Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records
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Abstract
In accordance with the Privacy Act of 1974 (Privacy Act), the U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB) proposes to establish a modified system of records titled "MSPB--3, Reasonable Accommodations." This system of records includes information that MSPB collects, maintains, and uses on applicants for employment, MSPB employees, and participants in MSPB programs who request and/or receive reasonable accommodations from MSPB for disability, medical, pregnancy- related, or religious reasons.
Full Text
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<title>Federal Register, Volume 90 Issue 2 (Friday, January 3, 2025)</title>
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[Federal Register Volume 90, Number 2 (Friday, January 3, 2025)]
[Notices]
[Pages 335-338]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [<a href="http://www.gpo.gov">www.gpo.gov</a>]
[FR Doc No: 2024-31521]
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MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION BOARD
Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records
AGENCY: U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board.
ACTION: Notice of a modified system of records.
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SUMMARY: In accordance with the Privacy Act of 1974 (Privacy Act), the
U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB) proposes to establish a
modified system of records titled ``MSPB--3, Reasonable
Accommodations.'' This system of records includes information that MSPB
collects, maintains, and uses on applicants for employment, MSPB
employees, and participants in MSPB programs who request and/or receive
reasonable accommodations from MSPB for disability, medical, pregnancy-
related, or religious reasons.
DATES: Please submit comments on or before February 3, 2025. This
modified system is effective upon publication in today's Federal
Register.
ADDRESSES: You may submit written comments to the Office of the Clerk
of the Board by email to <a href="/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#e191938897808298a18c929183cf868e97"><span class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="c8b8baa1bea9abb188a5bbb8aae6afa7be">[email protected]</span></a> or by mail to Clerk of the
Board, U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board, 1615 M Street NW,
Washington, DC 20419. All comments must reference ``MSPB--3, Reasonable
Accommodations SORN.'' Regardless of the method used for submitting
comments or material, all submissions will be posted, without change,
to MSPB's website (<a href="https://www.mspb.gov">https://www.mspb.gov</a>) and will include any personal
information you provide, such as your name, address, phone number,
email address, or any other personally identifying information in your
comment or materials. Therefore, any submissions will be made public
and without change.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For general questions or privacy
issues, please contact: D. Fon Muttamara, Chief Privacy Officer, Office
of the Clerk of the Board, 1615 M Street NW, Washington, DC 20419 at
(202) 653-7200 or <a href="/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#acdcdec5dacdcfd5ecc1dfdcce82cbc3da"><span class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="fd8d8f948b9c9e84bd908e8d9fd39a928b">[email protected]</span></a>. Please include ``Reasonable
Accommodations SORN'' with your question(s).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In accordance with the Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C.
552a, the MSPB proposes to modify an existing system of records titled
``MSPB--3, Reasonable Accommodations.'' This system of records covers
MSPB's collection, maintenance, and use of records on applicants for
employment, employees, and participants in MSPB programs who request or
receive reasonable accommodations or other appropriate modifications
from MSPB for medical or religious reasons. MSPB is modifying this
system of records to include a new category of individuals covered by
the system--participants in official MSPB functions (parties and/or
participants in MSPB appeals, respondents to surveys, and all other
individuals engaged in activity conducted by the MSPB), who seek a
reasonable accommodation; MSPB is updating the categories of
individuals covered and records in the system to include pregnant and
recently pregnant employees; and MSPB is updating the system location
and system manager to include the Office of Information Resources
Management and the Accessibility Program Manager.
Title V of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, prohibits
discrimination in services and employment on the basis of disability,
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits discrimination on
the basis of religion; and Title VII, as amended by the Pregnancy
Discrimination Act, prohibits discrimination on the basis of
pregnancy.\1\ The Pregnancy Workers
[[Page 336]]
Fairness Act, which went into effect on June 27, 2023, requires the
agency to provide reasonable accommodations for qualified employees and
job applicants with temporary physical or mental limitations due to
pregnancy, childbirth, or related conditions. These statutes on
discrimination and accommodations require Federal agencies to provide
reasonable accommodations to individuals with disabilities, are
pregnant or have been pregnant, and those with sincerely held religious
beliefs; unless doing so would impose an undue hardship. In general, an
accommodation is any change in the work environment or in the way
things are customarily done that enables an individual with a
disability to enjoy equal employment opportunities.
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\1\ Pregnancy includes current pregnancy; past pregnancy;
potential pregnancy; medical condition(s) related to pregnancy or
childbirth including breastfeeding/lactation; having or choosing not
to have an abortion; and birth control (contraception).
