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Government Operations in the Event of a Lapse in Appropriations, (1995)

Court: United States Attorneys General Number:  Visitors: 17
Filed: Aug. 16, 1995
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: 6, 31 U.S.C. § 1515 (recodified from section 665(e) at the time of the 1981 Opinion).1981, regarding the authority for the continuance of Government, functions during the temporary lapse of appropriations, and affirm, that the constitutional power of the purse resides with Congress.
                   Government Operations in the Event of a
                         Lapse in Appropriations
A government agency may employ personal services in advance of appropriations only when there is a
  reasonable and articulable connection between the function to be performed and the safety of human
  life or the protection of property, and when there is some reasonable likelihood that either or both
  would be compromised in some significant degree by the delay in the performance of the function in
  question.

                                                                                      August 16, 1995

                        MEMORANDUM OPINION FOR THE DIRECTOR
                         OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET

    This memorandum responds to your request to the Attorney General for advice
regarding the permissible scope of government operations during a lapse in
appropriations.1
    The Constitution provides that “no Money shall be drawn from the Treasury,
but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law.” U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 7.
The Treasury is further protected through the Antideficiency Act, which among
other things prohibits all officers and employees of the federal government from
entering into obligations in advance of appropriations and prohibits employing
federal personnel except in emergencies, unless otherwise authorized by law. See
31 U.S.C. §§ 1341 et seq.2
    In the early 1980s, Attorney General Civiletti issued two opinions with respect
to the implications of the Antideficiency Act. See Applicability of the Antideficien-
cy Act Upon a Lapse in an Agency’s Appropriations, 4A Op. O.L.C. 16 (1980)
(“1980 Opinion”); Authority for the Continuance of Government Functions
During a Temporary Lapse in Appropriations, 
5 Op. O.L.C. 1
(1981) (“1981
Opinion”). The 1981 Opinion has frequently been cited in the ensuing years. Since
that opinion was written, the Antideficiency Act has been amended in one respect,
and we analyze the effect of that amendment below. The amendment amplified on
the emergencies exception for employing federal personnel by providing that “[a]s
used in this section, the term ‘emergencies involving the safety of human life or


     1
       We do not in this memorandum address the different set of issues that arise when the limit on the
public debt has been reached and Congress has failed to raise the debt ceiling.
     2
       For the purposes of this inquiry, there are two relevant provisions of the Antideficiency Act. The
first provides that “[a]n officer or employee of the United States Government or the District of
Columbia government may not . . . involve either government in a contract or obligation for the
payment of money before an appropriation is made unless authorized by law.” 31 U.S.C.
§ 1341(a)(1)(B). The second provides that “[a]n officer or employee of the United States Govern-
ment . . . may not accept voluntary services . . . or employ personal services exceeding that authorized
by law except for emergencies involving the safety of human life or the protection of property.” 31
U.S.C. § 1342.




                                                   1
                 Supplemental Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel


the protection of property’ does not include ongoing, regular functions of govern-
ment the suspension of which would not imminently threaten the safety of human
life or the protection of property.” 31 U.S.C. § 1342.
    With respect to the effects of this amendment, we continue to adhere to the
view expressed to General Counsel Robert Damus of the Office of Management
and Budget that “the 1990 amendment to 31 U.S.C. § 1342 does not detract from
the Attorney General’s earlier analyses; if anything, the amendment clarified that
the Antideficiency Act’s exception for emergencies is narrow and must be applied
only when a threat to life or property is imminent.” Letter for Robert G. Damus,
General Counsel, Office of Management and Budget, from Walter Dellinger,
Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel (Oct. 19, 1993) (“1993
Letter”). In order to ensure that the clarification of the 1990 amendment is not
overlooked, we believe that one aspect of the 1981 Opinion’s description of
emergency governmental functions should be modified. Otherwise, the 1981
Opinion continues to be a sound analysis of the legal authorities respecting
government operations when Congress has failed to enact regular appropriations
bills or a continuing resolution to cover a hiatus between regular appropriations.

                                          I.

