Report To Congress
Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act
- Table of Contents
- Executive Summary
- Introduction
- Small Business Compliance Assistance
- General Guidance
- A Guide to the Federal Trade Commission
- Business Education Materials
- Consumer Education Materials
- Distribution of Business and Consumer Education Information
- Individual Advice
- Responses to Specific Questions
- Bureau of Consumer Protection Responses
- Bureau of Competition Responses
- Order Compliance Advice
- Advisory Opinions
- Civil Penalty Leniency
- Scope of the Commission's Civil Penalty Leniency Program
- Small Business Participation and Achievements of the Small
Business Civil Penalty Leniency Program
- Other FTC Initiatives to Assist and Protect Small Businesses
- Workshops, Conferences and Hearings
- Stopping Fraud and Deception Against Small Businesses and
Aspiring Entrepreneurs
- Regulatory Reform
- Conclusion
- Endnotes
- Appendix 1: Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
of 1996
- Appendix 2: Federal Register Notices
- Appendix 3: Business Education Publications
- Appendix 4: Consumer Education Publications
- Appendix 5: Sample Tracking Form
Pursuant to SBREFA, the FTC hereby reports to Congress on its achievements between
March 28 and December 31, 1997, with respect to: (1) providing compliance and other kinds
of assistance to small businesses; and (2) affording leniency in the determination of
civil penalties for small businesses found to be in violation of FTC rules. Some of these
achievements are highlighted below.
- More than 260,000 copies of business publications distributed -- many of them to small
businesses.
- Most business education publications available on the FTC's website, http://www.ftc.gov,
which had nearly 16 million "hits" during this period.
- New publications to help small businesses comply with amendments to the Fair Credit
Reporting Act, the Consumer Leasing Act, textile labeling requirements, and fair packaging
requirements for milk.
- Guidelines addressing antitrust laws relevant to physicians and health-care providers.
- New publications to assist small businesses in avoiding fraud perpetrated by bogus
"yellow pages" publications, bogus fund-raising appeals, and invention-promotion
schemes.
- 100 speeches by Commissioners or Commission staff members to business groups and
organizations representing small business interests.
- Bureau of Consumer Protection staff responded to more than 16,000 individual requests
for compliance (and other) assistance from small businesses. The Bureau of Competition
responded to nearly 800 such requests.
- Eleven small businesses participated in the Commission's civil penalty leniency program,
with the amount of penalties reduced and waived totaling more than $1
million.
- Workshops, conferences, and hearings on many topics of importance to small businesses,
including: proposed amendments to the FTC's Franchise Rule and 900-Number Rule, food
advertising claims, privacy issues in the on-line marketplace, and antitrust policies
regarding joint ventures.
- Continuing commitment to regulatory reform: The Commission has repealed nearly 50% of
its trade regulation rules and about 40% of its industry guides in recent years; other
rules, including the textile labeling rules, have been streamlined and simplified.
The Federal Trade Commission has prepared this report to comply with the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act ("SBREFA").(1)
The Federal Trade Commission is a small agency(2) with a
big mission: to maintain a free and fair marketplace for both business and consumers. The
Commission enforces the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. § 41 et seq., and has enforcement
responsibilities under 37 additional statutes. The Commission enforces 19 rules
promulgated pursuant to specific statutory directive and 13 trade regulation rules
promulgated under the rulemaking authority of the FTC Act. The Commission has always been
aware of and attentive to the special needs and interests of small businesses subject to
its jurisdiction.
Pursuant to SBREFA, the Commission developed policy statements describing how it
considers small business interests in two areas: (1) providing compliance assistance, and
(2) determining appropriate civil penalty amounts when bringing enforcement actions.(3) The Commission's Small Business Compliance Assistance
Policy Statement describes various forms of assistance available to small businesses to
help them understand and comply with obligations imposed by the statutes and rules
enforced by the Commission. The Commission's Civil Penalty Leniency Program Statement
discusses mitigating factors the Commission considers when small businesses are subject to
civil penalties for violation of a rule or statute enforced by the Commission. Both policy
statements were issued by the Commission on March 28, 1997, implementing sections 213 and
223 of SBREFA, 5 U.S.C. § 601 note, and were published in the Federal Register
on April 8, 1997.(4) The policy statements also are
available through the Internet, on the Commission's website at http://www.ftc.gov.
In further compliance with SBREFA, this report discusses the scope of the Commission's
programs, the number of small businesses using the programs, and the programs'
achievements. The report covers a nine-month period from March 28, 1997, when the policies
were formally adopted, through December 31, 1997. The cut-off date was chosen to allow for
collection and analysis of the responsive information and preparation of the report.
Small Business Compliance
Assistance
Section 213 of SBREFA required agencies regulating the activities of small businesses
to establish, by March 29, 1997, a program to answer inquiries and provide information and
advice on compliance with the law and to report to Congress, one year later, on the scope
and achievements of the program, as well as the number of small businesses using the
program.(5) The Commission has had such programs in place
for most of its history, and in recent years has taken a number of steps to enhance these
efforts. As described below, the agency offers an array of services, involving both
general guidance and individualized advice, to help small businesses understand their
obligations under the laws and regulations administered by the Commission. As a result of
SBREFA, the Commission approved a policy statement describing the various forms of
assistance available, and monitored use of these resources during the described reporting
period.
Reporting on the number of small businesses that used the FTC's compliance assistance
program necessitates making some informed assumptions. Nevertheless, the Commission
believes it can provide a reasonable estimate of the number of small business participants
in its program. (How the Commission derived these estimates is explained in detail on
pages 6-11.) The Commission estimates that more than 16,800 small businesses requested and
received individual compliance advice from Commission staff. A much larger number of small
businesses received more general compliance advice. These include nearly four million
recipients of the Commission's consumer education materials, many of which are also
relevant to small businesses, and approximately 260,000 recipients of its business
education publications. The Commission believes it would be reasonable to assume that
small businesses requested and received a significant percentage of these materials. In
addition, as described below, Commission staff members made about 100 presentations to
groups and organizations representing small-business interests. The audiences and
participants at such events varied widely, but the Commission believes that many small
businesses received compliance assistance from the FTC at these events.
In the sections below we will first describe the general guidance that the Commission
offers, and then the specific guidance offered to individual firms.
The Commission offers general information in a variety of forms to address issues and
questions that small businesses frequently raise. Published information often satisfies
the needs of these businesses for guidance as to their own obligations. In particular, the
Commission distributes a guide to its enforcement generally, business education materials,
and consumer education materials.
A Guide to the Federal Trade Commission
This brochure describes the principal antitrust statutes and consumer protection laws
enforced by the agency. Approximately 1,360 copies of this booklet, explaining how the FTC
enforces the law to protect the workings of a free market, were distributed.
Business Education Materials
Various Commission publications or statements of policy explain how particular kinds of
businesses, including many small ones, can conduct their affairs in compliance with the
laws and regulations administered by the FTC. More than 50 such publications are currently
available.
26 business compliance guides and publications explain the
requirements of specific Commission rules in a plain-English, non-technical manner.(6) Six business compliance publications were created or
revised during the reporting period to help businesses comply with the law. Many small
businesses are included in the target audiences for these six publications:(7)
- Fair Credit Reporting Act, As Amended; Credit Reports: What Information
Providers Need To Know; and Using Credit Reports: What Employers Need To Know
help businesses comply with amendments to the Fair Credit Reporting Act, which became
effective September 30, 1997, and are enforced by the FTC. The Fair Credit Reporting Act
protects the privacy of credit report information and helps guarantee that information
supplied by consumer reporting agencies is as accurate as possible. As a result of the
amendments, an employer must get a job applicant's written permission before obtaining a
copy of the applicant's credit report. Also, for the first time, creditors and others that
furnish information to credit reporting agencies (the companies that compile and
disseminate credit information) have new duties under federal law to ensure the accuracy
of the information they supply. Credit bureaus have increased responsibilities, especially
in the way they handle disputed information in consumer files.
