1 FAM 000
AUTHORITY, RESPONSIBILITY, AND ORGANIZATION
1 FAM 010
AUTHORITY, RESPONSIBILITY, AND ORGANIZATION
(CT:ORG-521; 03-22-2019)
(Office of Origin: HR/RMA)
1 FAM 011 AUTHORITY FOR CONDUCTING
FOREIGN RELATIONS
(CT:ORG-62; 01-31-1995)
The Constitution vests in the President the power to make
treaties and appoint ambassadors, other public ministers, and consuls, by and
with the advice and consent of the Senate. By derivation from these
Constitutional provisions, the President exercises primary authority and
responsibility for the formulation and execution of foreign policy.
1 FAM 011.1 Scope
(CT:ORG-242; 05-05-2011)
a. The functional statements or organizational responsibilities
and authorities assigned to each major component of the Department are
described in this volume of the Foreign Affairs Manual. They comprise the
basic organizational directive of the Department of State.
b. This volume also cites the more important
legislation and executive orders, accompanied by charts, where appropriate,
relating to the responsibilities of the Department of State.
c. The official organization chart of the Department
can be found on the U.S. Department of State Intranet website.
1 FAM 011.2 Role of Department of
State
(CT:ORG-104; 06-30-2001)
The Department of State exists to assist the President,
through the Secretary of State, in formulating and executing the foreign policy
and relations of the United States of America.
1 FAM 012 THE SECRETARY OF STATES
AUTHORITY
(CT:ORG-242; 05-05-2011)
a. The Secretary of States basic authority derives
from the provisions of the U.S. Constitution that vest in the President the
authority to conduct foreign affairs. The Secretary of State is the
Presidents principal foreign policy advisor and is responsible for the
formulation of foreign policy and the execution of approved policy (22 U.S.C.
2656).
b. The Secretary exercises authorities under numerous
statutes and executive orders, including the State Department Basic Authorities
Act of 1980, 70 Stat. 890, as amended, the Foreign Service Act of 1980, Public
Law 96-465, as amended, and the Omnibus Diplomatic Security and Antiterrorism
Act of 1986 (Public Law 99-399), as amended.
c. In addition, the authorities of the Secretary of
State include authority to administer the Department and the Foreign Service under
22 U.S.C. 2651a, 3921, and 3926; and E.O. 12137 and E.O. 12163.
1 FAM 013 INTERDEPARTMENTAL DIRECTION
AND LEADERSHIP
(CT:ORG-342; 08-27-2014)
The Department of State provides interdepartmental
direction and leadership to other foreign affairs agencies of the U.S.
government.
1 FAM 013.1 National Security
Council System and Direction, Coordination, and Supervision of
Interdepartmental Activities Abroad
(CT:ORG-62; 01-31-1995)
To assist in carrying out the Presidents responsibilities
for the conduct of national security affairs, the President has designated the
National Security Council (NSC) as the principal forum for consideration of
national security policy issues requiring Presidential decision. The following
interagency groups with Department of State participation have been established
to support the NSC at large and its individual members in carrying out their
responsibilities for foreign policy.
1 FAM 013.1-1 Senior
Interdepartmental Group-Foreign Policy (SIG-FP)
(CT:ORG-242; 05-05-2011)
a. The Senior Interdepartmental Group-Foreign Policy
(SIG-FP) will:
(1) Ensure that important foreign policy issues requiring
interagency attention receive full, prompt, and systematic consideration;
(2) Deal with interdepartmental matters raised by any
member or referred to it by subordinate interagency groups, or, if such matters
require higher-level consideration, report them to the Secretary of State for
decision or referral to the NSC;
(3) Ensure a proper selectivity of the foreign
policy/foreign affairs areas and issues to which the United States applies its
efforts;
(4) Monitor the execution of approved policies and decisions;
and
(5) Evaluate the adequacy and effectiveness of
interdepartmental programs and activities abroad.
b. The SIG-FP is composed of senior policy-level
representatives of the Department of State (Chairman), the Department of
Defense, the Director of Central Intelligence, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, and the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs.
Representatives of other departments and agencies with responsibility for
specific matters to be considered will attend on invitation by the Chairman.
1 FAM 013.1-2 Interdepartmental
Group (IG)
(CT:ORG-104; 06-30-2001)
a. An interdepartmental group (IG) is established and
convened under the authority of the Secretary of State. Its two primary
responsibilities are to:
(1) Formulate foreign policy for consideration at the
policy level; and
(2) Implement approved policy decisions.
b. An IG is designed to coordinate the positions and
interests of the foreign affairs community through an orderly, well-managed
process. The Department of State is responsible for ensuring that the views
and positions of all appropriate agencies are adequately represented throughout
the process.
c. The IGs will be chaired by the appropriate
Assistant Secretary, and membership will include representatives of the
Secretary of Defense, the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, the
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Assistant to the President for
National Security Affairs, and other agencies at the discretion of the Chair,
depending on the issue under consideration.
1 FAM 013.1-3 Interagency Process
(CT:ORG-104; 06-30-2001)
Policy issues flow upward from interagency groups (IGs) at
the Assistant Secretary level, to senior interagency groups (SIGs) at the
Deputy or Under Secretary level, and then to the National Security Council
(NSC) for decision. Foreign policy issues in the interagency system originate
in the Departments bureaus or are identified for study in a National Security
Study Directive (NSSD) emanating from the White House. The culmination of the
interagency process is the National Security Decision Directive (NSDD) issued
by the President. The NSDD promulgates policy decisions taken by the President
and directs their implementation.
1 FAM 013.1-4 Country Director
(CT:ORG-342; 08-27-2014)
a. A country director serves as the single focus of
responsibility for leadership and coordination of departmental and
interdepartmental activities concerning his or country or countries of assignment.
In particular, the director will:
(1) Provide continuing departmental and
interdepartmental leadership in planning, coordination, and implementation of
decisions;
(2) Raise specific matters for consideration by the
NSC interdepartmental groups, and bring detailed knowledge to the
interdepartmental group discussions when so requested; and
(3) Serve as the base for crisis task force
operations, as necessary.
b. The country director will be responsible for seeing
that the chief of missions needs are served both within the Department and
U.S. government-wide and will ensure that the mission is properly supported in
the full range of its requirements, policy, operations, and administration.
c. Each country director will organize and develop
such contacts, channels, and mechanisms as are appropriate to and necessary for
full interdepartmental leadership on country matters, and for full support to
the Assistant Secretary.
d. To assist in providing guidance and direction to the
country director, the assistant secretary will have one or more deputy
assistant secretaries whose areas of responsibility will be defined by the
Assistant Secretary.
1 FAM 013.2 Responsibilities of
Chiefs of U.S. Missions
(CT:ORG-457; 06-11-2018)
a. Under the direction of the President, the Chief of
Mission (COM) has full responsibility for the direction, coordination, and
supervision of all U.S. Executive Branch employees in his or her country,
regardless of their employment categories or location, except those under the
command of a U.S. military area commander (the Geographic Combatant Commander
or GCC), individuals detailed to an International Organization (IO) to do the
work of that IO, or Voice of America correspondents on assignment. With
these exceptions, the COM is in charge of all Executive Branch personnel,
activities and operations in his or her country of assignment.
b. The COM is responsible for the security of his or
her Mission and, subject to the same exceptions noted above and an additional
exception for any personnel for whom the Secretary of State has delegated
operational control of overseas security functions to the head of such
personnel's parent agency (see 2 FAH-2 H-116),
all U.S. Government personnel on official duty abroad and their accompanying
dependents. Title 22 U.S.C. 4801 et seq.
and the President's Letter of Instruction to Chiefs of Mission serve as the
main authorities for the execution of COM security responsibility. This is a
separate and distinct responsibility from COM authority.
c. COM authority and security responsibility are
subject to exceptions and exclusions by U.S. law or Presidential directive.
