Civil Monetary Penalties Annual Inflation Adjustments

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Federal RegisterDec 29, 2022
87 Fed. Reg. 80020 (Dec. 29, 2022)

AGENCY:

Federal Election Commission.

ACTION:

Final rules.

SUMMARY:

As required by the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990, the Federal Election Commission is adjusting for inflation the civil monetary penalties established under the Federal Election Campaign Act, the Presidential Election Campaign Fund Act, and the Presidential Primary Matching Payment Account Act. The civil monetary penalties being adjusted are those negotiated by the Commission or imposed by a court for certain statutory violations, and those imposed by the Commission for late filing of or failure to file certain reports required by the Federal Election Campaign Act. The adjusted civil monetary penalties are calculated according to a statutory formula and the adjusted amounts will apply to penalties assessed after the effective date of these rules.

DATES:

The final rules are effective on December 29, 2022.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:

Mr. Robert M. Knop, Assistant General Counsel, Mr. Joseph P. Wenzinger, Attorney, or Ms. Terrell D. Stansbury, Paralegal, Office of General Counsel, (202) 694-1650 or (800) 424-9530.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

The Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990 (the “Inflation Adjustment Act”), as amended by the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act Improvements Act of 2015 (the “2015 Act”), requires federal agencies, including the Commission, to adjust for inflation the civil monetary penalties within their jurisdiction according to prescribed formulas. A civil monetary penalty is “any penalty, fine, or other sanction” that (1) “is for a specific monetary amount” or “has a maximum amount” under federal law; and (2) that a federal agency assesses or enforces “pursuant to an administrative proceeding or a civil action” in federal court. Under the Federal Election Campaign Act, 52 U.S.C. 30101-45 (“FECA”), the Commission may seek and assess civil monetary penalties for violations of FECA, the Presidential Election Campaign Fund Act, 26 U.S.C. 9001-13, and the Presidential Primary Matching Payment Account Act, 26 U.S.C. 9031-42.

Public Law 101-410, 104 Stat. 890 (codified at 28 U.S.C. 2461 note), amended by Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996, Public Law 104-134, 31001(s)(1), 110 Stat. 1321, 1321-373; Federal Reports Elimination Act of 1998, Public Law 105-362, 1301, 112 Stat. 3280.

Public Law 114-74, 701, 129 Stat. 584, 599.

Inflation Adjustment Act section 3(2).

The Inflation Adjustment Act requires federal agencies to adjust their civil penalties annually, and the adjustments must take effect no later than January 15 of every year. Pursuant to guidance issued by the Office of Management and Budget, the Commission is now adjusting its civil monetary penalties for 2023.

Inflation Adjustment Act section 4(a).

See Inflation Adjustment Act § 7(a) (requiring OMB to “issue guidance to agencies on implementing the inflation adjustments required under this Act”); see also Memorandum from Shalanda D. Young, Acting Director, Office of Management and Budget, to Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies, M-23-05, Dec. 15, 2022, https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/M-23-05-CMP-CMP-Guidance.pdf (“OMB Memorandum”).

Inflation Adjustment Act section 5.

The Commission must adjust for inflation its civil monetary penalties “notwithstanding Section 553” of the Administrative Procedures Act (“APA”). Thus, the APA's notice-and-comment and delayed effective date requirements in 5 U.S.C. 553(b)-(d) do not apply because Congress has specifically exempted agencies from these requirements.

Inflation Adjustment Act section 4(b)(2).

See, e.g., Asiana Airlines v. FAA, 134 F.3d 393, 396-99 (D.C. Cir. 1998) (finding APA “notice and comment” requirement not applicable where Congress clearly expressed intent to depart from normal APA procedures).

Furthermore, because the inflation adjustments made through these final rules are required by Congress and involve no Commission discretion or policy judgments, these rules do not need to be submitted to the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives or the President of the United States Senate under the Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq. Moreover, because the APA's notice-and-comment procedures do not apply to these final rules, the Commission is not required to conduct a regulatory flexibility analysis under 5 U.S.C. 603 or 604. See5 U.S.C. 601(2), 604(a). Nor is the Commission required to submit these revisions for congressional review under FECA. See5 U.S.C. 30111(d)(1), (4) (providing for congressional review when Commission “prescribe[s]” a “rule of law”).

The new penalty amounts will apply to civil monetary penalties that are assessed after the date the increase takes effect, even if the associated violation predated the increase.

Inflation Adjustment Act section 6.