- Calling It Cotton: Labeling & Advertising Cotton Products
informs businesses what information under the Textile Rules must be included on labels and
in written advertisements if they want to promote the presence of premium forms of cotton
(such as "pima" cotton) in textile products. The fiber content labeling of
clothing and other household textile products is governed generally by FTC rules pursuant
to the Textile Fiber Products Identification Act. Another new business publication,
explaining those rules and recent revisions to the rules, will be published in the coming
year.
- Advertising Consumer Leases answers frequently asked questions
about the advertising requirements of the Consumer Leasing Act and Regulation M, the 1997
revised disclosure requirements, and the liability for violations.
- Measuring Up! Good Packaging Practices For Dairy Products. The
Commission prepared this brochure to educate businesses about the problem and provide
information to help the industry examine and reform its practices. A recent study by
federal and state agencies, including the FTC, revealed that many containers of milk sold
at wholesale and retail and many cartons of milk served in schools, universities, and
hospitals contain less than the amount stated on the label. Shortages also occurred in
containers of other dairy products and juice.
Industry guides address common compliance issues under the FTC Act, as applied to
particular industries or particular practices.(8) During
the reporting period, the Commission's Jewelry Guides (16 CFR Part 23) were revised to
offer advice on the marketing of jewelry made in whole or in part of platinum, including
the incorporation of International Organization for Standardization marking standards,
thus facilitating international trade.
Antitrust guidelines and policy statements explain the application of antitrust laws to
particular practices or industries.(9) Specific examples
and illustrative fact patterns show how the agency would apply the law to a particular set
of facts.(10) For example, last year the Commission and
the Department of Justice revised their joint 1992 Horizontal Merger
Guidelines in order to clarify how the agencies analyze efficiency claims in
mergers under review by the federal government. The revised guidelines provide a roadmap
as to how they assess whether efficiencies will lead merging firms to lower prices, create
new products, or otherwise enhance competition. They also make clear what merging firms
must do to demonstrate claimed efficiencies. The revised guidelines bring the analysis of
efficiencies in mergers up to date with comparable analyses in other areas of antitrust
law, and up to date with our contemporary competitive environment.
Guidelines on other antitrust issues, published in previous years, remain in effect.
Some of these are of particular relevance to small business, such as the guidelines issued
jointly by the FTC and the Department of Justice on various aspects of the health care
industry. For example, the Health Care Office in the Commission's Bureau of Competition
makes available to doctors, both in print and on the Commission's Internet site, a set of
guidelines to a number of physician issues, including guidelines and "safe
harbors" relevant to physician joint ventures.
Consumer Education Materials
More than 200 print and broadcast items directed to consumers also benefit small
businesses by identifying practices that may generate consumer protection problems between
businesses and their customers and describing the applicable laws and regulations.(11) Also, small businesses are frequently consumers
themselves. Materials on such topics as office supply scams and disclosures to prospective
franchisees can help small firms avoid problems. During the reporting period, the
Commission created four new publications designed specifically to assist small businesses
and entrepreneurs or help them avoid being defrauded.
- When Yellow Pages Invoices Are Bogus, produced jointly by the
FTC and the Yellow Pages Publishers Association, alerts businesses that unscrupulous
promoters are soliciting advertising in "alternative" or nonexistent business
directories. Although these directories appear to be legitimate Yellow Pages publications,
many are not distributed to the public and offer no benefits to businesses that pay to
advertise in them. In the worst cases, these "directories" are not published at
all.
- Raising Funds? What To Know About Hiring A Professional
provides nonprofit organizations with helpful information for investigating and hiring
professional fund-raisers.
- Donating To Public Safety Fund-Raiser$ was prepared for
businesspeople who may wish to contribute to law enforcement or public safety groups in
their communities or purchase advertising in publications that purport to be sponsored by
nonprofit organizations, such as police or firefighter associations. This FTC publication
helps businesspeople apply the same business savvy they use to make business decisions to
respond to fund-raising appeals.
- Invention Promotion Firms, produced by the FTC in cooperation
with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, features information for inventors about how to
detect and avoid invention promotion scams.
Distribution of Business and Consumer Education Information
All of these materials are readily available to small businesses and others directly
from the Commission, on the Commission's website, or from various other public or private
sources.(12) During the reporting period, the Commission
distributed its business and consumer materials in response to individual requests. In
addition, it identified appropriate audiences and disseminated materials in large
quantities. The Commission also distributed its educational materials through numerous
other organizations, including federal distribution centers, state agencies, the military,
schools and libraries, churches, financial institutions, the media, consumer and
non-profit organizations, and trade associations. The FTC continued to work with the Small
Business Administration to distribute its educational materials through SBA regional
centers. It is impossible to determine the actual number of publications provided to small
businesses; however, it is fair to assume that small businesses constituted a significant
segment of the audience for FTC publications.
Print Distribution
The Commission distributed a total of 145,929 business compliance publications, 115,364
other business education publications, and 3,859,792 copies of print materials directed to
consumers. Of this total, the Commission's ten regional offices distributed 18,312
business publications, and 55,347 consumer publications.
Public Service Announcement Distribution
The FTC produced and distributed a radio public service message concerning Franchise
Opportunities. The Commission estimates that from October to December 1997, there were
13,364 broadcasts of this message to an estimated audience of 18,030,040.
Industry Distribution
The Commission cooperated with business groups and others in the development and
distribution of publications. For example, the Commission recently coordinated with
industry groups to distribute, primarily to funeral casket retailers (most of which are
small businesses), 28,000 copies of the business booklet Complying With The
Funeral Rule. Such joint efforts multiply the outreach of the agency's
consumer and business education program.
FTC Internet Distribution
The FTC made extensive use of the Internet to distribute materials. The FTC website, http://www.ftc.gov,
includes both the Commission's consumer and business education publications. The BusinessLine
section of the Commission's website, which provides access to the Commission's business
education publications, had 29,023 "hits" during the reporting period. The ConsumerLine
section of the FTC's website, which provides access to the Commission's consumer education
publications, had 522,619 "hits" during that period. An additional 500,000
publications were retrieved through these two sections of the website. The entire FTC
website, which includes guidelines, policy statements, staff advisory opinions, press
releases, copies of recent orders, texts of major speeches and other materials, had a
total of 15,960,143 "hits" during the reporting period. The FTC website is
accessible as a "link" from online services at the Small Business Administration
and the U.S. Department of Commerce. Also during the reporting period, the Commission
began to distribute its business publications through the U.S. Business Advisor website
available through the Small Business Administration.
Other Internet Distribution
In addition, the Commission has joined with other agencies to provide Internet users,
including small businesses, with a new source of consumer news and information at http://www.consumer.gov.
The website allows users to easily access government information while obviating the need
for them to be able to identify the agency responsible for the subject matter. It offers a
broad array of consumer information on topics that include health and safety issues, money
and credit, children and education, the environment, transportation, food, how to avoid
scams, and more. This ongoing project is a cooperative effort of several agencies,
including the Federal Trade Commission, Securities and Exchange Commission, Food and Drug
Administration, Consumer Product Safety Commission, and National Highway Transportation
Safety Administration, that consolidated the information from their own websites at consumer.gov.
Commercial Publication Distribution
Commission guidance also can be found in commercial publications describing the
Commission and its enforcement activities. For example, the Statements of Antitrust
Enforcement Policy in Health Care are published at 4 CCH Trade Regulation Reporter
¶ 13,153.
Official Documents
Other sources of information about the Commission and its policies include proposed
Commission consent agreements, final orders, and other formal documents. These are
available in the FTC's Public Reference Room/Consumer Response Center. Many are available
on the Commission's website as well.
Speeches
Commissioners and Commission staff members frequently speak to business groups and
conduct programs where they explain statutory and regulatory requirements and answer
questions from individuals. Such presentations often include appearances before groups
representing or including small-business interests. Small business groups may request
speakers by contacting the Commission office that specializes in the subject matter of
interest.(13) During the reporting period, Commissioners
and Commission staff members made about 100 presentations to business groups and groups
and organizations representing small-business interests. The speeches covered a broad
range of subjects including, among others, developments in antitrust law and antitrust
enforcement; health care mergers; advertising law and Internet advertising; telemarketing
fraud; the Fair Credit Reporting Act and credit repair; investment, franchise, and
business opportunity fraud; the FTC Funeral Rule; the FTC Care Labeling Rule; and textile
product labeling. The Commission's Health Care Office made a special effort to provide
information on health-care antitrust through speeches during this time. Members of the
office addressed state medical societies in Michigan, California, Missouri, and New York,
as well as the American Medical Association, a national laboratory association, and a
national association of physician networks.
