civil rights investigations, anti- trust investigations, etc. this may produce an inhibiting effect on a potential witness. (There isalso the Incidental burden of in- cluding all of this information on all appli- cant forms as well.) . In a related vein, each agency is required to publish annually a description of its rec- ords systems. Except in the case of law en- forcement, national defense, and similar files, a description of the "categories of sources" Is to be included in the description. This too may present difficulties with respect to civil rights, fraud, and antitrust investigations where sources may require as much protec- tion as they do in criminal cases. An agency would be required to serve no- tice on an individual when a record pertain- ing to the individual is to be disclosed sub- ject to "compulsory legal process." While law enforcement records would be exempt from this requirement, civil investigatory files would not be. Again this-may present particular problems with respect to those civil actions which are quasi-criminal In na- ture. Moreover, it places an enormous bur- den on agencies and may, through motions to quash and similar interventions, seriously delay civil litigation. Relationship to Freedom of Information Act. The Staff draft expressly provides that nothing in the Freedom of Information Act permits withholding a record from the sub- ject of that record. This presents no serious problems since the bill itself permits with- holding investigatory and similar files from the individual. The bill also provides, how- ever, that disclosure is not permitted with- out an individual's consent unless disclosure would be required under FOI. Since the FOI Act itself authorizes the refusal of disclosure where this would constitute an "unwar- ranted invasion of privacy" the privacy bill's disclaimer of any intent to affect FOI is circular. In the face of the disclaimer, the government's efforts to mesh the two bills when faced with litigation over the nondis- elcsure of records to protect privacy may meet considerable difficulty. Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, the mo- tion before us and the amendment before us may be a good one. It may have merit. Maybe that would be the ultimate re- sult of the action taken by the Senate. As I indicated when S. 3418 was before Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 December 17, .197.E CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE S 21823 us last month, Mr. President, I share the objective of my good friend from North Carolina to protect Americans in their right to privacy. The declared purposes of this bill are desirable and worthy. It is, Mr. President, only some of the spe- cific features of the bill, which I have mentioned briefly, with which I have question. I do not know how many copies of this 40-page typewritten manuscript which contains the compromise measure have been made, or how many are available. As I indicated, I did not get one in my office until 6:30 last night. I have not made inquiry as to its distribution. It just seems to me that notwithstanding the lateness of this session, this subject and this measure are entitled to a little more deliberate, proper, and complete consideration by the Senate. It is an important subject and I hope that in our rush to enact this legislation that we are not inadvertently including provisions that will trouble us later. I have no disposition to get into the matter of proposing an amendment at this time. If I did, Mr. President, I would propose an amendment by way of a sub- stitute to reinstate, a substitute for the Ervin amendment, by way of a substitute to that, the text of the bill as originally passed by the House, which was under- standable, which had been closely stud- ied; and with which we have had some familiarity. I shall not do that, because to do that at this late hour would be putting the Senate in the same position with regard to that substitute measure that it is placed in with regard to the principal amendment-to wit, we would not have that discretion and we would not have that amplification upon the content of the amendment, and that would not be'fair. So I submit again, Mr. President, that it is a mistake to proceed at this late hour with the consideration of the pend- ing amendment. It is my hope that it will not be approved. If the amendment before us does not succeed, we will have before the House version of the privacy bill which I find an extremely meritorous measure. It will readily achieve the ob- jectives of the protection of privacy we seek and would receive my strong sup- port. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The ques- tion is on agreeing to the motion of the Senator from North Carolina. On this question the yeas and nays have been ordered, and the clerk will call the roll. The legislative clerk called the roll. Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. I announce that the Senator from Texas (Mr. BENT- sEN), the Senator from Nevada (Mr. BIBLE), the Senator from Alaska (Mr. GRAVEL), the Senator from Rhode Island (Mr. PASTORE), the Senator from Cali- fornia (Mr. CRANSTON), the Senator from Mississippi (Mr. EASTLAND), the Senator from Arkansas (Mr. FULBRIGHT), the Senator from Louisiana (Mr. JOHNSTON), the Senator from Arkansas (Mr. Mc- CLELLAN), the Senator from Connecticut (Mr. RIBIcoFF), and the Senator from Georgia (Mr. TALMADGE) are necessarily absent. I further announce that the Senator from Montana (Mr. MANSFIELD) is ab- sent on official business. I also announce that the Senator from Maine. (Mr. HATHAWAY) Is absent be- cause of a death in the family. I further announce that, if present and voting, the Senator from Rhode Is- land (Mr. PASTORE) would vote "yea." Mr. GRIFFIN. I announce that the Senator from Oklahoma (Mr. BELLMON) and the Senator from Utah (Mr. BEN- NETT) are necessarily absent. The result was announced-yeas 77, nays 8, as follows: [No. 567 Leg.] YEAS-77 Abourezk Goldwater Moss Allen Griffin Muskie Baker Hansen Nelson Bartlett . Hart Nunn Bayh Hartke Packwood Beall Haskell Pearson Eiden Hatfield Pell Brock Helms Percy Brooke Hollings Proxmire Buckley Huddleston Randolph Burdick Hughes Roth - Byrd, Humphrey Schweiker Harry F., Jr. Inouye Scott, Hugh Byrd, Robert C. Jackson Scott, Canrton Javits William L. Case Kennedy Sparkman Chiles Long Stafford Church Magnuson Stennis Clark Mathias Stevens Cook McClure Stevenson Dole McGee Symington Domenici McGovern Thurmond Dominick McIntyre Tunney Eagleton Metcalf Weicker Ervin Metzenbaum Williams Fannin Mondale Fong Montoya NAYS-8 Aiken Gurney Tower Cotton Hruska Young Curtis Taft NOT VOTING-15 Belliuon Eastland Mansfield Bennett Fulbright McClellan Bentsen Gravel Pastore Bible Hathaway Ribicoff Cranston Johnston Talmadge So Mr. ERVIN'S motion to concur in the House amendment with amendments was agreed to. Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote by which the Senate amendments were agreed to. Mr. CHURCH. Mr. President, I move to lay that motion on the table.. The motion to lay on the table was agreed to. Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Sen- ator from Washington (Mr. JACKSON) may proceed for 1 minute. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. LOWELL HISTORIC CANAL DISTRICT Mr. JACKSON. Mr. President, I move that the Committee on Interior and In- sular Affairs be discharged from the con- sideration of H.R. 14689, and that it be laid before the Senate for immediate consideration. Mr. President, this matter has been cleared with the minority. It is a very minor bill. Both Senators from Massachusetts have expressed their in- terest in it. The motion was agreed to. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill will be stated by title. The legislative clerk read as follows: A bill (H.R. 14689) to provide for a plan for the preservation, interpretation, develop- ment, and use of the historic, cultural, and architectural resources of the Lowell Historic Canal District in Lowell, Massachusetts, and for other purposes. Mr. JACKSON. Mr. President, this is a House-passed bill which calls for the expenditure of no more than $150,000 to study and prepare a plan for the historic preservation of the Lowell Canal District in Lowell, Mass. I have cleared the matter with the minority. Both Senators from Massa- chusetts have expressed'a strong interest in this legislation, and I hope that the Senate will take appropriate action. Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I rise in support of H.R. 14689, the Lowell His- toric Canal District bill. The Lowell area has been one of the hardest hit in the Nation in our deepening recession. This bill will provide a significant step to- ward restoring Lowell to its potential place in our economy, while helping re- store Lowell's historic significancc to the State of Massachusetts and to the Na- tion at large. This bill provides $150,000 for the de- velopment of a plan for the preserva- tion, development, interpretation, and use of the historic, cultural, and archi- tectural resources of Lowell, Mass. The nine-member Commission, composed of private citizens as well as government officials, is to produce a plan for protect- ing and restoring the historic properties in Lowell and make specific recommen- dations for its implementation. The com- pleted plan is to be submitted to Con- gress within 2 years. Further congres- sional action will then be necessary to authorize any Federal commitment in implementing the recommendations. Lowell, Mass., represents an important and often neglected chapter,of Ameri- can history. The coming of the indus- trial revolution, with all its concomitant social and economic effects, is the story to be told here. The falls of the Merrimack River at- tracted the attention of the pioneering New England industrialists in the early 19th century. They realized the power of the water falling through the locks of a transportation canal which bypassed the rapids could be harnessed to drive the textile machinery that was then being developed. The Merrimack Manufactur- ing Co. Pioneered the growth of Lowell, improving the canal and constructing the first Of the major industries to locate in what was then a remote and thinly set- tled area. Of signal importance in this process was that the industrialists, recognizing the need for a stable labor source as well as the water power Lowell had to offer, developed the area