Application of the Appointments Clause to a Statutory Provision Concerning the Inspector General Position at the Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board
Application of the Appointments Clause to a Statutory
Provision Concerning the Inspector General Position at
the Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board
A statutory provision declaring that the Inspector General of the Environmental Protection Agency
“shall, by virtue of such appointment, also hold the position of Inspector General” of the Chemical
Safety and Hazard Investigation Board does not violate the Appointments Clause of the Constitu-
tion, because it constitutes the permissible addition of germane duties to an office, rather than
appointment to a new office.
July 27, 2006
MEMORANDUM OPINION FOR THE GENERAL COUNSEL
CHEMICAL SAFETY AND HAZARD INVESTIGATION BOARD
Congress has provided that the Inspector General of the Environmental Protec-
tion Agency (“EPA”) “shall, by virtue of such appointment, also hold the position
of Inspector General” of the Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board
(“CSHIB” or “Board”). Pub. L. No. 109-54, 119 Stat. 499, 543 (2005). The Board
has requested our opinion on whether this provision violates the Constitution’s
Appointments Clause, U.S. Const. art. II, § 2, cl. 2, on the ground that Congress,
rather than the President or an appropriate department head, has thereby appointed
the EPA Inspector General to the distinct office of Inspector General of the Board.
In considering this question, we have received and benefited from extensive
submissions by both the Board and the EPA Inspector General. We conclude that
the provision is constitutional. It constitutes the permissible addition of germane
duties to an office, rather than appointment to a new office.
I.
Congress established the Board in the 1990 amendments to the Clean Air Act,
codified in relevant part at 42 U.S.C. § 7412(r)(6) (2000). The members of the
Board are appointed by the President, with the advice and consent of the Senate, to
five-year terms. Id. § 7412(r)(6)(B).
The Board has three primary statutory duties: (1) to “investigate . . . , determine
and report” the facts and cause “of any accidental release [of a ‘hazardous
substance into the ambient air,’ id. § 7412(r)(2)] resulting in a fatality, serious
injury or substantial property damages”; (2) to “issue periodic reports” to various
entities, “including the [EPA] and the [Department of Labor’s] Occupational
Safety and Health Administration, concerned with the safety of chemical produc-
tion, processing, handling and storage,” in which the Board is to recommend
changes in regulation or policy by the EPA or the Labor Department in this area;
and (3) to “establish by regulation” binding rules for “reporting accidental releases
into the ambient air.” Id. § 7412(r)(6)(C). Under certain circumstances, the EPA or
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the Labor Department is required to respond with reasons for rejecting any Board
recommendation or at least to consider the Board’s recommendations. Id.
§ 7412(r)(6)(H)–(K). The EPA must “provide to the Board such support and
facilities as may be necessary for operation of the Board” and is authorized to
enforce the Board’s reporting regulations; the Board in turn “may use any
information gathering authority of [EPA] under this chapter,” id. § 7412(r)(6)(P),
(O) & (M), although it has its own statutory authority to gather information, id.
§ 7412(r)(6)(L). Finally, the Board is not “responsible to or subject to supervision
or direction, in carrying out any duties under this subsection, of any officer or
employee or agent of the [EPA], the Department of Labor or any agency.” Id.
§ 7412(r)(6)(R). 1 Although Congress established the Board in 1990, the Board
received no funding until Fiscal Year 1998. See Pub. L. No. 105-65, 111 Stat.
1344, 1368 (1997).
The Inspector General Act (“IG Act”) creates an Inspector General (“IG”),
appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate, and a
corresponding Office of Inspector General, for the Executive Branch departments
and enumerated major agencies, administrations, and other “establishments,”
including the EPA. 5 U.S.C. app., IG Act §§ 2, 3 & 11 (2000). For several other
“designated Federal entities,” a category that includes Amtrak and many regula-
tory commissions, the Act creates an IG, with a corresponding Office, appointed
by the head of the entity rather than the President. Id. § 8G.