   Since the issuance of the extensive 1981 Opinion, the prospect of a general
appropriations lapse has arisen frequently. In 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1987,
and 1990, lapses of funding ranging from several hours to three days actually did
occur. While several of these occurred entirely over weekends, others required the
implementation of plans to bring government operations into compliance with the
requirements of the Antideficiency Act. These prior responses to the threat of or
actual lapsed appropriations have been so commonly referred to as cases of
“shutting down the government” that this has become a nearly universal shorthand
to describe the effect of a lapse in appropriations. It will assist in understanding
the true extent of the Act’s requirements to realize that this is an entirely inaccu-
rate description. Were the federal government actually to shut down, air traffic
controllers would not staff FAA air control facilities, with the consequence that
the nation’s airports would be closed and commercial air travel and transport
would be brought to a standstill. Were the federal government to shut down, the
FBI, DEA, ATF and Customs Service would stop interdicting and investigating
criminal activities of great varieties, including drug smuggling, fraud, machine
gun and explosives sales, and kidnapping. The country’s borders would not be
patrolled by the border patrol, with an extraordinary increase in illegal immigra-
tion as a predictable result. In the absence of government supervision, the stock
markets, commodities and futures exchanges would be unable to operate. Meat
and poultry would go uninspected by federal meat inspectors, and therefore could
not be marketed. Were the federal government to shut down, medicare payments
for vital operations and medical services would cease. VA hospitals would



                                          2
              Government Operations in the Event of a Lapse in Appropriations


abandon patients and close their doors. These are simply a few of the significant
impacts of a federal government shut down. Cumulatively, these actions and the
others required as part of a true shutdown of the federal government would impose
significant health and safety risks on millions of Americans, some of which would
undoubtedly result in the loss of human life, and they would immediately result in
massive dislocations of and losses to the private economy, as well as disruptions
of many aspects of society and of private activity generally, producing incalcula-
ble amounts of suffering and loss.
   The Antideficiency Act imposes substantial restrictions on obligating funds or
contracting for services in advance of appropriations or beyond appropriated
levels, restrictions that will cause significant hardship should any lapse in
appropriations extend much beyond those we have historically experienced. To be
sure, even the short lapses that have occurred have caused serious dislocations in
the provision of services, generated wasteful expenditures as agencies have closed
down certain operations and then restarted them, and disrupted federal activities.
Nevertheless, for any short-term lapse in appropriations, at least, the federal
government will not be truly “shut down” to the degree just described, simply
because Congress has itself provided that some activities of government should
continue even when annual appropriations have not yet been enacted to fund
current activities.
   The most significant provisions of the Antideficiency Act codify three basic
restrictions on the operation of government activities. First, the Act implements
the constitutional requirement that “No Money shall be drawn from the Treasury,
but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law.” U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 7.
Second, when no current appropriations measure has been passed to fund contracts
or obligations, it restricts entering into contracts or incurring obligations (except as
to situations authorized by other law). Third, it restricts employing the services of
employees to perform government functions beyond authorized levels to emergen-
cy situations, where the failure to perform those functions would result in an
imminent threat to the safety of human life or the protection of property.3 The
1981 Opinion elaborated on the various exceptions in the Antideficiency Act that
permit some continuing government functions, and we will only summarize the
major categories here:
   Multi-year appropriations and indefinite appropriations. Not all government
functions are funded with annual appropriations. Some operate under multi-year
appropriations and others operate under indefinite appropriations provisions that
do not require passage of annual appropriations legislation. Social security is a
prominent example of a program that operates under an indefinite appropriation.


   3
     These restrictions are enforced by criminal penalties. An officer or employee of the United States
who knowingly and willfully violates the restrictions shall be fined not more than $5,000, imprisoned
for not more than two years, or both. 31 U.S.C. § 1350 (1994).




                                                  3
                 Supplemental Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel


In such cases, benefit checks continue to be honored by the Treasury, because
there is no lapse in the relevant appropriation.
   Express authorizations: contracting authority and borrowing authority.
Congress provides express authority for agencies to enter into contracts or to
borrow funds to accomplish some of their functions. An example is the “food and
forage” authority given to the Department of Defense, which authorizes contract-
ing for necessary clothing, subsistence, forage, supplies, etc., without an appropri-
ation. 41 U.S.C. § 11 (1994). In such cases, obligating funds or contracting can
continue, because the Antideficiency Act does not bar such activities when they
are authorized by law. As the 1981 Opinion emphasized, the simple authorization
or even direction to perform a certain action that standardly can be found in
agencies’ enabling or organic legislation is insufficient to support a finding of
express authorization or necessary implication (the exception addressed next in the
text), standing 
alone. 5 Op. O.L.C. at 4
. There must be some additional indication
of an evident intention to have the activity continue despite an appropriations
lapse.
   Necessary implications: authority to obligate that is necessarily implied by
statute. The 1981 Opinion concluded that the Antideficiency Act contemplates
that a limited number of government functions funded through annual appropria-
tions must otherwise continue despite a lapse in their appropriations because the
lawful continuation of other activities necessarily implies that these functions will
continue as 
well. 5 Op. O.L.C. at 5
. Examples include the check writing and
distributing functions necessary to disburse the social security benefits that operate
under indefinite appropriations. Further examples include contracting for the
materials essential to the performance of the emergency services that continue
under that separate exception. In addition, in the 1980 Opinion, Attorney General
Civiletti opined that agencies are by necessary implication authorized “to incur
those minimal obligations necessary to closing [the] agency.” 4A Op. O.L.C. at
20. The 1981 Opinion reiterated this 
conclusion, 5 Op. O.L.C. at 10
n.12, and
consistent practice since that time has provided for the orderly termination of those
functions that may not continue during a period of lapsed appropriations.
   Obligations necessary to the discharge of the President’s constitutional duties
and powers. Efforts should be made to interpret a general statute such as the
Antideficiency Act to avoid the significant constitutional questions that would
arise were the Act read to critically impair the exercise of constitutional functions
assigned to the Executive. In this regard, the 1981 Opinion noted that when
dealing with functions instrumental in the discharge of the President’s constitu-
tional powers, the “President’s obligational authority . . . will be further buttressed
in connection with any initiative that is consistent with statutes—and thus with the
exercise of legislative power in an area of concurrent authority—that are more
narrowly drawn than the Antideficiency Act and that would otherwise authorize