The Commission provides advice to individuals in a variety of ways and on many topics.
Responses to Specific Questions
Small businesses may ask specific questions of the Commission or its staff, at
headquarters or one of the FTC's ten regional offices.(14)
Each substantive area under the Commission's laws and regulations has one or more staff
members responsible for responding to inquiries about the law's requirements. Every year,
the Commission staff responds to large numbers of inquiries from businesses, including
many small businesses. Inquiries come to the Commission by telephone, letter, fax, or
e-mail. Inquiry by telephone is encouraged because it is the agency's experience that the
give-and-take of a conversation facilitates understanding an issue. If it appears that
more detailed or complex information is needed to address an issue, the FTC staff may then
ask the caller to send a supplementary letter. A staff member may determine that the
agency's published material provides the assistance sought and send that material to the
inquirer. If the sources of general information are insufficient to provide the needed
guidance or assistance, the staff member may provide specific, informal advice or arrange
for a formal response in the form of an advisory opinion.
To provide the Congressional Committees with specific information on Commission
responses to inquiries from small businesses, it was necessary to develop a means of
systematically recording such inquiries and responses over a period of time. During four
selected weeks in 1997 (in May, June, September, and October), all Commission staff at
headquarters and in the regional offices were alerted to keep a record of inquiries from,
and responses to, businesses. The data from these four weeks has been used to project
estimated total responses to inquiries for the reporting period. The information regarding
inquiries and responses was recorded, collected, and entered into a computer database.
Whenever possible, the staff responding to inquiries was asked to record the number of
inquiries from small businesses. In many cases, this necessitated asking telephone callers
whether they represented a small business (without necessarily asking for the identity of
the particular company). In the case of letters, the staff was called upon to make
judgments about the size of the business, based primarily on the nature of the industry.
Capturing this information inevitably involved some informed assumptions. Nonetheless, the
Commission believes it can provide a reasonable estimate of responses to small business
inquiries.
Bureau of Consumer Protection Responses
During its four weeks of data collection, the Commission's Bureau of Consumer
Protection received 1,260 requests for compliance assistance on a wide range of topics
from businesses. Of this total, 689 inquiries, or nearly 55%, appeared to come from small
businesses or trade associations representing small businesses. During the entire
reporting period, therefore, the Bureau of Consumer Protection estimates that it responded
to a total of 12,285 requests for compliance assistance from businesses. Of this total,
the Bureau estimates that it responded to 6,757 requests for compliance assistance from
small businesses.
Separately, during the reporting period, Commission staff responded to approximately
1,300 requests for compliance assistance from small businesses regarding amendments to the
Fair Credit Reporting Act, which became effective September 30, 1997.
Additionally, during the reporting period, Commission staff estimates that it responded
to approximately 8,250 requests from small businesses for compliance assistance and
information about Registered Identification Numbers (RNs), issued by the FTC for use on
labels on clothing and other textile or fur products. Textile, wool and fur products,
covered by the Textile Fiber Products Identification Act, the Wool Products Labeling Act,
or the Fur Products Labeling Act, are required to bear a label identifying: (1) the fiber
or fur content; (2) the business name of the manufacturer, importer, distributor, or
seller; and (3) the country of origin. Businesses located in the United States may apply
to the FTC for an RN number, which they may use on the label in place of the name. During
the reporting period, the Commission placed information about RN numbers, including the RN
number database with more than 100,000 entries, on the Internet at the FTC's website, http://www.ftc.gov.
This makes frequently requested information about the identity of RN holders more readily
available to the public.
The Commission's Bureau of Competition, which enforces the antitrust laws, has fewer
occasions than the Bureau of Consumer Protection to give small businesses advice
concerning their obligations under the law. The antitrust laws typically impose
obligations on firms that possess market power, and firms with this degree of market power
are large businesses more often than small ones. Nonetheless, in those cases where the
issues have been relevant, this Bureau also has provided small businesses with guidance on
their legal obligations. The Bureau's Office of Policy and Evaluation, which serves as a
point of contact for inquiries and complaints from the business community, responded to
approximately 3,700 requests for legal guidance, including 17 specific requests for
assistance in complying with legal obligations, from small businesses during the reporting
period.
The Bureau of Competition's Health Care Office, which handles, among other things,
mergers, joint ventures, and boycotts involving physician practices, also responds to
inquiries from small businesses. Because the primary-care medical industry is relatively
decentralized, and because physicians generally compete in local markets, the conduct of
individual physician practices, which generally are small businesses, can be of
competitive significance. Physician-related antitrust issues come up particularly often in
the context of physician joint ventures. These ventures have become more common since the
advent of managed care, because health plans often prefer to contract with a single large
panel of doctors. During the reporting period, the Health Care Office handled 75 inquiries
from individual physicians or small businesses seeking guidance on the relevant legal
standards.
The FTC's Bureau of Competition has a special program to provide advice to firms that
must give premerger notification pursuant to the terms of the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act. While
premerger notification is generally required only for larger transactions valued at more
than $15 million, some parties to such transactions may meet the definition of a small
business. Any firm that is required (or believes it might be required) to give
notification may receive guidance on the proper procedures from the Premerger Notification
Office, in writing or by telephone, at (202) 326-3100. Interested firms also may obtain a
set of written guides describing the program and explaining how to determine whether a
particular firm must file. During the reporting period, the Premerger Office estimates
that it responded to 672 inquiries from small businesses attempting to determine whether
and how their planned mergers should be reported.
Order Compliance Advice
The Commission has a special procedure to provide advice to any person or firm subject
to an order of the Commission. The Compliance Division of the Bureau of Competition and
the Enforcement Division of the Bureau of Consumer Protection are responsible for
overseeing enforcement of and compliance with the competition and consumer protection
administrative orders issued by the Commission. The Commission's general practice is to
send a letter to each person or business subject to an order shortly after the order
becomes effective. In addition to describing the general requirements of the order, the
letter provides the name and telephone number of a staff person responsible for the
matter. Staff of the Compliance and Enforcement Divisions are available to handle
telephone and written inquiries concerning outstanding orders. Questions concerning the
requirements or scope of a competition order may be sent to: Compliance Division, Bureau
of Competition, Federal Trade Commission, Washington, D.C. 20580; questions regarding a
consumer protection order may be sent to: Enforcement Division, Bureau of Consumer
Protection, Washington, D.C. 20580. Telephone inquiries may be made to the Bureau of
Competition Compliance Division at (202) 326-2687, and to the Bureau of Consumer
Protection Enforcement Division at (202) 326-2996. During the reporting period, Commission
staff provided assistance and advice to 20 small businesses subject to Commission orders.
If the above sources of advice are insufficient for the inquirer's purpose, the
Commission has procedures for providing, when appropriate, a Commission advisory opinion
or, more commonly, a staff advisory opinion.(15) Advisory
opinions are intended to clarify the law applicable to a course of action that the
inquiring firm proposes to undertake. For small businesses, such opinions are a valuable
source of advice and compliance assistance from the Commission and its staff. During the
reporting period, the Commission staff issued 25 advisory opinions relevant to small
businesses. These letters addressed a broad range of competition and consumer protection
issues requiring analysis of guidelines, statutes and rules within the Commission's
jurisdiction, including the U.S. Department of Justice/FTC 1996 Statements of Antitrust
Enforcement Policy and Analytical Principles Relating to Health Care and Antitrust, the
FTC Act and the Fair Credit Reporting Act, and the FTC Franchise Rule.
In one well publicized opinion, for example, Commission staff responded to a request on
behalf of the Direct Marketing Association (DMA) for an advisory opinion regarding its
proposal to require that each DMA member: (1) participate in DMA's Mail Preference Service
and Telephone Preference Service and honor consumers' requests to refrain from future
contacts; (2) disclose to consumers whether and how it disseminates information on its
customers; and (3) upon the customer's request, refrain from transferring information
about that customer to others. On the basis of the information DMA provided, Commission
staff advised that it would not recommend an antitrust challenge to DMA's proposed new
policies.