The exceptions are cited above. These exceptions will apply throughout 1 FAM 013.2.
d. Exclusions relate to personnel who are outside the
boundaries of the qualifying language. For example, the President's Letter and
National Security Decision Directive (NSDD) 38 specify that the COM's authority
extends to U.S. Government employees of the "Executive Branch". The
use of the word "employee" also excludes those who do not have an
employer-employee relationship with the U.S. Government.
e. The Presidents Letter of Instruction is a
foundational document that explicitly addresses the authority and
responsibility of the COM and outlines the roles and responsibilities of
Executive Branch agencies conducting official U.S. Government activities in the
COMs country of responsibility. The President instructs the COM to:
(1) Direct, coordinate and supervise all U.S.
Government Executive Branch activities, operations and employees;
(2) Assume full responsibility for the security of the
mission and all the personnel for whom the COM is responsible, whether inside
or outside the chancery gate. Absent an interagency agreement, the COM must
provide for the security of all U.S. Government personnel on official duty
abroad;
(3) Consult and coordinate with the GCC to keep each
other currently and fully informed, and to cooperate on all matters of mutual
interest;
(4) Require all U.S. Government personnel to obtain
country clearance before entering the COM's assigned country on official
business. The COM may refuse country clearance or may place conditions or
restrictions on visiting personnel as deemed necessary;
(5) All Executive Branch personnel under COM authority
must submit staffing change requests in accordance with NSDD 38, obtaining COM
approval before changing the size, composition, or mandate of their staffs,
regardless of the duration or purpose of the proposed position or assignment.
f. The contents of each President's Letter of
Instruction may differ according to whether the COM has a bilateral or
international organization portfolio.
g. In accordance with 22 U.S.C. 3927a, COMs are
required to undertake a review of programs, personnel, and funding levels of
every staff element under their authority at least once every 5 years to better
meet foreign policy goals and ensure capital projects are sized correctly.
This rightsizing mandate extends to overseas staff of all Executive Branch
agencies.
h. Additional legislation, Presidential directives, and
executive orders relating to the responsibilities of the COM and the exercise
of COM authority over U.S. Government employees, operations and activities
overseas include, but are not limited to, the following:
(1) 22 U.S.C. 3902(3), Definitions
of Chief of Mission:
(a) Chief of Mission means the principal officer in
charge of a diplomatic mission of the United States or of a United States
office abroad which is designated by the Secretary of State as diplomatic in
nature, including certain officers designated as charge daffaires.
(b) The principal officers in charge of certain
Consulates General have been designated as COMs (for example, the Consulate
General in Jerusalem and the Consulate General in Hong Kong).
(2) 22 U.S.C. 4805, which states that Federal
agencies, with or without reimbursement, shall cooperate (through agreements)
to the maximum extent possible with the Secretary of State to perform security
inspections, provide logistical support relating to the differing missions and
facilities of other federal agencies, and perform other overseas security
functions as may be authorized by the Secretary.
(3) 22 U.S.C. 4831, Accountability Review Board 12 FAM 030 provides the context for when the Secretary of
State shall convene an Accountability Review Board (ARB). Specifically, a
Board must be convened if there is a security-related incident resulting in
loss of life, serious injury, or significant destruction of property related to
a U.S. Government mission abroad, or if there is a serious breach of security
involving the intelligence activities of a foreign government directed at a
U.S. Government mission abroad.
(4) 22 U.S.C. 3927(c) provides
that each COM to a foreign country shall have as a principal duty the promotion
of United States goods and services for export to such country. More
information can be found in the Foreign Service Act.
(5) Pursuant to 22 U.S.C. 4801, et seq. the Secretary
of State is responsible for the following. COMs may be required to implement
such policies on the Secretary's behalf:
(a) Coordinating all U.S. Government personnel assigned
to U.S. posts and missions abroad (U.S. or other missions, international
organizations), except for facilities, installations or personnel under the
command of a GCC;
(b) Establishing appropriate overseas staffing levels
for all such posts and missions for all federal agencies with activities abroad
(except for personnel and activities under the command of a GCC or regional
inspector general offices under the jurisdiction of the Inspector General, U.S.
Agency for International Development or
USAID); and
(c) Developing and implementing policies and programs
that provide for the safe and efficient evacuation of U.S. Government
personnel, dependents and private citizens when their lives are endangered.
(6) The Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 and the Arms
Export Control Act authorize a range of programs for foreign assistance and
Foreign Military Sales. The COM has a significant role in directing and
supervising the implementation of all programs authorized by these Acts in the
COM's country of responsibility, consistent with the President's Letter of
Instruction.
(7) National Security Decision Directive (NSDD) 38,
July 13, 1982, on staffing at Diplomatic Missions and Constituent Posts. NSDD
38 and guidelines allow for the flexible, systematic and expeditious deployment
and management of personnel of all U.S. Government agencies operating under the
authority of the COM in support of U.S. foreign policy objectives. The
directive requires COM approval prior to Executive Branch agencies undertaking
changes to current staffing authorizations. In addition, the directive serves
as the foundational document for establishing appropriate overseas staffing
levels at posts and missions for federal agencies with activities abroad
(excluding exceptions). The point of contact in the State Department for such
matters is the Office of Rightsizing. The Department of State maintains a
current record of staffing authorization for each overseas post. See 2 FAH-2 H-110 for further information.
(8) E.O. 12333, United States Intelligence Activities,
Part 1.9[1], states that
the Secretary of State shall: (a) Overtly collect information relevant to
United States foreign policy concerns; (b) Produce and disseminate foreign
intelligence relating to United States foreign policy as required for the
execution of the Secretary's responsibilities; (c) Disseminate, as appropriate,
reports received from United States diplomatic and consular posts; (d) Transmit
reporting requirements of the Intelligence Community to the Chiefs of United
States Missions abroad; and (e) Support Chiefs of Missions in discharging their
statutory responsibilities for direction and coordination of mission
activities. The responsibility of the Director of National Intelligence is to
ensure intelligence activities are conducted in a manner consistent with the
law.
(9) Relationship with Non-Personal Services Commercial
Contractors, see 2 FAH-2
H-116.6 and, if appropriate, Federal
Acquisition Regulation (FAR) 52.225-19.
h. 2 FAM 111.3, 2 FAM 113 and 2 FAH-2 H-100 contain
more information on COM authorities and responsibilities. Not all agencies
may be able to access the Department of State website.
1 FAM 013.3 Foreign Assistance
Administration and Related Functions
1 FAM 013.3-1 Foreign Assistance
Act of 1961, as Amended
(CT:ORG-457; 06-11-2018)
The Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 and the Arms Export
Control Act authorize a range of programs for foreign assistance and Foreign
Military Sales.
1 FAM 013.3-2 Executive Order
12163 of September 29, 1979, as Amended
(CT:ORG-457; 06-11-2018)
a. Executive Order 12163 of September 29, 1979, as
amended, delegates authorities under the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 and
other provisions of law to the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense,
and other agencies. The Secretary of State has further delegated some of these
functions in Department Delegation of Authority 293-2, including delegating
certain foreign assistance functions to the Director of the Office of U.S.
Foreign Assistance Resources and to the Administrator of the U.S. Agency for
International Development.