Explanation and Justification

The Inflation Adjustment Act requires the Commission to annually adjust its civil monetary penalties for inflation by applying a cost-of-living-adjustment (“COLA”) ratio. The COLA ratio is the percentage that the Consumer Price Index (“CPI”) “for the month of October preceding the date of the adjustment” exceeds the CPI for October of the previous year. To calculate the adjusted penalty, the Commission must increase the most recent civil monetary penalty amount by the COLA ratio. According to the Office of Management and Budget, the COLA ratio for 2023 is 0.017745, or 1.7745%; thus, to calculate the new penalties, the Commission must multiply the most recent civil monetary penalties in force by 1.07745.

The COLA ratio must be applied to the most recent civil monetary penalties. Inflation Adjustment Act, section 4(a); see also OMB Memorandum at 2.

The Inflation Adjustment Act, § 3, uses the CPI “for all-urban consumers published by the Department of Labor.”

Inflation Adjustment Act, section 5(b)(1).

Inflation Adjustment Act, section 5(a), (b)(1).

OMB Memorandum at 1.

The Commission assesses two types of civil monetary penalties that must be adjusted for inflation. First are penalties that are either negotiated by the Commission or imposed by a court for violations of FECA, the Presidential Election Campaign Fund Act, or the Presidential Primary Matching Payment Account Act. These civil monetary penalties are set forth at 11 CFR 111.24. Second are the civil monetary penalties assessed through the Commission's Administrative Fines Program for late filing or non-filing of certain reports required by FECA. See52 U.S.C. 30109(a)(4)(C) (authorizing Administrative Fines Program), 30104(a) (requiring political committee treasurers to report receipts and disbursements within certain time periods). The penalty schedules for these civil monetary penalties are set out at 11 CFR 111.43 and 111.44.

1. 11 CFR 111.24—Civil Penalties

FECA establishes the civil monetary penalties for violations of FECA and the other statutes within the Commission's jurisdiction. See52 U.S.C. 30109(a)(5), (6), (12). Commission regulations in 11 CFR 111.24 provide the current inflation-adjusted amount for each such civil monetary penalty. To calculate the adjusted civil monetary penalty, the Commission multiplies the most recent penalty amount by the COLA ratio and rounds that figure to the nearest dollar.

The actual adjustment to each civil monetary penalty is shown in the chart below.

11 CFR 111.24(a)(2)(i)11 CFR 111.24(a)(2)(ii)11 CFR 111.24(b)11 CFR 111.24(b)
Section Most recent civil penalty COLA New civil penalty
11 CFR 111.24(a)(1) $21,805 1.07745 23,494
46,517 1.07745 50,120
76,280 1.07745 82,188
6,523 1.07745 7,028
16,307 1.07745 17,570

2. 11 CFR 111.43, 111.44—Administrative Fines

FECA authorizes the Commission to assess civil monetary penalties for violations of the reporting requirements of 52 U.S.C. 30104(a) according to the penalty schedules “established and published by the Commission.” 52 U.S.C. 30109(a)(4)(C)(i). The Commission has established two penalty schedules: The penalty schedule in 11 CFR 111.43(a) applies to reports that are not election sensitive, and the penalty schedule in 11 CFR 111.43(b) applies to reports that are election sensitive. Each penalty schedule contains two columns of penalties, one for late-filed reports and one for non-filed reports, with penalties based on the level of financial activity in the report and, if late-filed, its lateness. In addition, 11 CFR 111.43(c) establishes a civil monetary penalty for situations in which a committee fails to file a report and the Commission cannot calculate the relevant level of activity. Finally, 11 CFR 111.44 establishes a civil monetary penalty for failure to file timely reports of contributions received less than 20 days, but more than 48 hours, before an election. See52 U.S.C. 30104(a)(6).

Election sensitive reports are certain reports due shortly before an election. See11 CFR 111.43(d)(1).

A report is considered to be “not filed” if it is never filed or is filed more than a certain number of days after its due date. See11 CFR 111.43(e).

To determine the adjusted civil monetary penalty amount for each level of activity, the Commission multiplies the most recent penalty amount by the COLA ratio and rounds that figure to the nearest dollar. The new civil monetary penalties are shown in the schedules in the rule text, below.

List of Subjects in 11 CFR Part 111

  • Administrative practice and procedures
  • Elections
  • Law enforcement
  • Penalties

For the reasons set out in the preamble, the Federal Election Commission amends subchapter A of chapter I of title 11 of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:

PART 111—COMPLIANCE PROCEDURE (52 U.S.C. 30109, 30107(a))

1. The authority citation for part 111 continues to read as follows:

Authority: 52 U.S.C. 30102(i), 30109, 30107(a), 30111(a)(8); 28 U.S.C. 2461 nt.