IGs have the duties (1) to “audit[] and investigat[e] . . . the programs and opera-
tions” of their agencies; (2) to seek ways “to promote economy, efficiency, and
effectiveness in the administration of,” and “to prevent and detect fraud and abuse
in,” the “programs and operations” of their agencies; and (3) “to provide a means
for keeping the head[s]” of their agencies, as well as Congress, “informed about
problems and deficiencies relating to the administration of such programs and
operations and the necessity for and progress of corrective action.” Id. § 2 (stating
purposes); see id. § 4(a) (specifying duties). We have explained that “Congress
intended the [IG] to be an objective official free from general regulatory responsi-
bilities who investigated the employees and operations of the Department, as well
as its contractors, grantees, and other recipients of federal funds, so as to root out
waste and fraud.” Inspector General Authority to Conduct Regulatory Investiga-
tions, 13 Op. O.L.C. 54, 55 (1989) (“IG Authority”).
1
When signing the 1990 amendments, the President noted “serious constitutional concerns” with
provisions, now codified at 42 U.S.C. § 7412(r)(6)(B) & (R) (2000), that restrict presidential removal
of Board members and review of and policy guidance to the Board (provisions he believed “severable”)
and that “invade the deliberative processes of the executive branch” by requiring the Board to transmit
its reports to Congress concurrently with their transmission within the Executive Branch. See Statement
on Signing the Bill Amending the Clean Air Act (Nov. 15, 1990), 2 Pub. Papers of Pres. George Bush
1602, 1603–04 (1990). These provisions do not affect our analysis.
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Under the IG Act, an entity that is neither an enumerated department or other
establishment nor a designated federal entity falls into the residual category of
“Federal entity.” 5 U.S.C. app., IG Act § 8G(a)(1). The head of a “Federal entity”
must prepare annually a report stating “whether there has been established in the
Federal entity an office that [would] meet the requirements” for an IG Office in a
designated federal entity. Compare id. § 8G(h)(2)(A) with id. § 8G(b). If not, the
report must “specif[y] the actions taken by the Federal entity otherwise to ensure
that audits are conducted of its programs and operations.” Id. § 8G(h)(2)(B).
As it is not specifically listed in the IG Act, the Board falls into this residual
category. But in successive appropriations for the Board beginning with Fiscal
Year 2001, Congress provided that “there shall be an [IG] at the Board who shall
have the duties, responsibilities, and authorities specified in the Inspector General
Act of 1978.” Pub. L. No. 106-377, app. A, 114 Stat. 1441, 1441A-36 (2000).
Congress repeated this language in the 2002 appropriation, adding “hereafter” at
the beginning. Pub. L. No. 107-73, 115 Stat. 651, 679 (2001). Congress further
provided that “an individual appointed to the position of the [IG] of the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) shall, by virtue of such appointment,
also hold the position of [IG] of the Board.” 114 Stat. at 1441A-36. FEMA then
had a presidentially appointed IG. 5 U.S.C. app., IG Act § 11(2). For Fiscal Year
2004, following FEMA’s absorption into the new Department of Homeland
Security, Congress transferred the Board’s IG function to the EPA IG, by provid-
ing that “the individual appointed to the position of [IG] of the [EPA] shall, by
virtue of such appointment, also hold the position of [IG] of the Board.” Pub. L.
No. 108-199, 118 Stat. 3, 399 (2004). Congress has repeated this provision for
Fiscal Years 2005 and 2006. See Pub. L. No. 108-447, 118 Stat. 2809, 3322
(2004); Pub. L. No. 109-54, 119 Stat. at 543.
II.
As explained below, we find no violation of the Appointments Clause in Con-
gress’s transfer of the Board’s IG function to the EPA IG. After setting out the
applicable rules, we resolve two preliminary questions and then show how
Congress’s direction to the EPA IG to serve as Board IG is the addition of
germane duties to the office of EPA IG, which is permissible under the Appoint-
ments Clause.
A.
The Constitution’s Appointments Clause provides for offices to be “established
by law.” U.S. Const. art. II, § 2, cl. 2; see also United States v. Maurice, 26 F. Cas.
1211, 1213–14 (C.C.D. Va. 1823) (No. 15,747) (Marshall, Circuit Justice). That
clause also provides four specific means of appointing persons to hold established
offices. The default is that officers be appointed by the President with the advice
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and consent of the Senate, but Congress “may by Law vest the Appointment of
such inferior Officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the Courts of
Law, or in the Heads of Departments.” U.S. Const. art. II, § 2, cl. 2. As the
Supreme Court has put it, “That all persons who can be said to hold an office
under the government about to be established under the Constitution were intended
to be included within one or the other of these modes of appointment there can be
but little doubt.” United States v. Germaine, 99 U.S. 508, 510 (1878); see Buckley
v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 126 (1976) (per curiam) (same); see also id. at 128–31
(discussing proposals rejected at the Constitutional Convention to vest appoint-
ment power in Congress). Thus, Congress may create offices, and may choose
among a few means of filling inferior offices, but may not itself fill any office
subject to the Appointments Clause.