1 FAM 013.3-3 USAID
Representation at Meetings with Foreign Delegations
(CT:ORG-457; 06-11-2018)
a. Assistant Secretaries will ensure appropriate USAID
representation at meetings of the President, the Secretary, the Deputy
Secretary, and others with foreign delegations and representatives if there is
any reason to believe that USAID subjects are likely to be discussed.
b. USAID representation must not result in an increase
in the total number of U.S. participants in the meetings which, except in
unusual circumstances, should approximate the number of foreign participants.
It is expected that foreign delegations will generally arrange separate
meetings with USAID for detailed discussions of USAID subjects.
c. Regional bureaus of the Department will consult
with USAID bureaus to ensure that USAID is properly informed of all meetings in
which it should be represented. Similarly, USAID bureaus should ensure that
bureaus of the Department are properly informed of all USAID meetings with
foreign delegations or representatives in which they should participate.
1 FAM 013.4 Peace Corps
(CT:ORG-521; 03-22-2019)
a. The following are the authorities for the
interrelationship between the Peace Corps and the Department of State.
b. Executive Order 12137 of May 16, 1979, as amended. Executive
Order 12137, as amended, delegated to the Director of ACTION all functions
conferred by the Peace Corps Act of 1961 (75 Stat. 612), except those directly
conferred by the Act on, or delegated to, the Secretary of State or reserved
for the President.
c. Public Law 97-113 of 1981. Public Law 97-113
reestablished the Peace Corps as an independent agency in 1981.
d. Secretary of State Cable
of April 23, 2015 (15 STATE 22571). The text of this cable is contained in 1 FAM Exhibit
013.6.
1 FAM 013.5 Other Interagency
Relationships
1 FAM 013.5-1 Coordination
(CT:ORG-342; 08-27-2014)
a. In addition to the foreign affairs family of the
Department of State and other civilian U.S. government agencies principally
engaged in activities abroad, there are other domestic departments and agencies
with international operations.
b. Through its Specialized Attach Program, the
Department and the Foreign Service also act for certain of these departments
and agencies. A few others carry on their own programs.
c. The Department assists other U.S. government
departments and agencies in both of these instances, always mindful of the
Secretarys primary responsibility for the conduct of U.S. foreign relations.
This cooperation has taken the form of a varied group of arrangements. Some
are written, detailed agreements, whereas, others are less formal
understandings concerning budgeting, staffing, administrative support, and
reimbursement procedures.
1 FAM 013.5-2 Foreign Service
Personnel
(CT:ORG-82; 12-01-1999)
Under the Foreign Service Act of 1980, the Secretary of
State administers and directs the Foreign Service and coordinates its
activities with the needs of the Department and other agencies and consults
with other agencies using the Foreign Service personnel system (USAID, Foreign
Agricultural Service, Foreign Commercial Service) to ensure maximum
compatibility.
1 FAM 013.5-3 Staffing Abroad
(CT:ORG-342; 08-27-2014)
a. Section 103(c) of the Omnibus Diplomatic Security
and Antiterrorism Act of 1986 (Public Law 99-399), as amended, gives the
Secretary full responsibility for the coordination of all U.S. government
personnel assigned to diplomatic or consular posts or other U.S. missions
abroad (except those under a U.S. area military commander) and authority to
establish appropriate staffing levels for such posts or missions for all
federal agencies with activities abroad (with the same military exception and
an exception for USAIDs Inspector General).
b. Under National Security Decision Directive38
(NSDD-38) and the Presidents Letter of Instruction to Chiefs of Mission, the
chief of mission must approve any changes to the size, composition, or mandate
of positions under his or her authority, and is responsible for reviewing
staffing and ensuring it is consistent with Mission goals and objectives.
c. Interagency agreements are cited throughout the
Foreign Affairs Manual and Handbooks, as appropriate, to the program and/or
policy under discussion. In addition to those specific agreements, the
following agreements have been reached with non-executive branch agencies:
(1) State/Library of Congress Memorandum of
Understanding on Overseas StaffingMarch 14, 1989; and
(2) State/GAO Memorandum of Understanding on Overseas
StaffingDecember 15, 1988.
1 FAM 014 ORGANIZATIONAL CONTROL,
POLICIES, AND FUNCTIONAL STATEMENTS
(CT:ORG-342; 08-27-2014)
The Secretary of State is responsible for control of the
organizational structure and assignment of functions in the Department of
State. The Secretary has delegated this authority to the Under Secretary
for Management (M). Within the policy guidelines established by the Under
Secretary for Management, operational responsibility for position management
lies with the Departments line managers. Therefore, bureau heads (and
managers of similar or higher rank with independent staffs) have primary
accountability for ensuring that the organizations under their direct control
conform to the organizational objectives established by the Under Secretary for
Management.
1 FAM 014.1 General Organizational
Objectives
(CT:ORG-342; 08-27-2014)
a. Consistent with the overall U.S. government policy
of ensuring the most effective use of government resources, any proposed new
organizational structure should strive to achieve a proper balance among:
(1) Mission needs;
(2) Efficiency of operations; and
(3) Effective employee utilization.
b. The first step is to identify the basic mission and
authorities delegated to the organization. Organizational planning must then
be guided by the objective categories outlined below:
(1) Meeting Department priorities;
(2) Improving service delivery; and
(3) Improving internal management.
1 FAM 014.2 Key Organizational
Practices
(CT:ORG-242; 05-05-2011)
To the extent practicable, major reorganizations of
bureaus or offices in the Department should follow the following eight key
practices and implementation steps:
Figure 6: GAO
Practice
|
Implementation Step
|
(1) Ensure top leadership drives the
transformation.
|
1.1 Define and articulate a succinct and compelling
reason for change.
1.2 Balance continued delivery of services with
merger and transformation activities.
|
(2) Establish a coherent mission and integrated
strategic goals to guide the transformation.
|
2.1 Adopt leading practices for results-oriented
strategic planning and reporting.
|
(3) Focus on a set of key principles and priorities
at the outset of the transformation.
|
3.1 Embed core values in every aspect of the organization
to enforce the new culture.
|
(4) Set implementation goals and a timeline to
build momentum and show progress from day one.
|
4.1 Make public implementation goals and timeline.
4.2 Seek and monitor employee attitudes and take
appropriate follow-on actions.
4.3 Attract and retain key talent.
4.4 Establish an organization-wide knowledge and
skills inventory to exchange knowledge among merging organizations.
4.5 Identify cultural features of merging
organizations to increase understanding of former work environments.
|
(5) Dedicate an implementation team to manage the
transformation process.
|
5.1 Establish networks to support implementation
team.
5.2 Select high-performing members.
|
(6) Establish a communications strategy to create
shared expectations and report related progress.
|
6.1 Communicate early and often to build trust.
6.2 Ensure consistency of message.
6.3 Encourage two-way communication.
6.4 Provide information to meet specific needs of
employees.
|
(7) Involve employees to obtain their ideas and
gain ownership for the transformation.
|
7.1 Use employee teams.
7.2 Involve employees in planning and sharing
performance information.
7.3 Incorporate employee feedback into new policies
and procedures.
7.4 Delegate authority to appropriate organizational
levels.
|
(8) Use the performance-management system to define
responsibility and assure accountability for change.
|
8.1 Adopt leading practices to implement effective
performance-management systems with adequate safeguards.
|
1 FAM 014.3 Organizational Nomenclature
(CT:ORG-342; 08-27-2014)
a. The basic nomenclature for the Departments domestic
organizational structure is summarized in this section. There are some
exceptions to the basic nomenclature; these exceptions, for the most part,
reflect specific legislative requirements.