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Disability Accommodations. Reasonable accommodations on the basis
of disability typically fall into the following categories: (1)
modifications or adjustments to a job application process that enable a
qualified applicant with a disability to be considered for a position;
(2) modifications or adjustments to the work environment, or to the
manner or circumstances under which the position held or desired is
customarily performed, that enable a qualified individual with a
disability to perform the essential functions of that position; and (3)
modifications or adjustments that enable a qualified employee with a
disability to enjoy equal benefits and privileges of employment as are
enjoyed by other similarly-situated employees without disabilities; and
(4) modifications to agency operating procedures to enable a qualified
individual with a disability, full access to agency functions. In some
instances, individuals may request modifications to their workspace,
schedule, duties, or other requirements for documented medical reasons
that may not qualify as a disability but may necessitate an appropriate
modification to workplace policies and practices.
Pregnancy-Related Accommodations. Reasonable accommodations on the
basis of pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions, may
include but are not limited to: providing the ability to sit or drink
water; receiving parking at that is closer to the work site; having
flexible hours; receiving additional break time to use the bathroom,
eat, and rest; and taking leave or time off to recover from childbirth.
Religious Accommodations. Applicants and employees may obtain
exceptions to rules or policies in order to follow their sincerely held
religious beliefs or practices, and employers may grant certain
accommodations for religious reasons but still refuse to grant them for
secular reasons. Religious Accommodations may include but are not
limited to: having flexible hours to observe religious holidays; having
flexible hours to observe religious practices, such as not working
after sundown, or taking breaks for prayer throughout the day; and
receiving an exemption from a Federal Government-mandated vaccine that
conflicts with a sincerely held religious belief.
MSPB's Office of Equal Employment Opportunity is responsible for
processing requests for reasonable accommodations from applicants for
employment and employees who seek an accommodation due to a medical,
pregnancy-related, or religious reasons, as well as processing requests
based on documented medical reasons that may not qualify as a
disability but that may necessitate an appropriate modification to
workplace policies and practices. For participants in MSPB programs who
are not applicants for employment or MSPB employees, MSPB's
Accessibility Program Manager, within the Office of Information
Resources Management, is responsible for processing these requests.
Pursuant to the Privacy Act, the system of records will include the
following documentation: the request; any related records provided to
support the request; any evaluation conducted internally, or by a third
party under contract with MSPB; the decision regarding whether to grant
or deny a request; and the details and conditions of the reasonable
accommodation.
The Privacy Act embodies fair information practice principles in a
statutory framework governing how Federal agencies collect, maintain,
use, and disseminate individuals' records. The Privacy Act applies to
records about individuals that are maintained in a ``system of
records.'' A system of records is a group of any records under the
control of an agency from which information is retrieved by the name of
an individual or by some identifying number, symbol, or other
identifying particular assigned to the individual. The Privacy Act
defines an individual as a United States citizen or lawful permanent
resident. Individuals may request access to their own records that are
maintained in a system of records in the possession or under the
control of MSPB by complying with MSPB Privacy Act regulations at 5 CFR
part 1205, and following the procedures outlined in the Records Access,
Contesting Record, and Notification Procedures sections of this notice.
The Privacy Act requires each agency to publish in the Federal Register
a description denoting the existence and character of each system of
records that the agency maintains and the routine uses of each system.
The modified Reasonable Accommodations System of Records Notice is
published in its entirety below. In accordance with the Privacy Act, 5
U.S.C. 552a(r), and OMB Circular A-108, ``Federal Agency
Responsibilities for Review, Reporting, and Publication under the
Privacy Act'' (Dec. 2016), MSPB has submitted a report of a modified
system of records to the Office of Management and Budget and Congress.
Gina K. Grippando,
Clerk of the Board, U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board.
SYSTEM NAME AND NUMBER:
MSPB--3, Reasonable Accommodations.
SECURITY CLASSIFICATION:
Unclassified.
SYSTEM LOCATION:
Records are maintained by the Office of Equal Employment
Opportunity and the Office of Information Resources Management, U.S.