Given this division of authority, “a statute creating a new office and conferring
it and its duties on the incumbent of an existing office would be unconstitutional
under the Appointments Clause.” The Constitutional Separation of Powers
Between the President and Congress, 20 Op. O.L.C. 124, 157 (1996) (“Separation
of Powers”) (emphasis added). As a corollary, Congress may not “alter the duties
and powers of existing offices . . . to achieve substantially the same result.” Id.;
see Shoemaker v. United States, 147 U.S. 282, 300 (1893) (“[W]hile Congress
may create an office, it cannot appoint the officer.”); Weiss v. United States, 510
U.S. 163, 174 (1994) (Congress may not “circumvent[] the Appointments Clause
by unilaterally appointing an incumbent to a new and distinct office”); Pres. James
Buchanan, Letter to the House of Representatives (June 25, 1860), in 7 A Compi-
lation of the Messages and Papers of the Presidents 3128, 3129 (James D.
Richardson ed., 1897) (“It has been alleged . . . that this clause is unconstitutional
because it has created a new office and has appointed Captain Meigs to perform its
duties. If it had done this, it would have been a clear question, because Congress
have no right to appoint to any office.”). But where Congress has simply “in-
crease[d] the power and duties of” positions, and the new duties are “germane to
the offices already held by” the incumbents, the Supreme Court has found no
infirmity. Shoemaker, 147 U.S. at 301; see also id. at 289 (Congress may “intrust
the performance of particular duties to officials already charged with duties of the
same general description”) (describing holding of lower court); Weiss, 510 U.S. at
174–76; id. at 195–96 (Scalia, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment).
This Office has concurred in that view. Separation of Powers, 20 Op. O.L.C. at
157–59; Status of the Director of Central Intelligence Under the National Security
Intelligence Reform Act of 2004, 29 Op. O.L.C. 28, 36 n.2 (2005) (“Status of
DCI”).
We have indicated that it is helpful, in applying Shoemaker’s “germaneness”
test, to ask whether an officer’s functions, with the addition by Congress to his
original duties, “could be said” to have been “‘within the contemplation of those
who were in the first place responsible for [his] appointment and confirmation,’”
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and we also have considered “the reasonableness of assigning the new duties ‘in
terms of efficiency and institutional continuity.’” Separation of Powers, 20 Op.
O.L.C. at 158 (quoting Legislation Authorizing the Transfer of Federal Judges
From One District to Another, 4B Op. O.L.C. 538, 541 (1980) (“Transfer of
Federal Judges”)). Shoemaker itself restated its germaneness test in two parts,
concluding that “the duty which the military officers in question were called upon
to perform cannot fairly be said to have been dissimilar to, or outside of the sphere
of, their official duties.” 147 U.S. at 301. The latter phrase suggests an inquiry into
what the appointing authority reasonably could have anticipated as within the
“sphere of” an office at the time of the last appointment before its duties increased.
Cf. Olympic Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. Director, Office of Thrift Supervision, 732
F. Supp. 1183, 1193 (D.D.C. 1990) (finding violation where Congress largely
continued powers of three-person board but consolidated them in single, designat-
ed, pre-existing officer); Weiss, 510 U.S. at 175 (in applying germaneness analysis
to military officers holding the position of military judge, looking to a “long
tradition” of the roles of military officers “in the operation of the military justice
system”). In advising that it would not violate the Appointments Clause to merge
the Court of Claims and the Court of Customs and Patent Appeals without
reappointing the judges, we reasoned “that the functions of judges on the new
court were sufficiently like those in the positions being abolished to view the
legislative redesignations as a modification of an existing position under Shoe-
maker,” and added that “it could be said that the judges’ functions on the merged
court were within the contemplation of those who were in the first place responsi-
ble for their appointment and confirmation.” Transfer of Federal Judges, 4B Op.
O.L.C. at 541.
B.