Organization Level
|
Title of Nomenclature
|
Organization Head
|
Level 1
|
Department
|
Secretary
|
Level 1a
|
Department
|
Deputy Secretary
|
Level 1b
|
Department
|
Under Secretary
|
Level 1c
|
Department
|
Ambassador at Large
|
Level 2
|
Bureau
|
Assistant Secretary
|
Level 3
|
Non specified
|
Deputy Assistant Secretary
|
Level 3a
|
Directorate
|
Managing Director
|
Level 4
|
Office
|
Director
|
Level 5
|
Division
|
Chief
|
Level 6
|
Branch
|
Chief
|
Level 7
|
Section
|
Chief
|
All Levels
|
Staff
|
Chief (See 014.4f.)
|
|
|
|
b. The nomenclature for the Departments overseas organizational
structure can be found in 2 FAM 100 POST
MANAGEMENT and 2
FAM 110 POST ORGANIZATION Chapters.
1 FAM 014.4 Generic
Responsibilities
(CT:ORG-342; 08-27-2014)
a. The Department is headed by the Secretary who
promulgates such rules and regulations as may be necessary to carry out the
functions vested by statute or executive order in the Department. The
Secretary may delegate authority to perform any of these functions including,
if so specified, the authority to redelegate any of the functions to officers
and employees under the Secretarys direction and supervision (22 U.S.C. 2651a):
(1) The Deputy Secretary serves as the Acting
Secretary should the Secretary die, resign, or otherwise become unable to
perform the functions and duties of the office. Both Deputy Secretaries serve
as principal advisers to the Secretary in the formulation and conduct of all
U.S. foreign policy and assists the
Secretary in providing overall supervision and direction to all substantive and
administrative elements of the Department.
(2) Under Secretaries assist the Secretary and Deputy
Secretaries in the formulation and conduct of U.S. foreign policy and provide
specific leadership in matters such as:
(a) Interdepartmental activities of the U.S. government
abroad;
(b) Intergovernmental affairs;
(c) Foreign economic and commercial policy;
(d) Security assistance programs;
(e) Global human rights, crime, science, and environment
programs; and
(f) Administrative operations of the Department
(3) Ambassadors at Large are appointed by the
President and serve anywhere in the world to help with emergent problems, to
conduct special or intensive negotiations, or serve in other capacities, as
requested by the Secretary or the President.
(4) The Under Secretaries have administrative and
management oversight over the Department's Assistant Secretaries and Assistant
Secretary equivalents under their respective under secretariats.
b. Bureaus and some other specified Department
organizations, usually headed by Assistant Secretaries or positions
administratively equivalent to the rank of Assistant Secretary, administer one
or more major functions of the Department:
(1) If the bureau has more than one major function and
is an organization of substantial size and or complexity, it should be further
structured to have deputy assistant secretaries (DASs), or positions ranked
equivalent thereto, to oversee these major functions. Where the size and
scope of a major function requires it, a managing director may oversee
collections of office-level sub-functions. A managing director is never
equivalent to deputy assistant secretary rank. Managing directors only
report directly to deputy assistant secretaries, and directorate structure is
such that managing directors are to have clearly defined managerial
responsibilities (they are not deputies to deputy assistant secretaries).
(2) Assistant Secretaries and equivalents report
organizationally to their respective Under Secretary. All Assistant
Secretaries and equivalents have the right to direct access to the Secretary of
State should circumstances arise where the Assistant Secretary believes it is
urgent and direct access is required. Assistant Secretaries should communicate
with the Secretary on non-urgent matters via Notes, Information Memos, etc.
c. Offices are structures below the DASs and are
constructed around sub-functions that require application of discrete bodies of
knowledge and the exercise of policy control within that field. These
structures usually are responsible for a complete functional field and are
staffed with professionals or specialists who are considered to be authorities
in this field.
d. Within the office structure there may be divisions
that are tasked with performing contiguous processes or perform staff or operating
activities or carry out major sub-elements of the general functional field.
e. Branches and sections are further subdivisions of
the responsibilities assigned to a division.
f. Staff (as an organizational unit) is a structure
consisting of a minimum of six persons assigned to another organizational unit
at any level. Staff functions are generally discrete and
self-contained. A staff may or may not have its own chief.
1 FAM 014.5 Organization Planning
Principles
(CT:ORG-242; 05-05-2011)
a. Organizational layers should be limited to the
minimum number consistent with effective span of control and performance of
mission. The addition of nonessential supervisory layers increases
problems associated with establishing clear delegation of responsibility and
authority, transmission of information, work flow, clearances, operational
costs, and morale.
b. Full deputy or assistant positions are normally
appropriate only at higher levels within the organization. Proliferation
of deputy positions is a major source of poor organizational design and
position management.
c. Staff units that report directly to an Assistant
Secretary should be established only to provide direct support in the
development of policy or planning or to provide a point for coordination of
cross-cutting activities.
d. Span of control is the number of subordinates one
supervisor can effectively manage. It is a significant aspect of
organizational design. A narrow span of control leads to unnecessary
organizational layering or proliferation; frequently results in excessive
control on the part of supervisors; and stifles initiative among subordinates
(particularly in policy development or support activities). On the other
hand, too wide a span of control hinders the ability to make supervisory
decisions based on a thorough knowledge and understanding of the particular
issue.
1 FAM 014.6 Organizational Control
(CT:ORG-457; 06-11-2018)
a. The Under Secretary for Management (M) must approve,
in advance and in writing, changes in functions and responsibilities between
bureaus, the establishment of all assistant secretary-equivalent positions and
all deputy assistant secretary (or equivalent) positions, as well as all
managing director positions, except for the Office of the Inspector General.
Bureaus and/or offices must submit their requests (see 1 FAM Exhibit
014.6, 1
FAM Exhibit 014.6 G and 1 FAM Exhibit
014.7, for required documentation and information) to the Director General
of the Foreign Service and Director of Human Resources (M/DGHR), through the
Office of Resource Management and Organization Analysis (HR/RMA) for approval
prior to submission to M.
b. Changes in organizational structure at the office or
country director level which do not meet the criteria listed in 1 FAM 014.7
must receive advance written approval from the Under Secretary for Management.
Bureaus and/or offices must submit their requests (see 1 FAM Exhibit
014.6 E and 1 FAM Exhibit
014.7 for required documentation and
information) to the Director General of the Foreign Service and Director of
Human Resources (M/DGHR) through HR/RMA for approval prior to submission to M.
c. Those office- or country director-level
organizational changes that satisfy the criteria listed in 1 FAM 014.7
may be approved by the bureau head and then reported to the Under Secretary for
Management through HR/RMA one month prior to the planned date of
implementation. Bureau authority to approve changes in organizational
structure does not include the reclassification of positions involved in the
change or the official assignment of organization symbols and codes.
d. The Under Secretary for Management may overturn any
organizational change that violates the criteria listed in 1 FAM 014.7 or
other applicable requirements. Therefore, to ensure logical and
consistent implementation of the intended changes, bureaus are required to
consult during the planning process with the:
(1) HR Service Provider on position classification and
organizational-design issues;
(2) HR/RMA on organizational-design, resource and
position-management issues;
(3) Office of Policy Coordination (HR/PC) on liaison
and notification to affected unions;
(4) M/PRI on general management policy and planning
issues;
(5) Bureau of Budget and Planning (BP) and Bureau of
the Comptroller and Global Financial Services (CGFS) on funding implications
and fiscal implementation;
(6) Office of Financial Policy (CGFS/FPRA/FP) on
organization codes and symbols (only issued after HR/RMAs organizational
design approval); and
(7) Office of Directives Management (A/GIS/DIR) 1 FAM
Volume Coordinator on codification of the changes. Codification of the 1 FAM
may not be completed until the corresponding 4-FAH changes have been approved
and processed by CGFS/FPRA/FP.