                                          4
               Government Operations in the Event of a Lapse in Appropriations


the President to carry out his constitutionally assigned tasks in the manner he
contemplates.” 5 Op. O.L.C. at 6
–7.4
   Personal or voluntary services “for emergencies involving the safety of hu-
man life or the protection of property.” The Antideficiency Act prohibits
contracting or obligating in advance of appropriations generally, except for
circumstances just summarized above. The Act also contains a separate exception
applicable to personal or voluntary services that deal with emergencies. 31 U.S.C.
§ 1342. This section was amended in 1990. We will analyze the effects of that
amendment in Part II of this memorandum.
   Finally, one issue not explicitly addressed by the 1981 Opinion seems to us to
have been settled by consistent administrative practice. That issue concerns
whether the emergency status of government functions should be determined on
the assumption that the private economy will continue operating during a lapse in
appropriations, or whether the proper assumption is that the private economy will
be interrupted. As an example of the difference this might make, consider that air
traffic controllers perform emergency functions if aircraft continue to take off and
land, but would not do so if aircraft were grounded. The correct assumption in the
context of an anticipated long period of lapsed appropriations, where it might be
possible to phase in some alternatives to the government activity in question, and
thus over time to suspend the government function without thereby imminently
threatening human life or property, is not entirely clear. However, with respect to
any short lapse in appropriations, the practice of past administrations has been to
assume the continued operation of the private economy, and so air traffic control-
lers, meat inspectors, and other similarly situated personnel have been considered
to be within the emergency exception of section 1342.

                                                    II.

   The text of 31 U.S.C. § 1342, as amended in 1990, now reads:

        An officer or employee of the United States Government or of the
        District of Columbia government may not accept voluntary services

     4
       The attorneys general and this office have declined to catalog what actions might be undertaken
under this heading. In 1981, for example, Attorney General Civiletti quoted Attorney General (later
Justice) Frank Murphy. “These constitutional powers have never been specifically defined, and in fact
cannot be, since their extent and limitations are largely dependent upon conditions and circumstanc-
es. . . . The right to take specific action might not exist under one state of facts, while under another it
might be the absolute duty of the Executive to take such action.” 1981 
Opinion, 5 Op. O.L.C. at 7
n.9
(quoting Request of the Senate for an Opinion as to the Powers of the President “in Emergency or
State of War,” 39 Op. Att’y Gen. 343, 347–48 (1939)). This power should be called upon cautiously, as
the courts have received such Executive Branch assertions skeptically. See, e.g., Youngstown Sheet &
Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 
343 U.S. 579
(1952); George v. Ishimaru, 
849 F. Supp. 68
(D.D.C.), vacated as
moot, No. 94-5111, 
1994 WL 517746
(D.C. Cir. Aug. 25, 1994) (per curiam). But see Haig v. Agee,
453 U.S. 280
(1981); In re Neagle, 
135 U.S. 1
(1890).




                                                     5
                      Supplemental Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel


          for either government or employ personal services exceeding that au-
          thorized by law except for emergencies involving the safety of hu-
          man life or the protection of property. This section does not apply to
          a corporation getting amounts to make loans (except paid in capital
          amounts) without legal liability of the United States Government. As
          used in this section, the term “emergencies involving the safety of
          human life or the protection of property” does not include ongoing,
          regular functions of government the suspension of which would not
          imminently threaten the safety of human life or the protection of
          property.