§ 111.24
[Amended]

2. Section 111.24 is amended as follows:

In the table below, for each section indicated in the left column, remove the number indicated in the middle column, and add in its place the number indicated in the right column.

Section Remove Add
111.24(a)(1) $21,805 $23,494
111.24(a)(2)(i) 46,517 50,120
111.24(a)(2)(ii) 76,280 82,188
111.24(b) 6,523 7,028
111.24(b) 16,307 17,570

3. Section 111.43 is amended by revising paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) to read as follows:

§ 111.43
What are the schedules of penalties?

(a) The civil money penalty for all reports that are filed late or not filed, except election sensitive reports and pre-election reports under 11 CFR 104.5, shall be calculated in accordance with the following schedule of penalties:

Table 1 to Paragraph ( a )

If the level of activity in the report was: And the report was filed late, the civil money penalty is: Or the report was not filed, the civil money penalty is:
$1-4,999.99 [$41 + ($6 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $402 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$5,000-9,999.99 [$80 + ($6 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $483 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$10,000-24,999.99 [$172 + ($6 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $806 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$25,000-49,999.99 [$342 + ($32 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $1,450 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$50,000-74,999.99 [$515 + ($129 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $4,624 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$75,000-99,999.99 [$684 + ($172 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $5,994 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$100,000-149,999.99 [$1,026 + ($214 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $7,708 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$150,000-199,999.99 [$1,373 + ($256 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $9,420 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$200,000-249,999.99 [$1,712 + ($298 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $11,132 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$250,000-349,999.99 [$2,570 + ($342 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $13,702 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$350,000-449,999.99 [$3,426 + ($342 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $15,414 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$450,000-549,999.99 [$4,282 + ($342 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $16,271 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$550,000-649,999.99 [$5,137 + ($342 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $17,128 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$650,000-749,999.99 [$5,994 + ($342 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $17,984 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$750,000-849,999.99 [$6,850 + ($342 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $18,839 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$850,000-949,999.99 [$7,708 + ($342 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $ 19,696 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$950,000 or over [$8,564 + ($342 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $20,552 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
The civil money penalty for a respondent who does not have any previous violations will not exceed the level of activity in the report.

(b) The civil money penalty for election sensitive reports that are filed late or not filed shall be calculated in accordance with the following schedule of penalties:

Table 2 to Paragraph ( b )

If the level of activity in the report was: And the report was filed late, the civil money penalty is: Or the report was not filed, the civil money penalty is:
$1-$4,999.99 [$80 + ($15 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $806 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$5,000-$9,999.99 [$162 + ($15 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $966 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$10,000-24,999.99 [$241 + ($15 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $1,450 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$25,000-49,999.99 [$515 + ($41 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $2,255 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$50,000-74,999.99 [$771 + ($129 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $5,137 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$75,000-99,999.99 [$1,026 + ($172 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $6,850 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$100,000-149,999.99 [$1,542 + ($214 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $8,564 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$150,000-199,999.99 [$2,056 + ($256 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $10,276 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$200,000-249,999.99 [$2,570 + ($298 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $12,845 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$250,000-349,999.99 [$3,853 + ($342 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $15,414 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$350,000-449,999.99 [$5,137 + ($342 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $17,128 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$450,000-549,999.99 [$6,423 + ($342 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $18,839 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$550,000-649,999.99 [$7,708 + ($342 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $20,552 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$650,000-749,999.99 [$8,992 + ($342 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $22,266 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$750,000-849,999.99 [$10,276 + ($342 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $23,979 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$850,000-949,999.99 [$11,560 + ($342 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $25,690 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
$950,000 or over [$12,845 + ($342 × Number of days late)] × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)] $27,404 × [1 + (.25 × Number of previous violations)].
The civil money penalty for a respondent who does not have any previous violations will not exceed the level of activity in the report.

(c) If the respondent fails to file a required report and the Commission cannot calculate the level of activity under paragraph (d) of this section, then the civil money penalty shall be $9,420.

§ 111.44
[Amended]

4. Amend § 111.44(a)(1) by removing “$160” and adding, in its place, “$172”.

Dated: December 22, 2022.

On behalf of the Commission,

Allen J. Dickerson,

Chairman, Federal Election Commission.

[FR Doc. 2022-28287 Filed 12-28-22; 8:45 am]

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