e. Reports of bureau requested changes, bureau-approved
changes and bureau requests for exceptions to the criteria listed in 1 FAM 014.7
must be submitted to M through DGHR (via HR/RMA) with a copy provided to the
Director, Office of Management Policy, Rightsizing, and Innovation
(M/PRI). The reports must outline the required information in 1 FAM Exhibit
014.7 - ORGANIZATIONAL RESTRUCTURING
CHECKLIST for Preparing Requests to U/S for Management through M/DGHR (via
HR/RMA). This checklist includes:
(1) Backgrounda concise statement describing the
existing organization, the proposed change(s), and the reason or basis for the
changes to the organizations(s) being proposed, amended, abolished, or changed
in title;
(2) Discussionthe effects expected of the new
structure. As appropriate, this section must include:
(a) Any changes in functions or assignment of functions
to subordinate organizational components;
(b) How the proposed organization meets the four broad
position-management goals, i.e.:
(i) Meeting Department priorities;
(ii) Improving service delivery;
(iii) Improving internal management; and
(iv) Improving employee morale and motivation;
(c) The effect, if any, the proposed change will have on
other department components, a list of organizations consulted on the proposal,
resource implications, (positions, full-time equivalent (FTE), and budget), and
a summary of unresolved issues, if any; and
(d) Any alternative organizational options considered
and reasons why rejected; and
(3) Attachmentsthe report and/or requests must
contain:
(a) A proposed mission and function statement for each
affected organizational component (for inclusion in the 1 FAM);
(b) Revised staffing structure and organization charts
for the organizational components; and
(c) A listing of any new or changed delegations of
authority (refer to 18 FAM 201.3 regarding this issue).
f. Approved organization charts will become the
Departments official organization charts after the functional statements have
been published in the 1 FAM. A draft (unpublished) 1 FAM update is a
pre-requisite for approval of the final reorganization plan.
g. Changes in organization below the office director
level must meet the criteria in 1 FAM 014.7
but may be approved by the Assistant Secretary or equivalent head of the bureau
without being reported to the Under Secretary for Management, upon compliance
with the following requirements:
(1) To ensure organizational consistency at all levels
of the Department, subordinate managers must submit through the Executive
Director to the bureau and/or equivalent head a request containing the
information described in paragraph d of this section. A copy of this
approved organization change request must be retained by the bureau executive
directors office as long as the organizational structure remains valid;
(2) When approving organizational changes below the
office director level the bureau/equivalent head must review the proposed
changes in light of the organizational principles and control provisions cited
herein. Prior to approval, the approving official is required to consult
with the appropriate HR Service Provider, HR/RMA, and M/PRI on organizational
structure, position classification, position, and general policy implications
of proposed structures; and
(3) After approval, and prior to the implementation
date, approving official and/or Executive Director must report such changes in
writing to the appropriate HR Service Provider, HR/RMA, HR/PC, M/PRI, CGFS/FPRA/FP,
and A/GIS/DIR so that necessary implementation steps can be taken.
h. The Office of Financial Policy (CGFS/FPRA/FP)
assigns and issues organization codes and symbols after M (when applicable) and
HR/RMAs written organizational design approval. The reasons a bureau or an
office may need to establish (create) or change an organization title, symbol
or code is when:
(1) A new organizational entity (e.g., office, division,
branch, or section) is created;
(2) Current organizational entities are divided,
reorganized, or merged;
(3) Current functions change; or
(4) An entity is moved within the Department of
States organizational structure.
Note: To
facilitate the process of organizational changes of bureaus and/or offices in
the Department see 1 FAM Exhibit
014.6. Organizational Control
Clearance/Approval Grid and 1 FAM Exhibit
014.7, Organizational Restructuring Checklist.
1 FAM 014.7 Organizational Policies
and Criteria
(CT:ORG-342; 08-27-2014)
a. For the reasons noted in 1 FAM 014.5,
paragraph a, organizational layering is to be kept to a minimum. If an
organization does establish a substructure, that substructure must comprise at
least two subcomponents (e.g., no bureau may have just one office-level
subcomponent; no office may have just one division level subcomponent,
etc.). Routine functions (such as certain administrative activities) may
be further subdivided into branch and section levels. See 1 FAM 014.4 for an explanation of the organizational
structure layers and nomenclature. A Deputy Assistant Secretary (DAS) is an
organizational head, which has no nomenclature for its level, even though there
can be multiple directorates or offices reporting to the DAS.
b. Regional bureaus may be organized on sub regional,
multiple country, and/or individual country bases. This structure is
designed to be flexible and contemplates the regrouping of countries whenever
workload, crises, or other operational matters dictate. These
organizational components are equivalent to an office.
c. Organizational structures involving full deputy or
assistant positions are to be minimized and are reserved for situations where
the volume and nature of the principals work cannot be effectively
accomplished by one person. In particular:
(1) A deputy or assistant is expected to participate
with the principal in carrying out the full range of management
responsibilities, and to act with full authority over the total work of the
organization during the principals unavailability or absence. Where the
supervision of an office needs to be subdivided, the appropriate subcomponents
are divisions led by division chiefs. The use of specialized deputies
(usually multiple in numbers) to oversee specific aspects of the organization
(e.g., Deputy for Policy or Deputy for Operations) is considered an exception
to this policy and will rarely be justified;
(2) Deputy positions may not be authorized with
respect to Under Secretaries, deputy assistant secretaries or equivalents,
managing directors, division chiefs, branch chiefs, section chiefs, or staff
chiefs; and
(3) The classification approval required for the
establishment of full deputy/assistant positions is vested in the director and
the appropriate HR Service Provider; all requests to classify full
deputy/assistant positions will be reviewed against criteria issued by HR/RMA
(use Form DS-3051, Checklist for Requesting Establishment of Deputy/Assistant
Positions).
d. To maintain effective and efficient span of control,
the following criteria will guide the design of the organizational structure:
(1) An office must have at least 12
full-time/part-time permanent positions;
(2) Any organizational entity or subcomponent (i.e.,
division, branch, or section) requires a minimum of eight full-time/part-time
permanent positions; except for staff units which require a minimum of six
full-time/part-time permanent positions;
(3) Subdividing an organization must result in the
smallest possible number of subcomponents consistent with the criteria listed
herein and with the requirements of the organizations functional mission; and
(4) If an office is subdivided, the total number of
full-time/part-time permanent positions in the office (including
divisions/branches/sections) must be at least 17, eight for two divisions plus
the office director. If the organization drops below the appropriate
number of positions for a period exceeding 6 months, consideration should be
given to its abolishment and/or consolidation into some other existing unit.
e. Because the Departments fundamental organizational
building block is the office, the following guidelines should be considered
carefully in creating an office:
(1) Like functions should be grouped together in an
organization;
(2) Integral policy or operational fields should not
be divided into separate offices; and
(3) The level and degree of policy and negotiating
responsibility exercised by the organization are important factors in
determining the need for an office.