All of the above programs to provide both general guidance and individual advice are
offered by the Commission to assist small businesses in understanding their obligations
under the laws and regulations administered by the Commission.
Civil Penalty Leniency
Scope of the Commission's Civil Penalty Leniency
Program
Under Section 223 of SBREFA,(16) agencies
regulating the activities of small businesses were required to establish, by March 29,
1997, a policy or program for "the reduction, and under appropriate circumstances for
the waiver, of civil penalties for violations of a statutory or regulatory requirement by
a small entity." The statute suggests that "[u]nder appropriate circumstances,
an agency may consider ability to pay in determining penalty assessments." The
statute further provides that the policy or program shall contain conditions or
exclusions, which may include, but shall not be limited to:
- 1. requiring the small entity to correct the violation within a reasonable correction
period;
-
- 2. limiting the applicability to violations discovered through participation by the
small entity in a compliance assistance or audit program operated or supported by the
agency or a State;
-
- 3. excluding from the program small entities that have been subject to multiple
enforcement actions by the agency;
-
- 4. excluding violations involving willful or criminal conduct;
-
- 5. excluding violations that pose serious health, safety, or environmental threats;
-
- 6. requiring a good-faith effort to comply with the law.
Section 223 provides that the policy or program is "[s]ubject to the requirements
of other statutes," and thus does not supersede existing law on penalties. Also,
because the leniency policy is prescribed only for civil penalties for violations of a
statutory or regulatory requirement, it does not apply to Commission cease and desist
orders, federal court injunctions, affirmative requirements for fencing-in or redress
contained in Commission orders, or civil penalty actions under Section 5(l), 15
U.S.C. § 45(l), for violations of Commission orders.
None of the statutes or rules enforced by the Commission provides for the mandatory
imposition of non-discretionary penalties. In most instances, the Commission is not
authorized to assess civil penalties itself, but rather selects a civil penalty amount to
be sought in a federal court action brought by the Department of Justice. In developing a
policy statement with regard to civil penalty leniency for small businesses, the
Commission considered that it already exercises its discretion in a variety of contexts to
consider mitigating factors when selecting penalty amounts. This experience suggested a
list of factors suitable for selecting the penalties appropriate to small businesses.
First, Section 5(m)(1)(A) of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. § 45(m)(1)(A), authorizes the
Commission to seek, in federal district courts, up to $11,000 per violation of certain
Commission rules,(17) if the defendant knew or
should have known that its acts violated the rule. In determining the appropriate amount
of a penalty, the courts are directed by Section 5(m)(1)(C), 15 U.S.C. § 45(m)(1)(C), to
take into account the degree of culpability; any history of prior such conduct; ability to
pay; effect on ability to continue to do business; and such other matters as justice may
require. The Commission also evaluates these factors to determine appropriate penalties in
cases that are not litigated.
Second, one Commission rule has a separate enforcement mechanism. Under the Energy
Policy and Conservation Act, 42 U.S.C. § 6303(a), the Commission has authority to assess
administrative civil penalties, up to $110 per violation, for violations of its Appliance
Labeling Rule, 16 CFR Part 305. The Commission's Rules of Practice provide that factors to
be considered in determining the amount of penalty include the respondent's size and
ability to pay; the respondent's good faith; any history of previous violations; the
deterrent effect of the penalty action; the length of time involved before the Commission
was made aware of the violation; the gravity of the violation, including the amount of
harm to consumers and the public caused by the violation; and such other matters as
justice may require.(18)
Third, civil penalties may also be imposed for violations of the Hart-Scott-Rodino
Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976, 15 U.S.C. § 18a ("HSR Act"). Under the HSR
Act, acquisitions above a certain amount,(19) involving
businesses above certain sizes,(20) cannot be consummated
unless certain information is filed with the Commission and with the Department of Justice
and certain waiting periods are observed. By statute, civil penalties of up to $11,000 for
each day a person is in violation of the HSR Act may be imposed in a federal court action
brought by DOJ. The Commission is charged with administering the premerger notification
program established by the HSR Act, and recommends actions and penalty amounts to DOJ. The
Commission generally will consider the firm's ability to pay when recommending appropriate
penalties. The Commission generally will not seek an enforcement action for a violation of
the HSR Act that appears to be truly inadvertent and where the filing is made promptly
after discovery of the oversight. If the violation is the firm's first, and is not the
result of gross negligence or a reckless disregard for the filing obligation, the
Commission staff generally sends a letter calling attention to the filing obligation but
indicating that no further action will be taken if the filing requirement is promptly met.
Fourth, judicial opinions interpreting Section 5(l) of the FTC Act, which
provides for civil penalties of up to $11,000 per violation of FTC administrative orders,
are instructive.(21) The statute does not set forth
criteria for assessing specific penalties for Section 5(l) violations, but the
Third Circuit Court of Appeals in United States v. Reader's Digest Ass'n, 662
F.2d 955, 967 (3d Cir. 1981), cert. denied, 455 U.S. 908 (1982), set out five
factors bearing on the selection of an appropriate civil penalty or remedy: the good or
bad faith of the respondent; the injury to the public; the respondent's ability to pay;
the desire to eliminate the benefits derived from the violations; and the necessity of
vindicating the Commission's authority. In each penalty case, the Commission selects an
appropriate penalty amount after weighing the above factors, along with the litigation
risks and penalties imposed in similar cases.
Finally, the Commission has undertaken an innovative approach to achieve compliance
with one of its rules. In early 1996, the Commission approved a new program to increase
compliance with its Funeral Industry Practices Rule, 16 CFR Part 453, which, among other
things, requires funeral homes to give consumers a list of prices for various goods and
services offered. The Funeral Rule Offenders Program ("FROP") was developed as a
joint effort between the National Funeral Directors Association ("NFDA") and the
FTC. Funeral providers that have failed to give test shoppers the itemized price lists
required by the Funeral Rule are offered the option of entering the FROP program rather
than facing possible formal legal action and the risk of paying a civil penalty. If they
choose FROP, they make a voluntary payment to the U.S. Treasury or state Attorney General
in an amount lower than would be sought in a civil penalty action and enroll in a
compliance program administered by the NFDA. The NFDA program includes a review of the
firm's practices, compliance training, and follow-up testing and certification.
In light of the Commission's past experience, as well as the factors suggested in
SBREFA itself, the Commission adopted the following policy for reducing, or in appropriate
circumstances waiving, civil penalties for violations of a statutory or regulatory
requirement by a small entity:
When the Commission identifies a small entity as not being in compliance with a
statutory or regulatory requirement within the Commission's jurisdiction, the Commission
will consider the propriety of penalty waiver or reduction. The following factors will
weigh in favor of leniency:
- 1. The small entity reported the violation to the Commission promptly after discovering
it.
-
- 2. The small entity corrected the violation within a reasonable time, if feasible.
-
- 3. The small entity had a low degree of culpability. The degree of culpability reflects
the efforts taken by the entity to determine and meet its legal obligations. These efforts
are judged in light of such factors as the size of the business; the sophistication and
experience of its owners, officers, and managers; the length of time it has been in
operation; the availability of relevant compliance information; the clarity of its legal
obligations; and any active attempts to clarify any uncertainties regarding its
obligations.
-
- 4. The small entity is financially unable to pay the usual penalty, or the usual penalty
would impair the small entity's ability to do business or to compete effectively.
-
- 5. The small entity has not been subject to any previous enforcement action by the
Commission or other federal, state, or local law enforcement jurisdiction for the same or
similar conduct for which the small entity is being considered for leniency. Where there
have been prior enforcement actions, however, the Commission may take into consideration,
as possible mitigating factors, when the previous enforcement action occurred, and whether
the small entity's management has changed since the previous enforcement action.
-
- 6. The small entity's violations did not involve willful or criminal conduct.
-
- 7. The violations did not pose a serious health, safety, environmental, or economic
threat to consumers or the public.
Each factor need not necessarily be present for a small entity to qualify for leniency,
and, depending upon the particular circumstances, some factors may be weighed more heavily
than others. Also, any other factors relevant in particular circumstances will be
considered, as appropriate.