as a planned indus- trial community. Their intent was to dis- pel the fears of the evils of industrial change which had grown out of the early factory complexes in England. To ac- complish this, the companies constructed a model community in which even the off-duty hours of employees were super The early years of this industrial de- velopment saw Lowell hailed as an indus- trial utopia. The management of the town by the companies, while classified by modern standards as paternalistic, represented -a major departure from many of the exploitative aspects, of the Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 -' Approved For Release 2002/01/28 : CIA-RDP76M00527R000700150086-4 S 21824 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE December 17, 1974 industrial growth of that era. Lowell drew admiring visitors from both the United States and abroad, and the area drew wide attention for its success in combining industrial and social values. The experiment that was- Lowell at last began to change. Following the Civil War, increased competition, lower labor coats in other areas, and poor manage- ment all played a part in leading to the decline in prominence of the Lowell area. Now there is widespread support from the citizens of Lowell as well as historians and other interested parties for preserv- ing and restoring the structures and areas which interpret the significance of Lowell. Perhaps the single event which catalyzed this interest was the demolish- in?: of the original Merrimack Manufac- turing Co. mill to make way for a high rise structure. It became apparent that without some organized approach, the imrortant reminders of Lowell as a part of our growth as a Nation will disappear through attrition. H.R. 14689 is the vehi- cle through which a plan that takes ac- count of the history and the present and future needs of this area- can be devel- oped. In addition to the $150,000 provided in this bill, it is gratifying to know that the State of Massachusetts has pledged $9,700,000 in further support of the proj- ect associated with this legislation. Mr. President, I wish to thank the Sen- ator from Washington (Mr. JACKSON) the chairman of the Interior Committee and the Senator from Nevada (Mr. Br- BLF) the chairman of the subcommit- tee for their support and aid in steer- ing this legislation to consideration by the Senate. This bill will help restore Lavell's place in the Nation's history and help strength- en its present economic situation. I urge the Senate to pass this bill. Mr. BROOKE. Mr. President, today is a day the citizens of Lowell, Mass., have long been waiting for. The city of Lowell is one of America's oldest industrial cen- ters and possesses what is probably the finest set of working canals and mills in this country. The Senate action today has all but insured that much of this great city will be preserved for all Amer- icans as an example of the kind of indus- trial center that made this country what it it today. This bill sets in motion a study which wit', decide exactly what the best course of ,-reservation should be for this great city. It will only cost $150,000 and in re- turn the people of this country will be able to see for themselves what indus- trial America looked like In the 10th century. I commend Senator JACKSON and the Senate Interior and Insular Affairs Com- mittee for their prompt action on this bill and I commend my colleagues for the'.r support. I would also like to take this opportunity to commend the dili- gent work of Representative PAUL CRONIN. He has skillfully managed this measure through the House and deserves much of the credit for Its success In this session of the Congress. We have insured that future generations will have a first- The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill is open to amendment. If there be no amendment tobe proposed, the quese-ion is on the- third reading of the bill. The bill (H.R. 14689) was Ordered :o a third reading, was read the third tine, and passed. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS FOR THE STRIKING OF COMME'M- ORATIVE MEDALS Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. M.r. President, I understand that this request has been cleared on both sides of the aisle, spe- cifically with the Senator from Oregon (Mr. PACKWOOD) and the Senator from Pennsylvania (Mr. ScxwElitER) on the other side of the aisle, and with the Senator from Idaho (Mr. CHURCH), the Senator from California (Mr. CRANSTON), and the Senator from Wisconsin ( Mr. PROXMIRE) on this side of the aisle. I make the request on behalf of the Sena- tor from Illinois (Mr. STEVENSON). I ask unanimous consent that the Chair lay before the Senate a mess age from the House of Representatives on H.R. 17556. The PRESIDING OFFICE- laid before the Senate H.R. 17556, an act to extend for 2 years the authorizations for the striking of medals in commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the cable car in San Francisco and in commemoration of Jini Thorpe, and for other purposes. Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. I ask uni..ni- mous consent that the bill be considered as having been read the first and :;ec- and time, and that the Senate proceed to its immediate consideration. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The Senate proceeded to consider he bill. Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. I ask unani- mous consent, this request having been cleared with the aforementioned Sena- tors, that there be a time limitation of one-half hour on the bill, to be equ'.lly divided between the Senator from Illinois (Mr. STEVENSON) and the Senator from Pennsylvania (Mr. SCHWEIKEr.), and that there be a time limitation on any amend- ments of 20 minutes, and a time limita- tion on any debatable motion or appeal of 10 minutes, and that the agreement be in the usual form, with the exception of one amendment which will be offered by the Senator` from Illinois (Mr. STEV N- SON), which is not germane. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The bill is open to amendment. Mr. STEVENSON. Mr. Pres:.dent, I call up an amendment which I have at the desk, and ask for its immediate consider- ation. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Will the Senator send his amendment to-the desk? The amendment will be stated. The legislative clerk read as follows: The Senator from Illinois (Mr. STEVENSon) proposes an amendment, at the end of the bill, to Insert a new section entitled "Chi ter Amendments." Mr. STEVENSON. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that further reading Mr. STEVENSON's amendment is as fol- lows: At the end thereof, insert the following: CHARTER AMENDMENTS SEC. 5. Section2aO (1) of the Export-Im- port Bank Act of 1945 is amended--- (1) by inserting in the third sentence im- mediately after "other evidences of indebted- ness;" the following: "to guarantee, insure coinsure, and reinsure against political and credit risks of loss;"; (2) by inserting in the third sentence im- mediately after "competent jurisdiction;" the following: "to represent itself or to con- tract for representation in all legal and ar- bital proceedings outside the United States; and (3) by Inserting after the- fourth sentence the following new sentence: "The Bank is authorized to publish. or arrange for the publication of any documents, reports, con- tracts, or other material necessary in con- nection with or in furtherance 'of its ob- jects and purposes without regard to the provisions of section 501 of title 44. United States Code, whenever the Bank determines that publication in accordance with the pro- visions of such section would not be prac- ticable. ". POLICY SEC. 6. Section 2(b) (1) of the Export-Im- port Bank Act of 1945 is amended to read as follows: "(b) (1) (A) It Is the policy of the United States to foster expansion of exports of goods and related services, thereby contributing to the promotion and maintenance of high levels of employment and real income and to the increased development of the productive resources of the United States: To meet this objective, the Export-Import Bank is di- rected, in the exercise of its functions, to provide guarantees, insurance, and exten- sions of credit at rates and on terms and other conditions which are competitive with the Government-supported rates and terms and other conditions available for the financ- ing of exports from the principal countries whose exporters compete with United States exporters. The Bank shall, in cooperation with the export financing Instrumentalities of other governments, seek to minimize com- petition in government-supported export financing. The Bank shall, on a semiannual basis, report to the appropriate committees of Congress Its actions in complying with these directives. In this report the Bank shall Include a survey of all other major export- financing facilities available- from other gov- ernments and government-related agencies through which foreign exporters compete with the United States exporters and in- dicate in specific terms the ways in which the Bank's rates, terms, and other condi- tions compare with those offered from such other governments directly or indirectly. Further, the Bank shall at the same time survey a representative number of United States exporters and United States commer- cial lending institutions which provide ex- port credit to determine their experience in meeting financial competition from other countries whose exporters compete with United States exporters. The results of this survey shall be included as part of the semi- annual report required by the subpara- graph. The Bank shall also include in the semiannual report a description of each loan by, the Bank involving the export of any product or service related to the production, refining or transportation of any type of energy or the development of any energy resource with a statement assessing the im- pact, if any, on the availability of such prod- ucts, services, or energy supplies thus de- veloped for use within the United States, "(B) It Is further the policy of the United States that loans made by the Bank shall b i t ear n erest at rates determined by the hand glimpse of one of American his- The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without Board of Directors of the Bank, taking into tory's important ch 07%ved For Releg - C'2 b'I/2t ar id-RDP76M00529 OO15OO cost of money to