1 FAM 014.8 Functional Statements
(CT:ORG-342; 08-27-2014)
a. Functional statements provide the minimum detail to
define the area of responsibility of an organizational unit; to distinguish its
activities from those of related units; and to eliminate potential overlap and
duplication. To facilitate the classification of positions at all
organization levels, functional statements are required for all approved
organizational structures, even though such statements may not be published in
the FAM.
b. A statutory authority must be delegated in writing
by the official with that authority in order for the delegation to be
effective. A functional statement of authority that is not statutory, approved
by the Under Secretary for Management constitutes an official delegation of
authority for the Department. Authority vested in an individual position
becomes a part of the authority of each position in the direct line of
supervision above that position, except where authority is specifically vested
by law in a designated official. Once the Under Secretary for Management
has delegated authority over a topic to a bureau, the bureau heads may
re-delegate that authority within their bureau if the Under Secretary has
specifically granted re-delegation authority.
c. Bureaus or offices are responsible for submitting
updated functional statements to the Office of Directives Management
(A/GIS/DIR), whenever necessary, to ensure that 1 FAM, Organization and
Functions, is current at all times. Bureaus or offices are also
responsible for providing copies of updated functional statements and organization
charts to the appropriate HR Service Provider and HR/RMA to facilitate their
classification and position-management responsibilities.
1 FAM 015 ESTABLISHing OR CHANGing
ORGANIZATION TITLES, SYMBOLS, AND/OR CODES
(CT:ORG-520; 03-18-2019)
a. Organization symbols and codes are assigned by the
Bureau of the Comptroller and Global Financial Services Office of Financial
Policy (CGFS/FPRA/FP) after proper Under Secretary for Management and Office of
Resource Management and Organization Analysis (HR/RMA) organizational design
approval and bureau head approval. New Department organizational entities
are to have CGFS/FPRA/FP assign and/or approve their symbols before obtaining
organization codes.
b. Organizational changes (i.e., office names and
symbols) at least down to the office level must be codified in 1
FAM. A draft of the update to the 1 FAM must accompany any request for
approval and assignment of organization symbols and codes.
1 FAM 015.1 Definitions
(CT:ORG-352; 01-07-2015)
Master Reference Data (MRD): A data management tool for housing reference
data, such as the list of Organization Symbols or Organization Codes, for use
in Department of State systems. The Bureau of Information Resource
Management's Operations Systems and Integration Office, Enterprise Programming
and Integration Division, Data Management Branch (IRM/OPS/SIO/EPI/DM) maintains
this tool for use by all Department of State employees.
Organization Code: A six-digit number assigned to an
organizational entity. The organization codes are established to identify the
responsible and benefiting organizations for accounting, budgeting, cost
accounting, payroll, personnel management and reporting, supplies, equipment
and property accountability, and inventory management. Organization codes are
assigned to domestic offices, posts abroad, and special offices abroad; points
of origin abroad, destination, and locations of personnel; post activities, as
required; other Federal agencies, international organizations, and other
activities, as required. The organization codes authorized for Department of
State and non-serviced agencies' worldwide use are established and maintained
by CGFS/FPRA/FP, published in 4 FAH-1 H-400,
Organization Structure, and included in the MRD.
Organization Symbol: A series
of abbreviations or acronyms expressed in letters that represent the title of
an organizational entity (sometimes called office symbols). Organization
symbols identify the levels or elements of a bureaus organizational
structure. Short-form organization symbols (limited to twelve characters) are
assigned by CGFS/FPRA/FP after changes in an organization are approved (see 1 FAM 014.6
for the detailed approval process and required documentation). The list of
short-form organization symbols is published in 4 FAH-1 H-420.
Long-form organization symbols are currently maintained by the Office of
Directives Management (A/GIS/DIR). CGFS/FPRA/FP and A/GIS/DIR jointly maintain
the list of relationships between short-form and long-form organization symbols
for input to the MRD.
Organization Title: The descriptive name that identifies the
function and responsibilities of an organization entity. A/GIS/DIR and
CGFS/FPRA/FP jointly provide input to the master list of organization titles
and the relationship to the Organization Symbol in the MRD.
1 FAM 015.2 Establishing, Changing,
or Discontinuing an Organization Title, Symbol, and/or Code After Approval
(CT:ORG-348; 10-09-2014)
a. When changes in an organization and/or program are
approved, the responsible office (usually the Executive Director) must send a
written request with the Office of Resource Management and Organization
Analysis (HR/RMA) organizational structure design approval and head of bureau approvals
for the establishment, change, or discontinuation of organizations to
CGFS/FPRA/FP in accordance with 4 FAH-1 H-117 Code Maintenance. The request must include the
approvals, an updated bureau organization chart, and the draft update to the 1
FAM functions and responsibilities statements. The request with documentation
must be sent via SMART record e-mail.
b. When establishing or changing an organization name,
related organization symbol and/or code, the responsible office may suggest organization
symbols and codes. Bureaus can refer to their existing codes in 4 FAH-1 H-420 to see the structure and to review all their
codes for other potential changes, such as organizations that have been
discontinued.
c. CGFS/FPRA/FP will review the request and work with
the bureau to ensure titles, symbols, and codes meet the requirements and will
assign new and revised titles, symbols, and codes as required and discontinue
any codes no longer required.
d. Bureaus must also choose a pay period in which they
want these changes to become effective. The date they choose is generally
based upon the completion date of Form SF-50, Notification of Personnel Action,
for the employees that are affected when an organization code is established,
changed, or discontinued. Bureaus will have approximately three pay periods to
complete personnel actions and work with other systems to transfer staff from
codes being discontinued. This information (effective dates) will be recorded
in the MRD.
e. After CGFS/FPRA/FP approves the request, it updates
4 FAH-1 and notifies the appropriate systems and CGFS personnel, the requesting
bureau, other bureau personnel, as needed, and A/GIS/DIR that changes to the 4
FAH-1 have been made. CGFS/FPRA/FP will also provide updates to
IRM/OPS/SIO/EPI/DM to record changes in the MRD to reflect the new and revised
titles, symbols, and/or codes. Application systems that require real-time
notifications of changes in titles, symbols, and/or codes may receive these
updates directly from the MRD in the future. CGFS/FPRA/FP will consolidate its
updates to 4 FAH-1 and send them to A/GIS/DIR with a change transmittal for
publication on the Office of Directives Management intranet site.
f. Bureaus will use the CGFS/FPRA/FP 4 FAH-1 update to
finalize their 1 FAM functions and responsibilities statements as soon as
possible following the publication of the updated 4 FAH-1.
1 FAM 016 THROUGH 019 UNASSIGNED
1 FAM Exhibit 013.6
FROM THE SECRETARY TO ALL CHIEFS OF MISSION PEACE CORPS-STATE DEPARTMENT
RELATIONS
(CT:ORG-521; 03-22-2019)
FM SECSTATE WASHDC
TO ALL DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR POSTS COLLECTIVE
FROM THE SECRETARY TO ALL CHIEFS OF MISSION
MRN: 15 STATE 22571
E.O. 13526
TAGS: AODE, AMGT
SUBJECT: PEACE CORPS-STATE DEPARTMENT RELATIONS
REF: A) 07 STATE 78240
B) 09 STATE 12309
1. INTRODUCTION: In the context of this Administration's
foreign assistance programs and initiatives to manage those programs and the
U.S.presence overseas, I am delighted to take this opportunity to reaffirm to all
Chiefs of Mission the basic principles guiding the Department's dealings with
the Peace Corps. The President and I strongly support the objectives and
purposes of the Peace Corps and wish to strengthen its capabilities and
effectiveness in the years ahead. The Peace Corps is pursuing new opportunities
in the twenty-first century, while also ensuring the safety and security of
Peace Corps volunteers to the maximum extent possible. The Department and all
of our overseas missions are committed to helping in every way possible.