Before reaching the germaneness inquiry with regard to the Board, we must
resolve two preliminary questions. First, Congress has not conferred new duties on
a particular person which would plainly violate the Constitution. It has conferred
new duties on a particular office, regardless of who may hold it: Whoever holds
one particular IG office (first at FEMA and then at EPA) also assumes the IG
duties for the Board. Congress has, through the language of the Fiscal Year 2002
appropriation, permanently established the position of Board IG. Yet it has
continued to designate the EPA IG to fill that position in annual appropriations
(and it conceivably could seek to re-assign the duty each year). Should that
practice continue, one might argue that each annual provision works a new
Appointments Clause violation. 2 But the question whether such uses of annual
2
Although Congress has power to add to or subtract from the duties of an office, it conceivably
could abuse that power to the point of unconstitutionality. The issue would be similar to one that can
arise with Congress’s power to abolish an office. Congress may do so, even though such action
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appropriations violate or would violate the Appointments Clause begs the question
we must answer under Shoemaker. If the position of IG of the Board is properly
understood as an addition to the duties of the EPA IG rather than the creation of a
new office, then Congress in annually so providing is merely repeating the same
permissible grant of authority to the EPA IG, which is within its rights. The limit
to such a practice in the context of the Appointments Clause is imposed by the
germaneness test itself, not by any separate rule.
Second, one might think it unnecessary to consider germaneness when legisla-
tion uses words that establish a distinct position and designate the incumbent of an
existing office to hold that new position. Here, Congress has provided that
“hereafter there shall be an Inspector General at the Board,” 115 Stat. at 679, and
“an Inspector General” does, in general, hold a distinct office. Furthermore,
Congress has, in assigning the functions of the Board IG to the EPA IG, consis-
tently referred to “the position” of Board IG, e.g., 118 Stat. at 398, a term that
could be a synonym for “office.” The term “position” may suggest more than a
mere addition of duties to the office of EPA IG. It may be argued in this way that
Congress has created a new office.
The better view, however, is that one must look not to the labels that Congress
has used but to the particular duties that it has added to an office; the germaneness
test is the proper mechanism for assessing this question. The Appointments Clause
speaks of the power to appoint “Officers.” An officer holds an office, and an
“office” for purposes of the Clause “is essentially a collection of duties and
authorities,” rather than “a title” or label. Status of DCI, 29 Op. O.L.C. at 30–31;
see United States v. Hartwell, 73 U.S. 385, 393 (1867) (“The term [‘office’]
embraces the ideas of tenure, duration, emolument, and duties.”). Thus, we have
concluded that the position of Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, created
by intelligence-reform legislation, is merely “a continuation of the office of”
Director of Central Intelligence, notwithstanding a change in title, reduction of
duties, and some other changes. Our conclusion rested primarily on a comparison
of duties. See Status of DCI, 29 Op. O.L.C. at 31–32. When Congress adds rather
than subtracts duties, there is a risk that it has created a new office and purported
to fill it, which the Constitution forbids. But the way to answer that question is
through a germaneness analysis of the duties in issue. Id. at 36 n.2.
The facts and reasoning of Shoemaker confirm this duties-based approach.
There, Congress had created a five-member commission with authority to select
and to secure the purchase of land for Rock Creek Park in the District of Colum-
bia. The statute provided “[t]hat the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army,
the Engineer Commissioner of the District of Columbia, and three citizens to be
effectively removes an officer. But Congress may not abuse this power through “ripper” legislation, by
nominally abolishing one office, simultaneously creating a “new” but essentially identical office, and
then requiring a new appointment. See Status of DCI, 29 Op. O.L.C. at 34–35.
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appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, be,
and they are hereby, created a commission.” Act of Sept. 27, 1890, ch. 1001, § 2,
26 Stat. 492, 492 (1890). Congress had created five new positions of “commis-
sioner”; three of the commissioners were to be selected in the way that officers
ordinarily are appointed, yet Congress had designated the remaining two commis-
sioners to be the holders of certain existing offices.
The Shoemakers thus had a credible objection “that two members of the com-
mission were appointed by Congress.” 147 U.S. at 288. They argued that “the act
itself defines these park commissioners to be public officers, because it prescribes
that three of them are to be civilians, to be nominated by the President and
confirmed by the Senate,” and “the other two are likewise ‘officers,’ whose
appointment should have” conformed to the Appointments Clause. Id. at 300. Yet
the Supreme Court unanimously rejected this argument:
[W]e do not think that, because additional duties, germane to the of-
fices already held by them, were devolved upon them by the act, it
was necessary that they should be again appointed by the President
and confirmed by the Senate. It cannot be doubted, and it has fre-
quently been the case, that Congress may increase the power and du-
ties of an existing office without thereby rendering it necessary that
the incumbent should be again nominated and appointed.