The above criteria include most of the factors suggested in SBREFA. The one suggested
factor that the Commission did not include is one that would limit the penalty reduction
policy or program to violations discovered by the small entity through participation in an
agency-run or state-run compliance assistance or audit program. The Commission does not
have formal compliance assistance or audit programs. Given the variety and scope of the
rules and statutes that the Commission enforces, imposing a parallel requirement, such as
a self-auditing program, would unnecessarily restrict the availability of penalty waiver
or reduction.
In addition, the Commission expanded somewhat the scope of two of the factors suggested
in SBREFA. First, SBREFA suggests excluding entities that have been subject to multiple
enforcement actions by the agency. The Commission broadened this category to include
entities that have been subject to actions for the same or similar conduct by other
federal agencies or state or local agencies. The law violations prosecuted by the
Commission are frequently very similar to violations prosecuted by other federal, state,
and local law enforcement agencies.(22) It is therefore
appropriate, in considering whether to exclude entities from lenient treatment, to
consider whether similar conduct has been subject to enforcement efforts by such agencies.
Second, SBREFA also suggests excluding violations that pose serious health, safety, or
environmental threats. The Commission, in addition to such risks, also considers serious
economic injury, as that form of injury is the type most often encountered in Commission
cases, and in many instances may cause as much serious injury as that arising from health,
safety, or environmental threats.
Small Business Participation
and Achievements
of the Small Business Civil Penalty Leniency Program
During the reporting period, eleven Commission enforcement actions against small
businesses qualified for the FTC's civil penalty leniency program. The Commission did not
seek civil penalties from any small businesses that failed to qualify for the Commission's
program. Thus, eleven small businesses participated in the agency's civil penalty leniency
program.
In five enforcement actions, the Commission reduced civil penalties by a total
of $916,000. In each instance, the small business settled FTC charges, filed in federal
district court, alleging violation of a statute or rule enforced by the Commission. The
size of the company was the most significant factor considered by the FTC in determining
how much to reduce the civil penalty sought in each case. Applying the mitigating factors
enunciated in its leniency policy, the Commission reduced civil penalties sought in each
of these five cases primarily because the small business was financially unable to pay the
usual penalty, or the usual penalty would have impaired the small business's ability to do
business or to compete effectively. The amount of civil penalty reduction in each case was
determined by subtracting the civil penalty amount the company agreed to pay, from the
maximum civil penalty that the staff would have sought if the company had not been a small
business.(23) Furthermore, the federal district courts
accepted each settlement without modifying the civil penalty amounts the small businesses
had agreed to pay.
In the first case, the complaint charged that a debt collection company and its
president had violated the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act by using false
representations or deceptive means to collect or attempt to collect a debt or to obtain
information concerning a consumer. The settlement required the company and its president
to pay a civil penalty in the amount of $60,000. The civil penalty was reduced by $290,000
from the maximum civil penalty of $350,000.
In the second case, the complaint charged that a debt collection agency and its
officials violated the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act by using abusive and deceptive
practices in attempting to collect debts from consumers. The settlement required the
defendants to pay a civil penalty of $25,000. The civil penalty was reduced by $375,000
from the maximum civil penalty of $400,000.
In the third case, the complaint charged an importer of women's clothing with violating
the FTC's Care Labeling Rule by distributing garments with inaccurate and unsubstantiated
care instructions. The settlement required the defendant to pay a civil penalty of $4,000.
The civil penalty was reduced by $26,000 from the maximum civil penalty of $30,000.
In the fourth case, the complaint alleged that a telecommunications franchisor had
violated the FTC's Franchise Rule by failing to provide prospective buyers with required
disclosures and earnings-claims documents and by making unsubstantiated earnings claims.
The settlement required the defendant to pay a civil penalty of $10,000. The civil penalty
was reduced by $115,000 from the maximum civil penalty of $125,000.
In the fifth case, the complaint charged a hosiery mill with violation of the Textile
Fiber Products Identification Act by selling to a national retailer a line of socks that
were mislabeled as to their fiber content. The settlement required the defendant to pay a
civil penalty of $10,000. The civil penalty was reduced by $110,000 from the maximum civil
penalty of $120,000.
In six enforcement actions, the Commission waived civil penalties by a total
of $260,895. Applying the mitigating factors enunciated in its leniency policy, the
Commission waived civil penalties in each of these six cases because the small business
was financially unable to pay the usual penalty, and even a reduced penalty would have
impaired the small business's ability to do business or to compete effectively. In five of
the cases, however, the civil penalty also was waived because the small businesses
participated in the Commission's recently established Funeral Rule Offenders Program. The
amount of civil penalty waiver in each case is equivalent to the maximum civil penalty the
Commission would have sought if the small business had been subject to an FTC civil
penalty enforcement action in federal district court. (See discussion, supra, at
page 12.)
In the sixth civil penalty waiver case, the FTC's complaint charged that a hosiery mill
had violated the Textile Fiber Products Identification Act by selling to a national
retailer socks mislabeled as to their fiber content. The settlement prohibited the company
from violating the Textile Act in the future and required the company to maintain and make
available to the FTC business records demonstrating its compliance with the settlement. In
this case, the Commission waived a maximum civil penalty of $100,000.
In July 1997, as part of an ongoing nationwide law enforcement program to identify
funeral homes that fail to comply with the price disclosure requirements of the FTC's
Funeral Rule, the Commission announced the results of a funeral home sweep in New Jersey.
The FTC used test shoppers from the American Association of Retired Persons
("AARP"), who visited 36 funeral homes to determine whether the homes provide
consumers with a copy of an itemized general price list. Five of the funeral homes visited
by AARP members appeared to be in violation of the Funeral Rule, and all five homes agreed
to enroll in the FROP program. As a result of this sweep and entry into FROP, these five
funeral homes made a total voluntary payment to the U.S. Treasury in the amount of
$25,750. This payment was lower than the civil penalty amounts the FTC might have obtained
in formal law enforcement actions. In these five cases the Commission waived civil
penalties totaling $160,895.(24)
Other FTC Initiatives to
Assist and Protect Small Businesses
Workshops, Conferences and Hearings
Many of the Commission's rules and guides directly affect small businesses. When
examining new issues and reviewing rules and guides that raise particularly complex or
controversial issues, the Commission has made increasing use of informal public workshops
and conferences to expand the dialogue and improve the way the Commission obtains the
information it needs to make decisions. Public workshops and conferences bring together
representatives of businesses large and small, consumers, academia, and government. They
give participants an opportunity to expand upon written comments already submitted, obtain
compliance information from the agency, and engage in dialogue and debate with one
another. Workshops and conferences streamline the regulatory process and enhance the
Commission's understanding of the issues at stake. They also provide small businesses with
an opportunity to improve their understanding of, and the compliance obligations imposed
by, the statutes and rules enforced by the Commission. During the reporting period, the
Commission held public workshops and conferences, with small business participation, for
the following initiatives:
Franchise Rule
The Commission hosted six public workshops in five cities across the country to
encourage public participation in a rulemaking proceeding concerning the Franchise Rule,
which requires franchise sellers to disclose specific information about the franchise
system to prospective buyers before a sales agreement is completed. The Commission sought
comment on whether it should revise the rule to align more closely federal and state
disclosure requirements governing franchise sales, and to address changes in the marketing
of franchises, such as the sale of franchises internationally and through the Internet.
The workshops provided the Commission with additional information in advance of final
rulemaking.
Food Advertising
Commission staff participated in a conference, hosted by the Food and Drug Law
Institute, to educate members of the dietary supplement industry on FTC advertising
substantiation policy. The conference included presentations on the FTC's policy, as well
as a training session using case hypotheticals.
900-Number Rule
The Commission's Workshop on its 900-Number Rule was part of an FTC proceeding to
consider expanding the Rule to cover audio information and entertainment services accessed
by dialing telephone numbers that begin with numbers other than "900" and to
review whether the rule has been effective in curbing abuses associated with 900-number
services.
Privacy Issues
The Commission held a workshop on consumer privacy issues, including the online
collection of information from children, computer databases, and unsolicited e-mail, to
examine industry's response to the growing concern about personal privacy in the new
online marketplace.