31 U.S.C. § 1342 (1994). Because of the section 1342 bar on employing personal
services, officers and employees may employ personal services in excess of other
authorizations by law only in emergency situations.5 This section does not by itself
authorize paying employees in emergency situations, but it does authorize entering
into obligations to pay for such labor.
   The central interpretive task under section 1342 is and has always been to
construe the scope of the emergencies exception of that section. When the 1981
Opinion undertook this task, the predecessor to section 1342 did not contain the
final sentence of the current statute, which was added in 1990. Examining that
earlier version, the Attorney General concluded that the general language of the
provision and the sparse legislative history of it did not reveal its precise meaning.
However, the opinion was able to glean some additional understanding of the
statute from that legislative history.
   The Attorney General noted that as originally enacted in 1884, the provision
forbade unauthorized employment “except in cases of sudden emergency involv-
ing the loss of human life or the destruction of property.” 1981 Opinion, 5 Op.
O.L.C. at 8 (quoting Act of May 1, 1994, ch. 37, 23 Stat. 15, 17) (emphasis
deleted). He then observed that in 1950, Congress enacted the modern version of
the Antideficiency Act and accepted revised language for section 1342 that
originally had been suggested by the Director of the Bureau of the Budget and the


   5
       The 1981 Opinion concluded that:
          [d]espite the use of the term ‘voluntary service,’ the evident concern underlying this
          provision is not government agencies’ acceptance of the benefit of services rendered
          without compensation. Rather, the original version of [section 1342] was enacted as
          part of an urgent deficiency appropriation act in 1884, Act of May 1, 1994, ch. 37, 23
          Stat. 15, 17, in order to avoid claims for compensation arising from the unauthorized
          provision of services to the government by non-employees, and claims for additional
          compensation asserted by government employees performing extra services after
          hours. This is, under [section 1342], government officers and employees may not in-
          volve government in contract for employment, i.e., for compensated labor, except in
          emergency situations. 30 Op. Att’y Gen. 129, 131 
(1913). 5 Op. O.L.C. at 8
(emphasis in original).




                                                    6
              Government Operations in the Event of a Lapse in Appropriations


Comptroller General in 
1947. 5 Op. O.L.C. at 9
. In analyzing these different
formulations, the Attorney General stated that

        [w]ithout elaboration, these officials proposed that “cases of sudden
        emergency” be amended to “cases of emergency,” “loss of human
        life” to “safety of human life,” and “destruction of property” to “pro-
        tection of property.” These changes were not qualified or explained
        by the report accompanying the 1947 recommendation or by any as-
        pect of the legislative history of the general appropriations act for
        fiscal year 1951, which included the modern [section 1341]. Act of
        September 6, 1950, Pub. L. No. 81-759, § 1211, 64 Stat. 765. Con-
        sequently, we infer from the plain import of the language of their
        amendments that the drafters intended to broaden the authority for
        emergency employment.

Id. The 1981
Opinion also sought guidance from the consistent administrative
practice of the Office of Management and Budget (“OMB”) in applying identical
“emergencies” language found in another provision. That other provision prohibits
OMB from apportioning appropriated funds in a manner that would indicate the
need for a deficiency or supplemental appropriation, except in cases of “emergen-
cies involving the safety of human life, [or] the protection of property”—
phraseology identical to the pre-1990 version of section 1342.6 Combining these
two sources with the statutory text, the Attorney General articulated two rules for
identifying functions for which government officers may enter into obligations to
pay for personal services in excess of legal authority other than section 1342 itself:


   6
     31 U.S.C. § 1515 (recodified from section 665(e) at the time of the 1981 Opinion). Analyzing past
administrative practice under this statute, Attorney General Civiletti found that:
        Directors of the Bureau of the Budget and of the Office of Management and Budget
        have granted dozens of deficiency reapportionments under this subsection in the last
        30 years, and have apparently imposed no test more stringent than the articulation of a
        reasonable relationship between the funded activity and the safety of human life or the
        protection of property. Activities for which deficiency apportionments have been
        granted on this basis include [FBI] criminal investigations, legal services rendered by
        the Department of Agriculture in connection with state meat inspection programs and
        enforcement of the Wholesome Meat Act of 1967, 21 U.S.C. §§ 601–695, the protec-
        tion and management of commodity inventories by the Commodity Credit Corpora-
        tion, and the investigation of aircraft accidents by the National Transportation Safety
        Board. These few illustrations demonstrate the common sense approach that has guid-
        ed the interpretation of § 665(e). Most important, under § 665(e)(2), each apportion-
        ment or reapportionment indicating the need for a deficiency or supplemental appro-
        priation has been reported contemporaneously to both Houses of Congress, and, in the
        face of these reports, Congress has not acted in any way to alter the relevant 1950
        wording of § 665(e)(1)(B), which is, in this respect, identical to § 665(b).
1981 
Opinion, 5 Op. O.L.C. at 9
–10 (footnotes omitted).