Merit Systems Protection Board, 1615 M Street, NW, Washington, DC
20419. Records may be located in locked cabinets and offices, on MSPB's
local area network, or in designated U.S. data centers for cloud
service providers certified by the Federal Risk and Authorization
Management Program or FedRAMP.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S):
Director of the Office of Equal Employment Opportunity and
Accessibility Program Manager, U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board,
1615 M Street NW, Washington, DC 20419, <a href="/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#c2a3a1a1adafafada6a3b6abadac82afb1b2a0eca5adb4"><span class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="3d5c5e5e52505052595c495452537d504e4d5f135a524b">[email protected]</span></a>.
AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
The Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. 701, 791, 794; Title VII
of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. 2000e; 29 CFR part 1605
(Guidelines on Discrimination Because of Religion); 29 CFR part 1614
(Federal Sector Equal Employment Opportunity); 29 CFR part 1630
(Regulations To Implement the Equal Employment Provisions of the
Americans With Disabilities Act); Executive Order 13164, Requiring
Federal Agencies to Establish Procedures to Facilitate the Provision of
Reasonable Accommodation (July 26, 2000); and Executive Order 13548,
Increasing Federal Employment of Individuals with Disabilities (July
26, 2010); The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (effective June 27, 2023),
Pub. L.
[[Page 337]]
117-328, 42 U.S.C. 2000gg; Providing Urgent Maternal Protections for
Nursing Mothers Act (effective December 29, 2022), Pub. L. 117-328, 29
U.S.C. 218d.
PURPOSE(S) OF THE SYSTEM:
The purpose of this system of records is to allow MSPB to collect
and maintain records on applicants for employment, MSPB employees, and
participants in MSPB programs who request or receive reasonable
accommodations or other appropriate modifications from MSPB for
medical, pregnancy, or religious reasons; to process, evaluate, and
make decisions on individual requests; and to track and report the
processing of such requests MSPB-wide to comply with applicable
requirements in law, regulation, and policy, and to maintain the
confidentiality of the information provided in support of the
accommodation.
CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE SYSTEM:
Applicants for MSPB employment, former and current MSPB employees,
and participants in MSPB programs who requested and/or received
reasonable accommodations or other appropriate modifications from MSPB
for medical, pregnancy, or religious reasons.
CATEGORIES OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
Records include information concerning the requester and/or
recipient as part of the request, review, and decision-making process.
These records may include demographic information, information
regarding the health condition or sincerely held religious belief, and
other related information required to document and make a determination
on the request.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
Information is obtained from applicants for employment, MSPB
employees, and participants in MSPB programs who request and/or receive
a reasonable accommodation or other appropriate modification from MSPB,
directly or indirectly from an individual's medical provider or another
medical professional who evaluates the request, directly or indirectly
from an individual's religious or spiritual advisors or institutions,
and from management officials.
ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES
OF USERS AND PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
In addition to those disclosures generally permitted under 5 U.S.C.
552a(b) of the Privacy Act, all or a portion of the records or
information contained in this system may be disclosed outside MSPB as a
routine use pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(b)(3) as follows:
a. To the Department of Justice (DOJ), including Offices of the
U.S. Attorneys; or another Federal agency conducting litigation or in
actual or reasonably anticipated proceedings before any court,
adjudicative, or administrative body; another party or potential party
or the party's or potential party's authorized representative in
litigation before a court, adjudicative, or administrative body; or to
a court, adjudicative, or administrative body. Such disclosure is
permitted only when it is relevant or necessary to the litigation or
proceeding, and one of the following is a party to the litigation or
has an interest in such litigation:
(1) MSPB, or any component thereof;
(2) Any employee or former employee of MSPB in his or her official
capacity;
(3) Any employee or former employee of MSPB in his or her
individual capacity where DOJ or MSPB has agreed to represent the
employee; or
(4) The United States, a Federal agency, or another party in
litigation before a court, adjudicative, or administrative body, upon
the MSPB General Counsel's approval, pursuant to 5 CFR part 1216 or
otherwise.
b. To the appropriate Federal, State, or local agency responsible
for investigating, prosecuting, enforcing, or implementing a statute,
rule, regulation, or order, when a record, either on its face or in
conjunction with other information, indicates or is relevant to a
violation or potential violation of civil or criminal law or
regulation.
c. To a member of Congress or the White House from the record of an
individual in response to an inquiry made at the request of the
individual to whom the record pertains.
d. To the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) in
records management inspections conducted under the authority of 44
U.S.C. 2904 and 2906.