....
[I]n the present case, the duty which the military officers in question
were called upon to perform cannot fairly be said to have been dis-
similar to, or outside of the sphere of, their official duties.
Id. at 301. The Court considered not the different titles of commissioner, Chief of
Engineers, and Engineer Commissioner, but rather the relationship of the “addi-
tional duties” and increased “power and duties” of a commissioner to the pre-
existing “official duties” of those military offices. Although the three civilian
commissioners might hold offices, it did not follow that the two ex officio
commissioners each held a new, additional office. The lower court likewise had
reasoned “that it was not unconstitutional for the legislature to intrust the perfor-
mance of particular duties to officials already charged with duties of the same
general description.” Id. at 289. A focus on form likely would have produced a
different result.
The Supreme Court again followed a duties-based analysis a hundred years
later in Weiss. Congress had created the distinct positions of military judges (who
presided over courts-martial) and provided for them to be selected from among
qualified military officers. As military officers, the judges already had been
appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate, but they
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were to be selected as judges by a Judge Advocate General, not the head of a
department. 510 U.S. at 167–68. In addition, there was no dispute that military
judges “act as ‘Officers’ of the United States.” Id. at 169. Yet, as in Shoemaker,
the Court concluded unanimously that another appointment was not needed,
rejecting the argument “that the position of military judge is so different from
other positions to which [a military] officer may be assigned.” Id. at 170. The
Court made two factual points: (1) “[a]lthough military judges obviously perform
certain unique and important functions, all military officers, consistent with a long
tradition, play a role in the operation of the military justice system,” and (2) “the
position of military judge is less distinct from other military positions than the
office of full-time civilian judge is from other offices in civilian society.” Id. at
175.
C.
Thus, one cannot answer the Appointments Clause question simply by noting
Congress’s reference to the “position” of Board IG. The question, instead, is
whether the duties of IG of the Board are “germane” to those of the EPA IG. We
conclude that they are.
The general duties of the Board IG and the EPA IG are defined identically, by
the same statute. The duties of the EPA IG, since the office’s creation, have been
defined by those sections of the Act that set out the duties of any IG. See 5 U.S.C.
app., IG Act § 4(a) (defining “the duty and responsibility of each [IG]”); id. § 2
(stating purposes of IG Offices); id. § 11(2) (requiring an IG, with the duties
defined in section 4, for the EPA). These common duties, as explained above in
Part I, include conducting audits, making certain kinds of recommendations and
reports, and conducting investigations “so as to root out waste and fraud.” IG
Authority, 13 Op. O.L.C. at 55. In creating the position of Board IG, Congress
simply cross-referenced these same duties, stating that he “shall have the duties,
responsibilities, and authorities specified in the Inspector General Act of 1978, as
amended.” 115 Stat. at 679.
It does not follow that Congress could assign to any existing IG the position of
IG at any other department, agency, or entity. We previously have said, for
example, that it is a close question (one we declined to decide) whether Congress
may provide that a federal judge, upon completing a temporary administrative
assignment, would have the option to return to his home district or circuit or,
instead, serve in the District of Columbia Circuit. Transfer of Federal Judges, 4B
Op. O.L.C. at 538. Even though “service as a judge on one federal court is surely
‘germane’ to judicial service on another,” we recognized that a judge’s “appoint-
ment and confirmation are predicated on the expectation that he will in fact be
serving in that district or circuit.” Id. at 540. Similarly, here the IG Act defines the
duties of an IG “with respect to the establishment within which his Office is
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established.” 5 U.S.C. app., IG Act § 4(a); see also id. § 3(a) (“Each [IG] shall
report to and be under the general supervision of the head of the establishment
involved”); id. § 8G(b) & (d) (IG office to be created “in each designated Federal
entity,” with the IG being supervised by the head of that entity). And we have
advised informally, in commenting on pending legislation, that it would violate the
Appointments Clause to add to the Office of Special Inspector General for Iraq
Reconstruction, without reappointment, duties relating to relief and reconstruction
in Louisiana and elsewhere arising out of Hurricane Katrina.