2. PEACE CORPS' PURPOSE: As stated in the Peace Corps Act,
the purpose of the Peace Corps is to promote world peace and friendship. The
agency's essential role is threefold:
A. to provide U.S. volunteers to help meet the needs of the
people of the host countries for trained manpower;
B. to help promote a better understanding of the U.S. people
on the part of the people served; and
C. to help promote a better understanding of other people on
the part of the U.S. people. The Peace Corps makes a significant contribution
to building international understanding and sympathy among people, an integral
long-term objective of U.S. foreign policy.
3. RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE U.S. MISSION AND PEACE CORPS
STAFF:
A. To fulfill its responsibilities successfully and to
retain its unique people-to-people character, the Peace Corps must remain
substantially separate from the day-to-day conduct and concerns of our foreign
policy. The Peace Corps' role and its need for separation from the day-to-day
activities of the mission are not comparable to those of other U.S. government
agencies.
B. The President's Letter of Instruction and other relevant
laws and regulations (including your delegated duties under the Diplomatic
Security Act) outline your authority over and responsibilities for all Executive
Branch employees, including U.S. Direct-Hire (USDH) employees, Personal
Services Contractors (PSC) and Locally Engaged Staff of the Peace Corps. As
Secretary of State, I am responsible for the "continuous supervision and
general direction" of Peace Corps programs to ensure they are effectively
integrated both at home and abroad, and "the foreign policy of the United
States is best served thereby." Like my predecessors, I ask that you join
me in exercising these authorities so as to provide the Peace Corps with as
much autonomy and flexibility in its day-to-day operations as possible, so long
as this does not conflict with U.S. objectives, policies, and legal
requirements. As Secretary Rusk stated in 1961, "The Peace Corps is not
an instrument of foreign policy because to make it so would rob it of its
contribution to foreign policy."
C. The Peace Corps Director will notify you of the selection
of the country director to be assigned to the Mission, a decision reserved to
the Director exclusively. Permanent Peace Corps USDH and US-based PSC positions
must be established, abolished, or modified in accordance with National
Security Decision Directive 38.
D. Peace Corps country directors and staff members are
present in the country under a separate Peace Corps country agreement under
which they have certain privileges, including tax and customs duties
exemptions, but no immunities from the jurisdiction of the host government. Peace
Corps employees should not be placed on the Mission duty roster or asked to
assume Mission administrative functions or other responsibilities outside their
Peace Corps duties except in unusual situations. Peace Corps officials are
provided with official passports, not diplomatic passports. With regard to
Mission descriptions of U.S. government activities overseas, reference to Peace
Corps activities in a Mission Strategic Plan should be limited, and confined to
the Chief of Mission statement. The Peace Corps welcomes the Chief of
Mission's assessment of the Country Director's or other staff member's
performance for incorporation into the annual and ongoing evaluation process by
the Peace Corps of its employees.
E. The Peace Corps expects its employees to live at a level
that appropriately reflects the Peace Corps' status as a grassroots,
people-to-people, volunteer organization. Traditionally, Peace Corps offices
and staff residences have not been located in Mission compounds or in areas
predominantly frequented by foreigners. Pursuant to section 691 of the Foreign
Relations Authorization Act, Fiscal Year 2003, Public Law 107-228, to the
degree permitted by security considerations, you should give favorable
consideration to requests from the Peace Corps to maintain its offices at
locations separate from the Mission and thus preserve this autonomy.
4. PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEERS:
A. For all relevant purposes, volunteers are not considered
to be U.S. government employees. They are not official members of the Mission,
they are not under Chief of Mission authority, and do not have diplomatic
immunity. Generally, you and other members of the Mission should not treat
them as employees, but should treat them in the same manner as you do all other
private U.S. citizens resident in your area.
B. Volunteers are selected on the basis of technical
expertise, motivation, and personal characteristics relevant to the Peace
Corps' purposes of providing technical assistance and fostering improved
understanding of the U.S. people by host-country citizens and of host country
peoples on the part of the U.S. people. They are expected to maintain an
apolitical stance with respect to the political affairs in their countries of
service.
C. In the absence of overriding security concerns, the Peace
Corps is responsible for determining what volunteers will do and where they
will be located in-country.
D. Peace Corps activities must be completely and absolutely
separated from intelligence activities. There should be no professional
contact whatsoever between anyone in the intelligence community and any Peace
Corps volunteer or trainee. Peace Corps staff should not be included in
meetings where defense or intelligence issues are discussed, unless volunteer
safety is at issue.
5. COUNTRY AGREEMENTS: The Peace Corps must obtain the
Department's advice and approval before new programs are proposed or country
agreements are negotiated. Embassies work closely with Peace Corps
representatives in the process of negotiating, concluding, and when
appropriate, terminating Peace Corps country agreements. The Department will
follow the Circular 175 procedure set out in 11 FAM 700 in approving
negotiation, conclusion, or termination of country agreements. Thereafter, the
Peace Corps will ordinarily make direct contact with host governments and
arrange for the implementation of country agreements. The Peace Corps
representative will keep you fully informed and appropriately consult with you
regarding the programs being planned and the number of volunteers involved.
Before making a decision about terminating activity in a given country, the
Peace Corps will conduct a thorough review in consultation with you and the
Department of State. (As mentioned above, terminating a country agreement
requires Department approval under Circular 175 procedures.)
6. CLOSING: For more than 50 years, Ambassadors and overseas
Missions have assisted the Peace Corps, enabling nearly 220,000 volunteers to
demonstrate the U.S. people's concern for the welfare of the citizens of other
countries and their commitment to peace. The volunteers' success in those
endeavors has enhanced significantly the image of the United States abroad.
With your assistance, the Peace Corps will continue to fulfill its important
mission. I rely on you to manage constructively the Peace Corps relationship
at your post.
1 FAM Exhibit 014.6
ORGANIZATIONAL CONTROL CLEARANCE/APPROVAL GRID
(CT:ORG-352; 01-07-2015)
This Exhibit is meant to facilitate the process for
organizational changes of bureaus and/or offices in the Department and includes
definitions of grid categories and key organizations points of contact.
|
(1)
|
(2)
|
(3)
|
(4)
|
(5)
|
(6)
|
|
TYPE OF REQUEST
|
CONSULTATION REQUIRED
|
DOCUMENTATION REQUIRED FOR REQUEST
|
WHO MUST CLEAR ON REQUEST BEFORE IT IS SENT TO APPROVER
|
WHO MUST APPROVE REQUEST
|
WHO MUST BE NOTIFIED OF APPROVAL
|
A
|
Establishment or termination of a bureau (ref 1 FAM 014.4
(b)
|
Executive Office, HR Service Provider, HR/RMA, HR/PC,
M/PRI. Additionally, H, L, and BP must be consulted regarding Congressional
notification requirements.
|
Action Memo from A/S or Equivalent or higher through
M/DGHR (via HR/RMA) to U/S for Management
|
HR Service Provider, HR/RMA, HR/PC, L, M/PRI, H, BP,
and M Front Office
|
U/S for Management (through M/DGHR)
|
HR Service Provider, HR/RMA, HR/PC, L, M/PRI, H, BP,
CGFS/DCFO, CGFS/FPRA/FP, and A/GIS/DIR
|
B
|
Change in functions or responsibilities between bureaus
(ref 1 FAM
014.6(a))
|
Executive Office, HR Service Provider, HR/RMA, HR/PC,
M/PRI and the other affected bureau. H, L, and BP must be consulted regarding
Congressional notification requirements.