Weight Loss Issues
The Commission coordinated a conference entitled Commercial Weight Loss Products and
Programs: What Consumers Stand to Gain and Lose. The conference featured well-known
experts from academia, government, and private industry, and addressed a wide range of
policy issues regarding what might be done to combat the national rise in obesity. As a
result of this conference, coalitions formed to create guidelines for voluntary
information disclosure by sellers of weight-loss products and programs and to provide
consumer education on weight-loss issues.
Joint Ventures
The Commission conducted a hearing in connection with its Joint Venture Project to
receive input on issues concerning business collaborations among competitors. The Joint
Venture Project, undertaken by the FTC and the Department of Justice, is considering
whether antitrust guidance to the business community can be improved by clarifying and
updating antitrust policies regarding joint ventures and other forms of competitor
collaborations.
Stopping Fraud and Deception
Against
Small Businesses and Aspiring Entrepreneurs
One of the Commission's top priorities is combating fraudulent and deceptive marketing
aimed at small businesses and those who want to start up small businesses. During the
reporting period, the Commission's enforcement efforts to protect small businesses and
aspiring entrepreneurs included the following:
- The Commission continued Operation CopyCat, a joint
federal-state law enforcement sweep of allegedly fraudulent office and cleaning supply
telemarketers who prey on small businesses and not-for-profit organizations. This sweep,
coordinated by the Commission in 1996, resulted in 17 law enforcement actions by the FTC,
the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, and state attorneys general and local law enforcement
officials. The FTC obtained more than $1.5 million in consumer redress in
settlements with such office supply telemarketers. During the reporting period, another
telemarketer who allegedly bilked small businesses and not-for-profit organizations by
sending and billing for unordered merchandise, then threatening those who did not pay,
agreed to settle FTC charges of violation of the Telemarketing Sales Rule.
- Law enforcement officials from all fifty states joined the FTC in Operation
False Alarm, a sweep targeting fraudulent fund raising, on behalf of police
and fire fighters, aimed at both consumers and small businesses. A total of 57 law
enforcement actions were filed, including three by the FTC. A nationwide public education
campaign was launched in cooperation with the National Association of Attorneys General.
- Operators of an alleged illegal pyramid scheme, who advertised on the Internet and in
newspapers that consumers could contribute to a charity and make huge monthly returns,
agreed to settle FTC charges that false and misleading statements were used to sell
memberships in the scheme. These operators were targeted as part of Operation
Missed Fortune, a 1996 law enforcement crackdown on
"get-rich-quick" schemes conducted by the FTC and 25 states. Initially, this
crackdown resulted in 75 law enforcement actions against alleged self-employment scams,
work-at-home schemes, and the deceptive sale of pre-packaged small businesses involving
services ranging from vending machines to medical billing.
- The Commission launched Project Field of Schemes, a sweep
involving U.S. and Canadian enforcement authorities, which targeted the upsurge in the
number and variety of investment-related telemarketing fraud, and resulted in 61 law
enforcement actions and a consumer education campaign. Cases brought by the FTC alone
stopped over $150 million in alleged fraud.
- In Project Mousetrap, the FTC and two state attorneys general
brought seven actions against companies allegedly involved in schemes to "help"
independent inventors market their inventions, including five firms that had sold over $90
million in allegedly fraudulent services. A message of extreme caution was issued to
consumers about using the very expensive, but almost always fruitless, services of
invention promotion firms.
- The FTC, the Kansas Attorney General, and seven additional states launched Project
Trade Name Games, an aggressive assault on alleged swindlers who portrayed
images of sure and generous profits through ownership of carousels displaying products
licensed by well-known companies. Initially, the campaign netted 18 enforcement actions.
The campaign also involved an education effort launched by the FTC in coordination with
industry members whose trade names have been used by scam artists to sell the bogus
business opportunities.
- The Commission launched Operation Yankee Trader, a multi-state
law enforcement initiative aimed at fraudulent vending machine business opportunity firms.
Connecticut, New Hampshire and Maine officials joined to take action against several
vending machine sellers located outside the Northeast that were targeting New England
consumers.
- As part of Project Mailbox, the FTC, U.S. Postal Inspection
Service, the National Association of Attorneys General, 25 state attorneys general and
local law enforcement officials, and AARP announced 190 law enforcement actions against
allegedly fraudulent direct mail schemes that target consumers and others, including small
entities such as churches and non-profit organizations. The scams targeted in the sweep
involved a range of alleged deceptive claims, including misrepresentations that a mailing
was from the government; deceptive claims that consumers had won something; and false
prize promotion claims.
- Hundreds of get-rich-quick business opportunities and apparent pyramid schemes operating
on the Internet were warned by law enforcement authorities across the country and around
the world that their "fabulous offers" may be illegal operations. The FTC and
two other federal law enforcement agencies, 23 state agencies, and consumer protection
officials in 24 countries participated in the first International Internet
Sweep Day to target get-rich-quick scams mushrooming on the Internet. A
prime objective of the sweep was to educate businesses using the Internet about consumer
protection laws, and to deter those who are violating the laws from continuing to do so.
- Operation Trip-Up, a Telemarketing Sales Rule sweep that
targeted fraudulent work-at-home travel agency business opportunities and other travel
fraud, was launched by the FTC and 12 state attorneys general. The sweep resulted in 36
law enforcement actions, and the American Society of Travel Agents partnered with the FTC
to produce and distribute educational materials on how to avoid being a victim of travel
fraud.
The Commission has undertaken a range of initiatives to remove unnecessary regulatory
burdens from business. The Commission continues to make these efforts a high priority,
recognizing that regulatory reform may be especially helpful to small businesses. The
Commission's regulatory review program ensures that the usefulness, benefits, and costs of
every Commission rule and industry guide are reviewed systematically at least once every
ten years. The Commission's program is far broader than any of the reviews currently
mandated by law or established by executive order. Moreover, the program has yielded
significant results. Since the 1992 initiation of the ten-year review program, the
Commission has repealed almost 50% of its trade regulation rules(25)
and about 40% of its guides. Most of this reform has taken place since 1995, when the
Commission accelerated the process by adopting streamlined procedures. The Commission
believes that its systematic review program will ensure that all of its rules and guides
remain necessary and in the public interest.
The Commission is pleased to submit this report to Congress regarding the scope,
achievements, and number of small businesses participating in its small business
compliance assistance and civil penalty reduction/waiver programs. The Commission believes
that the accomplishments under SBREFA and otherwise described in this report illustrate
the Commission's commitment to SBREFA's mission to foster a more cooperative, less
threatening regulatory environment for small businesses.
Appendix 1:
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
Appendix 2:
Federal Register Notices
Appendix 3:
Business Education Publications
Business Education publications
- Advertising Consumer Leases
- Business Guide to Mail and Telephone Order Merchandise Rule
- Business Check List for Direct Marketers
- Business Guide to Federal Warranty Law
- Buying By Phone
- Calling It Cotton: Labeling & Advertising
- Complying with the Telemarketing Sales Rule
- Complying with the Credit Practices Rule
- Complying with the Funeral Rule
- Complying with the 900 Number Rule
- Complying with the FTC's Appliance Labeling Rule
- Consumer Reports: What Insurers Need to Know
- Credit Reports: What Information Providers Need to Know
- Direct Marketers Guide to Labeling Requirements
- Donating to Public Safety Fundraisers
- Getting Business Credit
- Good Pricing Practices? Scan Do
- How to Write Adverse Action Notices
- How to Comply with the Used Car Rule
- How to Write Readable Credit Forms
- How to Comply with the FTC Fuel Rating Rule
- Labeling Fuels: A Compliance Guide
- Legal Supplement to Federal Warranty Law
- Measuring Up! Good Packaging Practices for Dairy Products
- Offering Layaways
- Office Supply Scams
- Raising Funds? What to Know About Hiring a Professional
- Using Consumer Reports: What Employers Need to Know
- When Yellow Pages Invoices Are Bogus
- Writing A Care Label
- Writing Readable Warranties
- Yellow Pages Invoice Scams
Appendix 4:
Consumer Education Publications
- Consumer Alerts
- Ads Promising Debt Relief May Be Offering Bankruptcy
- After a Disaster: Hiring a Contractor
- Avoid a Spring Break Bust
- Avoiding Home Equity Scams
- Avoiding the Muscle Hustle: Tips for Buying Exercise Equipment
- Beloved... Bejeweled... Be Careful
- Border-Line Scams Are the Real Thing
- Credit Repair: Help Yourself First
- FCC License Auctions
- Federal and Postal Job Scams: Tip-offs to Rip-offs
- Getting Purse-onal
- Green Card Lottery Scams
- How to Avoid Losing Your Money to Investment Schemes
- How to Dodge a Display Rack Scam
- International Lottery Scams
- Is There a Bandit In Your Mailbox
- Just When You Thought It Was Safe: Advance-fee Loan "Sharks"
- Kitchen Gadgets Offer ... Food For Thaw-t
- Look Before You Lease
- 'Net Based Business Opportunities
- Ouch - Students Getting Stung Trying to Find $$$ For College
- Paunch Lines: Weight Loss Claims
- Penny Wise or Pump Fuelish
- Phone, E-mail, & Pager Scams
- Profits in Pyramid Schemes?