It is enough to recognize that, not only do the Board IG and the EPA IG have
the same general statutory duties, but in addition these two positions involve
entities that have closely related functions and a history of interacting, and the
addition of Board IG duties to the EPA IG does not work a significant increase in
the duties of the EPA IG.
First, it is not as if an IG from one agency were being given additional duties as
IG for another unrelated agency. In carrying out his IG duties for the EPA and the
Board, the EPA IG addresses similar operational matters. The provisions of the
Clean Air Act summarized above in Part I indicate that the Board’s functions serve
the regulatory missions of the EPA and the Labor Department. Indeed, the Board’s
investigations, rulemaking proposals, and reporting roles are, under the statute,
aimed at assisting the EPA and Labor in reducing the risk of future hazardous
chemical releases. The Board’s regulatory authority involves promulgating rules
that require reporting of such releases. Those rules in turn enable the Board to
perform the investigations that lead to its recommendations to the two agencies
that do have primary regulatory responsibility over these matters—the EPA and
the Labor Department. And it appears from the statute that the Board’s mission
has a greater connection with the work of the EPA than the Labor Department. 3
Second, as explained above in Part I, the Board is merely an undesignated
“Federal entity” under the IG Act, rather than a department, enumerated agency, or
even a designated federal entity. And the IG Act contemplates that at least audits
of undesignated federal entities should be conducted in some fashion. See 5 U.S.C.
app., IG Act § 8G(h)(2). The performance of IG functions for an undesignated
federal entity by an IG who exists pursuant to the IG Act, and whose pre-existing
duties involve, as here, subjects similar to those involved in the additional IG
functions, could (at least presumptively) be said to be within the contemplation of
those who were responsible for that IG’s appointment. See Separation of Powers,
20 Op. O.L.C. at 158. Such additional duties likely are not “outside the sphere of,”
and are “of the same general description” as, his pre-existing duties, Shoemaker,
147 U.S. at 301, 289, and the addition likely is reasonable in terms of efficiency,
see Separation of Powers, 20 Op. O.L.C. at 158.
3
We have no occasion to answer the moot question of the germaneness of the duties of the Board
IG to those of the former FEMA IG.
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Furthermore, the EPA IG has received little additional staff, resources, or salary
to carry out the additional duties of Board IG, and this fact tends to confirm that
the increase in duties is not significant. A significant addition to an office’s duties
is more likely to be outside the sphere of its existing duties, see Status of DCI, 29
Op. O.L.C. at 36 n.2, and thus to “amount to assuming a new ‘Offic[e]’ within the
meaning of” the Appointments Clause, Weiss, 510 U.S. at 196 (Scalia, J., concur-
ring). Here, however, in establishing the position of Board IG, Congress has
required the IG who received that function to use personnel of his existing IG
Office rather than establish a new IG Office for the Board, and has barred him
from appointing any individuals to positions within the Board. See, e.g., 115 Stat.
at 679 (FY 2002); 118 Stat. at 399 (FY 2004). Similarly Congress has not
appropriated separate funds for the Board IG; instead, it has left the EPA IG to
carry out his duties with regard to the Board from his appropriation for the EPA IG
Office. In its Fiscal Year 2001 appropriation, for example, Congress included no
funds for the Board IG in its appropriation for the Board, provided a $10,000,000
appropriation for the FEMA IG, and added that the FEMA IG “shall also serve as”
the Board IG. 114 Stat. at 1441A-36 & A-46. Since transferring the Board IG
function to the EPA IG, Congress has continued to include no money for the
Board IG in its appropriations for the Board. See, e.g., 118 Stat. at 399. Instead, in
conference reports on appropriations bills for the EPA, the congressional conferees
have expressed views on how much of its appropriation the EPA IG Office should
spend on the Board IG function and have requested that the EPA include in its
budget requests an amount sufficient to carry out this function. See, e.g., H.R. Rep.
No. 108-401, at 1127 (2003). Under these circumstances, combined with both the
general and specific similarities in duties, there is no reason to conclude that
Congress has appointed the EPA IG to a new and distinct office rather than simply
adding germane duties to his existing office.
The Board does, in addition to being an entity distinct from the EPA, operate
with a statutory protection against any responsibility to, or supervision or direction
by, officers or employees of the EPA, see 42 U.S.C. § 7412(r)(6)(R); see also id.