e. To appropriate agencies, entities, and persons when (1) MSPB
suspects or has confirmed that there has been a breach of the system of
records; (2) MSPB has determined that as a result of the suspected or
confirmed breach there is a risk of harm to individuals, MSPB
(including its information systems, programs, and operations), the
Federal Government, or national security; and (3) the disclosure made
to such agencies, entities, and persons is reasonably necessary to
assist in connection with MSPB's efforts to respond to the suspected or
confirmed breach or to prevent, minimize, or remedy such harm.
f. To another Federal agency or Federal entity, when MSPB
determines that information from this system of records is reasonably
necessary to assist the recipient agency or entity in (1) responding to
a suspected or confirmed breach or (2) preventing, minimizing, or
remedying the risk of harm to individuals, the recipient agency or
entity (including its information systems, programs, and operations),
the Federal Government, or national security, resulting from a
suspected or confirmed breach.
g. To contractors, grantees, experts, consultants, or volunteers
performing or working on a contract, service, grant, cooperative
agreement, or other assignment for MSPB when MSPB determines that it is
necessary to accomplish an agency function related to this system of
records. Individuals provided information under this routine use are
subject to the same Privacy Act requirements and limitations on
disclosure as are applicable to MSPB employees.
h. To another Federal agency or commission with responsibility for
labor or employment relations or other issues, including equal
employment opportunity and reasonable accommodation issues, when that
agency or commission has authority relating to reasonable
accommodation.
i. To an authorized appeal grievance examiner, formal complaints
examiner, administrative judge or administrative law judge, equal
employment opportunity investigator, arbitrator, or other duly
authorized official engaged in investigation or settlement of a
grievance, complaint, or appeal filed by an individual who requested a
reasonable accommodation or other appropriate modification.
j. To another Federal agency, including but not limited to the
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Office of Special
Counsel, to obtain advice regarding statutory, regulatory, policy, and
other requirements related to requests for reasonable accommodation,
and to evaluate and report on the agency's performance responding to
requests for reasonable accommodation.
k. To a Federal agency or entity authorized to procure assistive
technologies and services in response to a request for reasonable
accommodation.
l. To first aid, medical, and safety personnel if the individual's
medical condition requires emergency treatment.
m. To another Federal agency or oversight body charged with
evaluating MSPB's compliance with the laws,
[[Page 338]]
regulations, and policies governing reasonable accommodation requests.
n. To another Federal agency pursuant to a written agreement with
MSPB to provide services (such as medical evaluations), when necessary,
in support of reasonable accommodation decisions.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORAGE OF RECORDS:
The records in this system are stored electronically on MSPB's
local area network or with FedRAMP-authorized cloud service providers.
Access is limited to a small number of authorized personnel at MSPB. In
addition, if paper records exist, they are stored in locked file
cabinets and/or access-restricted offices.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETRIEVAL OF RECORDS:
Records are retrieved by name or another unique personal
identifier.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETENTION AND DISPOSAL OF RECORDS:
The records maintained in this system of records are subject to
NARA General Records Schedule (GRS) 2.3 (Employee Relations Records),
Item 20 (Reasonable accommodation case files). NARA GRS 2.3 instructs
disposition three years after employee separation from the agency or
all appeals are concluded, whichever is later, but longer retention is
authorized if required for business use.
ADMINISTRATIVE, TECHNICAL, AND PHYSICAL SAFEGUARDS:
Records in the system are protected from unauthorized access and
misuse through various administrative, technical, and physical security
measures, such as access controls, mandatory security and privacy
training, encryption, multi-factor authentication, security guards, and
locked offices.
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES:
Individuals seeking notification of and access to their records in
this system of records may submit a request in writing to the Office of
the Clerk of the Board, U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board, 1615 M
Street NW, Washington, DC 20419. Individuals requesting access must
comply with MSPB's Privacy Act regulations regarding verification of
identity and access to records (5 CFR part 1205).
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
Individuals may request that records about them be amended by
writing to the Office of the Clerk of the Board, U.S. Merit Systems
Protection Board, 1615 M Street NW, Washington, DC 20419. Individuals
requesting amendment must follow MSPB's Privacy Act regulations
regarding verification of identity and amendment of records (5 CFR part
1205).
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURES:
See Record Access Procedures above.
EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR THE SYSTEM:
None.
HISTORY:
MSPB--3, Reasonable Accommodations, 86 FR 73001 (Dec. 23, 2021).
[FR Doc. 2024-31521 Filed 1-2-25; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7400-01-P
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</html>This is legal information, not legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change frequently. Always verify current law with official sources and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice on your specific situation.