- Public Safety Fund-Raising Appeals
- Spotting Sweet-Sounding Promises of Fraudulent Invention Promotion Firms
- Thinking About a Home Improvement
- Traveler's Advisory: Get What You Pay For
- Trouble @ the In Box - Alert
- Virtual Treatments Can Be Real
- When Opportunity Knocks... See Who's There
-
- Automobiles
- Auto Service Contracts
- Buying a Used Car
- Buying a Safer Car
- Buying a New Car
- Car Ads: Reading Between Lines
- Consider the Alternatives: Alternative Fueled Vehicles
- Gas Saving Products
- Keys to Vehicle Leasing
- Renting A Car
- Taking the Scare Out of Auto Repair
- The Low-Down on High Octane Gasoline
- Vehicle Repossession
-
- FTC Briefs
- $100K a Year? Mmmmm....
- Make Huge Profits with Amazing No-Risk Investments
- The Muscle Hustle
- Saving $$ at the Pump
- So You've Got A Great Idea! Heads Up!
-
- Buying & Working at Home
- The Cooling Off Rule
- Shopping by Phone or Mail
- Credit
- Avoiding Credit and Charge Card Fraud
- Building a Better Credit Record
- Choosing and Using Credit Cards
- Co-signing a Loan
- Credit Scoring
- Credit & ATM Cards: What To Do If They're Lost or
Stolen
- Credit and Divorce
- Credit and Older Americans
- Credit Card Blocking
- Credit Practices Rule
- Credit Repair: Self-Help May Be Best
- Credit & Your Consumer Rights
- Electronic Banking
- Equal Credit Opportunity
- Fair Debt Collection
- Fair Credit Billing
- Fair Credit Reporting
- "File Segregation" A New Credit Identity Scam
- Getting Back In the Black
- Gold and Platinum Cards
- How to Dispute Credit Reports Errors
- Knee-Deep In Debt
- Secured Credit Card Marketing Scams
- Truth in Leasing
- Utility Credit
- General
- Best Sellers for Consumers & Businesses
- FTC ConsumerLine: Open for Traffic
- Guide to the FTC
- How to Right a Wrong
- How to Resolve Consumer Disputes
- Health
- Eye Wear
- Fraudulent Health Claims
- Generic Drugs
- Health Spas: Exercise Your Rights
- Hearing Aids
- Indoor Tanning
- Infertility Services
- Protecting Kids from the Sun
- Skinny on Dieting
- Sunscreens
- Varicose Vein Treatments
- Vision Correction Procedures
- Who Cares?
- Investments
- Art Fraud
- Business Opportunity Scams: Avoiding Vending Machine and
Display Rack Scams
- Consumers Guide to Buying a Franchise
- Costly Coupon Scams
- Franchise and Business Opportunities
- Going To Display Rack & Ruin
- Investment Risks
- Medical Billing Business Opportunities
- Multilevel Marketing Plans
- Telecommunication Scams: Using FCC Licenses
- Test Your Investment IQ
- Wealth Building Scams
- Work-At-Home Schemes
- Miscellaneous
- EnergyGuide - Consumer Tip Sheet
- Got a Great Idea? Postcard
- Stop Telemarketing Fraud Bumper Sticker
- The Real Deal Book Cover
- Wanna Buy A Bridge Postcard
- Wish I Was There Postcard
- WWW.CONSUMER.GOV Postcard
- WWW.CONSUMER.GOV Bumper Sticker
- Online
- Cybershopping
- 'Net Based Business Opportunities
- Online Scams: Pot Holes on the Information Highway
- Site Seeing on the Internet
- Trouble @ the In Box
- Products
- All That Glitters... The Jive on Jewelry
- Buying Time: Pre-Paid Phone Cards
- Closet Cues: Care Labels and Your Clothes
- Energy Efficient Light Bulbs
- Grocery Store Rain Checks
- Infomercials
- Making Sure the Scanned Price Is Right
- Negative Option Plans
- Pump Fiction: Tips for Buying Exercise Equipment
- Service Contracts
- Tobacco Products
- Toy Ads on Television
- Unordered Merchandise
- Warranties
- Water Testing Scams
- Homes & Real Estate
- EnergyGuide to Major Home Appliances
- EnergyGuide to Home Heating & Cooling
- Getting a Loan: Your Home as Security
- High Rate High Fee Loans (Sec32 Mortgages)
- Home Water Treatment Units
- Home Financing Primer
- Home Equity Credit Lines
- How to Buy a Manufactured Home
- Lawn Service Contracts
- Mortgage Discrimination
- Mortgage Servicing
- Rebuilding Your Home After a Disaster
- Refinancing Your Home
- Reverse Mortgages
- Second Mortgage Financing
- Timeshare Tips
- Timeshare Resales
- Using Ads to Shop for Home Financing
- Services
- Caskets and Burial Vaults
- Choosing a Career or Vocational School
- Focus on Phone Leasing
- Funerals: A Consumer Guide
- Help Wanted... Finding a Job
- Invention Promotion Firms
- It's Your Call: Shopping in the New Telecommunications
Marketplace
- Layaway Purchase Plans
- Modeling Agency Scams
- Personal Emergency Response Systems
- Viatical Settlements
- Telemarketing
- 900 Numbers: FTC Rule Helps Consumers
- Are You a Target of Telemarketing Scams?
- Automatic Debit Scams
- Charitable Donations: Give or Take?
- Easy Credit? Not So Fast: The Truth About Advance-fee Loans
- International Telephone Number Scams
- Magazine Subscription Scams
- Prize Offers
- Straight Talk About Telemarketing
- Telemarketing Reloading and Double Scamming
- Telemarketing Recovery Scams
- Telemarketing Travel Fraud
- Toll Free Telephone Number Scams
- While You Were Out
- Bookmarks & Tip Cards
- Amazing Claims Bookmark
- Avoid Being a Victim of Telemarketing Scams
- Best Sellers - Health & Fitness Publications
- Best Sellers - Business Publications
- Buying an Energy Smart Appliance
- Caring For Your Clothes - Flyer
- Clothing Care Symbol Guide - Hang Card
- Credit Rules Bookmark
- Cross Border Scams
- Do the Math: Magazine Subscription Scams
- Help Wanted... Finding a Job
- How To Be Web Ready Bookmark
- Is There a Bandit In Your Mailbox? Bookmark
- Make Huge Profits with Amazing No-Risk Investments
- Making Sure the Scanned Price Is Right
- Need Cash? Advanced-fee Loan Scams
- Now is the Time for All Good Consumers Bookmark
- Real Deal Bookmarks
- Spotting Office Supply Scams
- Stopping Telemarketing Scams
- Sweepstakes Strategies
- Think Twice....Investment Scams
- You've Won! Automatic Debit Scams
- Young Consumers
- Ready, Set... Credit
- The Real Deal
Appendix 5:
Sample Tracking Form
Endnotes
1. Pub. L. No. 104-121, 110 Stat. 857 (March 29, 1996),
codified at 5 U.S.C. § 601 note.