§ (6)(A) (referring to Board as “independent”), but that independence does not
make the duties of the Board IG any less germane to the pre-existing duties of the
EPA IG. As a statutory matter, Congress is free to revise this independence, such
as by separately providing—as it has in the appropriations provisions at issue—
that an officer in the EPA shall have certain duties with regard to the Board. Nor
can there be any statutory objection to the EPA IG’s “supervising” his own work
as Board IG: The role of Board IG is not one of the functions or duties established
for the Board in section 7412 and therefore is not subject to the provision regard-
ing lack of direction or supervision by EPA officers. See id. § 7412(r)(6)(R).
The question is whether it is relevant to the constitutional germaneness analysis
that Congress first granted this independence and then (arguably) removed some
of it by assigning the function of Board IG to the EPA IG. Congress’s initial grant
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of statutory independence might be said to have placed the duties of any Board IG
outside the sphere of the EPA IG’s duties and not within the reasonable contem-
plation of the President and Senate in appointing the EPA IG. One might argue
that the President and Senate, in determining the suitability of an appointee for the
office of EPA IG, did not have a reasonable opportunity to determine whether he
possessed appropriate qualifications for carrying out the duties of Board IG.
Whatever the merits of such an argument in general, it does not apply here,
because the statutory independence of the Board involves its operational, pro-
grammatic duties under section 7412(r)(6), which do not include the functions of
its IG. Although an IG does have broad powers of auditing and investigation, see
5 U.S.C. app., IG Act §§ 4(a) & 6, these are distinct from program operating au-
thority, which he expressly does not have. See id. § 9(a)(2) (prohibiting the
transfer of any “program operating responsibilities” to an IG); id. § 8G(b) (in
creating IG for designated federal entities, “there shall not be transferred to such
office any program operating responsibilities”). Rather, “Congress intended the
[IG] to be an objective official free from general regulatory responsibilities.” IG
Authority, 13 Op. O.L.C. at 55. An IG also cannot take personnel action against an
agency officer or employee outside of his direct subordinates. 5 U.S.C. app., IG
Act §§ 6(a)(6), (b)(2). Apart from auditing and investigating, he merely reports
and recommends action to his agency’s head, id. §§ 4(a), 5(a) & (d), or in certain
cases to the Attorney General, id. § 4(d). It is for the agency head, not the IG, to
direct and supervise an agency’s officials. Even an IG’s narrow authority over his
direct subordinates, see id. § 6(a)(7), is irrelevant here, where the Board IG has, by
statute, no distinct office or staff. Moreover, lest these statutory limits be trans-
gressed, the IG Act requires that the EPA IG in his role as Board IG report to and
be under the general supervision of the Board, not the EPA Administrator or his
deputy. See id. § 3(a) (“Each [IG] shall report to and be under the general supervi-
sion of the head of the establishment involved”); id. § 8G(d) (same with IGs in a
designated federal entity). In this regard, the EPA IG will have two distinct
masters—the Board and the EPA Administrator—but only one for each role. And
the EPA IG is removable by, and thus ultimately accountable to, not the Adminis-
trator but the President, see id. § 3(b), to whom the Board could appeal. Much as
the EPA cannot be said to be under the supervision or direction of, or responsible
to, its IG—else the Administrator would be a subordinate of the IG—the Board is
not under the supervision or direction of, or responsible to, the Board IG, and thus
not under an EPA officer. Thus, in the area of IG duties, there is no background
rule of Board independence from the EPA that might affect the Appointments
Clause analysis.
Finally, a contrary view of the relevance of the Board’s operational indepen-
dence likely would prevent Congress from assigning to any IG office that is not
vacant the duties of Board IG, given that the statute prohibits “any . . . agency”
from supervising or directing the Board’s operations. 42 U.S.C. § 7412(r)(6)(R).
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Statutory Provision Concerning the IG Position at the CSHIB
Congress would have been required either to establish a separate IG (with staff)
for a micro-agency that has a budget of $9.2 million, see 119 Stat. at 543, and (we
understand) approximately 40 employees, or to create the position of Board IG
pending the next vacancy in and appointment to some other IG office. Such a
choice, if not absurd, is at least counter-intuitive. We see no basis in the Appoint-
ments Clause for forcing Congress into it.
For all of these reasons, there is no violation of the Appointments Clause in
Congress’s provision for the position of Board IG.
C. KEVIN MARSHALL
Deputy Assistant Attorney General
Office of Legal Counsel
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