                                                  7
                 Supplemental Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel


       First, there must be some reasonable and articulable connection be-
       tween the function to be performed and the safety of human life or
       the protection of property. Second, there must be some reasonable
       likelihood that the safety of human life or the protection of property
       would be compromised, in some degree, by delay in the performance
       of the function in 
question. 5 Op. O.L.C. at 8
.
    While we continue to believe that the 1981 articulation is a fair reading of the
Antideficiency Act even after the 1990 amendment, see 1993 Letter, we are aware
of the possibility the second of these two rules might be read more expansively
than was intended, and thus might be applied to functions that are not emergencies
within the meaning of the statute. To forestall possible misinterpretations, the
second criteria’s use of the phrase “in some degree” should be replaced with the
phrase, “in some significant degree.”
    The reasons for this change rest on our understanding of the function of the
1990 amendment, which comes from considering the content of the amendment,
its structure, and its sparse legislative history. That history consists of a solitary
reference in the conference report to the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of
1990, Pub. L. No. 101-508, 104 Stat. 1388:

       The conference report also makes conforming changes to title 31 of
       the United States Code to make clear that . . . ongoing, regular opera-
       tions of the Government cannot be sustained in the absence of ap-
       propriations, except in limited circumstances. These changes guard
       against what the conferees believe might be an overly broad interpre-
       tation of an opinion of the Attorney General issued on January 16,
       1981, regarding the authority for the continuance of Government
       functions during the temporary lapse of appropriations, and affirm
       that the constitutional power of the purse resides with Congress.

H.R. Rep. No. 101-964, at 1170 (1990). While hardly articulating the intended
scope of the exception, the conference report does tend to support what would
otherwise be the most natural reading of the amendment standing alone: because it
is phrased as identifying the functions that should be excluded from the scope of
the term “emergency,” it seems intended to limit the coverage of that term,
narrowing the circumstances that might otherwise be taken to constitute an
emergency within the meaning of the statute.
   Beyond this, however, we do not believe that the amendment adds any signifi-
cant new substantive meaning to the pre-existing portion of section 1342, simply
because the most prominent feature of the addition—its emphasis on there being a
threat that is imminent, or “ready to take place, near at hand,” see Webster’s Third
New International Dictionary 1130 (1986)—is an idea that is already present in



                                          8
             Government Operations in the Event of a Lapse in Appropriations


the term “emergency” itself, which means “an unforeseen combination of
circumstances or the resulting state that calls for immediate action” to respond to
the occurrence or situation. 
Id. at 741.7
The addition of the concept of “imminent”
to the pre-existing concept of “emergency” is thus largely redundant. This
redundancy does, however, serve to emphasize and reinforce the requirement that
there be a threat to human life or property of such a nature that immediate action is
a necessary response to the situation. The structure of the amendment offers
further support for this approach. Congress did not alter the operative language of
the statute; instead, Congress chose to enact an interpretive provision that simply
prohibits overly expansive interpretations of the “emergency” exception.
    Under the formulation of the 1981 Opinion, government functions satisfy
section 1342 if, inter alia, the safety of human life or the protection of property
would be “compromised, in some 
degree.” 5 Op. O.L.C. at 8
. It is conceivable that
some would interpret this phrase to be satisfied even if the threat were de minimis,
in the sense that the increased risk to life or property were insignificant, so long as
it were possible to say that safety of life or protection of property bore a reasona-
ble likelihood of being compromised at all. This would be too expansive an
application of the emergency provision. The brief delay of routine maintenance on
government vehicles ought not to constitute an “emergency,” for example, and yet
it is quite possible to conclude that the failure to maintain vehicles properly may
“compromise, to some degree” the safety of the human life of the occupants or the
protection of the vehicles, which are government property. We believe that the
revised articulation clarifies that the emergencies exception applies only to cases
of threat to human life or property where the threat can be reasonably said to the
near at hand and demanding of immediate response.

                                                    WALTER DELLINGER
                                                   Assistant Attorney General
                                                    Office of Legal Counsel




    7
      See also Random House Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged 636 (2d ed. 1987)
(“emergency” means “a sudden, urgent, usually unexpected occurrence or occasion requiring
immediate action”); Webster’s II New Riverside University Dictionary 427 (1988) (“an unexpected,
serious occurrence or situation urgently requiring prompt action”).




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