|
Action Memo from A/S or Equivalent or higher through
M/DGHR (via HR/RMA) to U/S for Management
|
HR Service Provider, HR/RMA, HR/PC, L, M/PRI, H, BP,
and
M Front Office
|
U/S for Management (through M/DGHR)
|
HR Service Provider(s), HR/RMA, HR/PC, L, M/PRI, H, BP,
CGFS/DCFO,
CGFS/FPRA/FP, A/GIS/DIR and IRM/OPS/SIO/EPI/DM
|
C
|
Establishment of all A/S and DAS (or their equivalent)
positions, as well as all Managing Director positions, except for OIG. (ref 1 FAM 014.6a)
|
Executive Office, HR Service Provider and HR/RMA
|
Action Memo from A/S or Equivalent or higher through M/DGHR
(via HR/RMA) to U/S for Management
|
Requesting Bureau Front Office, HR Service Provider,
HR/RMA, DGHR, M/PRI, and M Front Office
|
U/S for Management (through M/DGHR)
|
HR Service Provider, HR/RMA, HR/CDA/SL, HR/PC, M/PRI,
CGFS/FPRA/FP, A/GIS/DIR and IRM/OPS/SIO/EPI/DM
|
D
|
Changes in organizational structure at the office or
country director levels which do not meet the criteria in 1 FAM 014.7
(ref 1 FAM
014.6b and 014.g)
This process also applies to title/name change of
organization structure
|
Executive Office, HR Service Provider, HR/RMA, HR/PC,
M/PRI
|
Action Memo from A/S or equivalent through M/DGHR (via
HR/RMA) to U/S for Management; with copy to M/PRI requesting exception(s) to
the criteria listed in 1 FAM 014.7
|
HR Service Provider, HR/RMA, HR/PC, M/PRI, and M Front
Office
|
U/S for Management (through M/DGHR)
|
HR Service Provider, HR/RMA, HR/PC, M/PRI,
CGFS/FPRA/FP, A/GIS/DIR and IRM/OPS/SIO/EPI/DM
|
E
|
Changes in organizational structure at the office or
country director levels which do meet the criteria in 1 FAM 014.7
(ref 1 FAM
014.6c and 014.6g)
This process also applies to title/name change of
organization structure
|
Executive Office, HR Service Provider, HR/RMA, HR/PC,
M/PRI
|
Information Memo from A/S or equivalent through
M/DGHR (via HR/RMA) to U/S for Management; copy to M/PRI transmitting report
of bureau-approved changes (see 1 FAM 014.6d
for attachments)
|
HR Service Provider and Internal bureau clearances
only
|
Bureau Head
|
U/S for Management before implementation as well as HR
Service Provider, HR/RMA, HR/PC, M/PRI, CGFS/FPRA/FP, A/GIS/DIR, and
IRM/OPS/SIO/EPI/DM
|
F
|
Changes in the organization below office director level
(ref 1 FAM
014.6f and 014.6g)
This process also applies to title/name change of
organization structure
|
Executive Office, HR Service Provider, HR/RMA, HR/PC,
M/PRI
|
SMART e-mail from Office Director to A/S or Equivalent
|
HR Service Provider, HR/RMA, HR/PC, and M/PRI
|
A/S or equivalent
|
HR Service provider, HR/RMA, HR/PC, M/PRI and A/GIS DIR
prior to implementation If changes to org title/symbol/code, also notify
CGFS/FPRA/FP
|
G
|
New organization symbol, change to org symbol or
elimination of org symbol (ref 1 FAM 015,
015.2)
|
n/a
|
SMART e-mail from the Executive Director to
CGFS/FPRA/FP with copies of all structural approvals, an updated bureau org
chart and draft update to 1 FAMs function and responsibility statements.
|
HR Service Provider and HR/RMA
|
CGFS/FPRA/FP
|
HR Service Provider, Requesting Bureau Official and
A/GIS/DIR for codification in FAM/FAH and IRM/OPS/SIO/EPI/DM, HR/EX/SOD
(GEMS), HR/RMA, the requesting bureau, and various other organizations.
|
H
|
New organization code, change to org code or
elimination of org code (ref 1 FAM 015,2)
|
n/a
|
SMART e-mail from the Executive Director to
CGFS/FPRA/FP with copies of all structural approvals, an updated bureau org
chart and draft update to 1 FAMs function and responsibility statements.
|
HR Service Provider and HR/RMA
|
CGFS/FPRA/FP
|
A/GIS/DIR for codification in FAM/FAH and
IRM/OPS/SIO/EPI/DM, HR/EX/SOD (GEMS), HR/RMA, the requesting bureau, and
various other organizations.
|
Grid Definitions:
(1) Type of Request: The reason or event triggering
the request and associated 1 FAM reference point.
(2) Consultation Required: These offices must be
consulted before the request is officially submitted for clearances/approval.(See also 1 FAM 014.6)
(3) Documentation Required for Request: What type of
document is to be submitted; e.g., Action Memo, Information Memo, SMART e-mail,
etc. (See 1 FAM
014.6e and 1 FAM Exhibit
014.7 for additional documentation and
information requirements.).
(4) Who Must Clear on Request BEFORE it is sent to
Approver: The document must have a clearance page indicating these offices have
reviewed and cleared the document
(5) Who Must Approve Request: The required approval
level
(6) Who Must be Notified of Approval (the requesting
bureau is to ensure that these offices are notified of approval or
disapproval before changes can be made to systems, documents, etc.)
Organization
|
HR/RMA
|
HR/PC
|
M/PRI
|
BP
|
CGFS/FPRA/FP
|
A/GIS/DIR
|
IRM/OPS/SIO
|
L
|
H
|
1 FAM Exhibit 014.7
ORGANIZATIONAL RESTRUCTURING CHECKLIST FOR PREPARING REQUESTS TO U/S for
MANAGEMENT THROUGH M/DGHR (via HR/RMA)
(CT:ORG-514; 02-11-2019)
The purpose of this Exhibit is to provide bureaus with an
organizational restructuring checklist for the related requests they submit to
HR/RMA. Note that it essentially summarizes HR/RMAs review process of their
request. Indicating YES means the step was addressed in the DRAFT package and
NO means it will need to be added. In the Recommended Action column, HR/RMA
will provide specific comments on details, which will be needed for the FINAL
package.
Please contact HR/RMA for consultation before/during your
reorganization process and while drafting this checklist.
Step
|
Include in
Package
|
Recommended Action
|
|
YES
|
NO
|
|
(1) A description of the existing and proposed
organization.
|
|
|
|
(2) An outline of the proposed changes.
|
|
|
|
(3) The reasons for the changes.
|
|
|
|
(4) An explanation of how the proposed organization
meets the Department's management goals.
|
|
|
|
(5) A communications plan outlining how the
reorganization team is planning to informally solicit views and input from
affected stakeholders.
|
|
|
|
(6) A request for an exception to the Department's
organizational policy and criteria if the proposed structure does not meet
size or other requirements. The request must include an explanation of why
the organization must be structured as proposed and a discussion of
alternatives that were considered.
|
|
|
|
(7) A justification of resource requirements. If
additional resources (personnel and/or budget) are essential, a request for
additional resources must be included outlining a complete justification for
the new resources.
|
|
|
|
(8) Current and revised staffing and organization
charts for the affected areas must be attached including all contractors
(e.g., personal service contractors and others).
|
|
|
|
(9) Crosswalk- A listing of full-time regular
positions--current to new organizational home
For further guidance see Excel spreadsheet below for
RMA Official Format.
|
|
|
|
(10) A description of proposed functional statements
for each affected organization must be included.
|
|
|
|
(11) An outline of proposed FAM changes. Final FAM
updates are a pre-requisite for the final re-organization approval plan.
|
|
|
|