See Appendix 1. For purposes of SBREFA, the term "small
entity" encompasses small businesses, small organizations, and small governmental
jurisdictions. These terms are defined in 5 U.S.C. § 601. "Small business" is
defined as a "small business concern" under the Small Business Act and
implementing rules. "Small organization" means a not-for-profit enterprise that
is independently owned and operated and not dominant in its field. "Small
governmental jurisdiction" means a government (including a school district) or a
locality with a population of less than 50,000.
2. In fiscal year 1997, the FTC had 928 FTE (full time
equivalents).
3. While the statements were drafted specifically with
respect to small businesses, similar compliance assistance is available to larger
businesses, and some comparable factors for determining civil penalty amounts may be
relevant to larger businesses as well.
4. 62 Fed. Reg. 16,809. The Commission sought public comment
on the policy statements, and received only one comment. As explained in a subsequent
notice, the comment was not relevant to either policy statement. 62 Fed. Reg. 46,363
(Sept. 2, 1997). See Appendix 2. These policy statements provide guidance and
information only, and do not create any rights, duties, obligations, or defenses, implied
or otherwise. The Commission retains the discretion to determine how to proceed in
particular cases.
5. Section 213 of SBREFA, 5 U.S.C. § 601 note,
provides:
Whenever appropriate in the interest of administering statutes and regulations
within the jurisdiction of an agency which regulates small entities, it shall be the
practice of the agency to answer inquiries by small entities concerning information on,
and advice about, compliance with such statutes and regulations, interpreting and applying
the law to specific sets of facts supplied by the small entity. In any civil or
administrative action against a small entity, guidance given by an agency applying the law
to facts provided by the small entity may be considered as evidence of the reasonableness
or appropriateness of any proposed fines, penalties or damages sought against such small
entity.
6. The Commission has published compliance guides for nearly
all of its Rules affecting small businesses, including the Mail Order Rule, Franchise
Rule, Funeral Rule, Telemarketing Sales Rule, Telephone Disclosure and Dispute Resolution
("900" Number) Rule, and Used Motor Vehicle Rule. See Appendix 3
(Business Education Publications).
7. The Commission's business guides have been prepared
voluntarily. The FTC has not issued any rules subject to Section 212 of SBREFA, which
requires that, for any new rule for which an agency is required to prepare a final
regulatory flexibility analysis under 5 U.S.C. § 604, the agency must publish a
"small entity compliance guide" to assist small entities in complying with the
rule.
8. There are more than 20 such guides, including guides for
the use of environmental marketing claims, guides for the advertising of warranties and
guarantees, guides for private vocational schools, and guides for the jewelry industry.
9. The Commission, jointly with the Department of Justice
("DOJ"), has issued guidance on such issues as health care, international
operations, licensing of intellectual property, and horizontal mergers. The Commission has
separately issued guidelines on promotional allowances and services.
10. For example, in the area of medicine and health care,
the FTC and DOJ have jointly issued guidelines discussing nine frequently encountered
subjects, such as physician network joint ventures, and hospital joint ventures involving
specialized clinical or other expensive health care services.
11. See Appendix 4 (Consumer Education
Publications).
12. Materials on both competition and consumer protection
issues can be obtained by writing the Consumer Response Center, Room 130, Federal Trade
Commission, Washington, DC 20580, or telephoning the CRC at (202) 326-2222.
13. Business groups can request speakers by contacting the
Commission's Bureau of Competition, (202) 326-3300, or Bureau of Consumer Protection,
(202) 326-3238. Copies of major speeches are available from the Office of Public Affairs,
(202) 326-2180, and on the Commission's website.
14. Inquiries may be made to the Commission in the following
ways:
Telephone inquiries regarding competition issues may be made to the general
inquiries number of the Bureau of Competition, (202) 326-3300; calls regarding consumer
protection issues may be made to the Bureau of Consumer Protection, (202) 326-2222. From
these contact points, calls will be forwarded to the staff member best able to address the
particular issue.
Written questions or comments regarding competition matters may be mailed to the
Office of Policy and Evaluation, Bureau of Competition, Federal Trade Commission,
Washington, D.C. 20580, or sent by fax to (202) 326-2884.
Written questions or comments regarding consumer protection matters may be
mailed to the Bureau of Consumer Protection, Federal Trade Commission, Washington, D.C.
20580, or sent by fax to (202) 326-2012.
Persons who are uncertain which of these offices to contact may write or call
the Office of the Secretary, Federal Trade Commission, Washington, D.C. 20580, (202)
326-2515, or send a fax to (202) 326-2496.
Inquiries also can be sent by e-mail to "webmaster@ftc.gov," where
they will be forwarded to the appropriate staff person. E-mail requests for advice should
include the inquiring party's telephone number because a telephone conversation may help
to resolve the issue.
In addition, the Commission's ten regional offices, listed below, may be
contacted for information and materials regarding consumer protection or competition
matters:
- ATLANTA REGIONAL OFFICE
- Suite 5M35, Midrise Building
- 60 Forsyth St., S.W.
- Atlanta, GA 30303
- (404) 656-1390 FAX: (404) 656-1379
BOSTON REGIONAL OFFICE
- 101 Merrimac St., Suite 810
- Boston, MA 02114-4719
- (617) 424-5960 FAX: (617) 424-5998
CHICAGO REGIONAL OFFICE
- 55 E. Monroe St., Suite 1860
- Chicago, IL 60603-5701
- (312) 960-5633 FAX: (312) 960-5600
CLEVELAND REGIONAL OFFICE
- Eaton Center, Suite 200, 1111 Superior Ave.
- Cleveland, OH 44114
- (216) 263-3455 FAX: (216) 263-3426
DALLAS REGIONAL OFFICE
- 1999 Bryan St., Suite 2150
- Dallas, TX 75201
- (214) 979-9350 FAX: (214) 953-3079
DENVER REGIONAL OFFICE
- 1961 Stout St., Suite 1523
- Denver, CO 80294-0101
- (303) 844-2272 FAX: (303) 844-3599
LOS ANGELES REGIONAL OFFICE
- 10877 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 700
- Los Angeles, CA 90024
- (310) 824-4343 FAX: (310) 824-4380
NEW YORK REGIONAL OFFICE
- 150 William St., 13th Floor
- New York, NY 10038
- (212) 264-8290 FAX: (212) 264-0459
SAN FRANCISCO REGIONAL OFFICE
- 901 Market St., Suite 570
- San Francisco, CA 94103
- (415) 356-5270 FAX: (415) 356-5284
SEATTLE REGIONAL OFFICE
- 915 Second Ave., Suite 2896
- Seattle, WA 98174
- (206) 220-6350 FAX: (206) 220-6366
15. 16 CFR §§ 1.1-1.4. Advisory opinions are intended
to clarify the law applicable to a course of action that the inquiring firm proposes to
undertake. Ordinarily advisory opinions are not appropriate if the requester is already
engaged in that course of action.
An advisory opinion from the Commission may be appropriate if the matter
involves a substantial or novel question of fact or law and there is no clear Commission
or court precedent, or if the subject matter of the request and publication of Commission
advice is of significant public interest. In other situations, a staff advisory opinion
will be provided, when practicable and appropriate. A staff or Commission advisory opinion
ordinarily will be considered inappropriate if the same or substantially the same course
of action is already under investigation or is or has been the subject of current
governmental proceedings; or if an informed opinion cannot be made, or could be made only
after extensive investigation, clinical study, testing, or collateral inquiry. In
addition, advisory opinions do not answer hypothetical questions. As previously noted,
however, Commission staff will provide informal advice or guidance in response to
inquiries.
The Commission may at any time reconsider the questions involved and rescind any
advice it gives in a Commission advisory opinion. Nevertheless, the Commission will not
proceed against the requester of the advice respecting an action taken in good faith
reliance on the advice, so long as the requester presented all relevant facts fully and
accurately and discontinues the action promptly upon notification that the advice has been
rescinded. Advice rendered in a staff advisory opinion does not bar the Commission from
rescinding the advice and, when appropriate, initiating an enforcement action.
Nonetheless, good faith reliance upon a staff advisory opinion would be a mitigating
factor in a determination to bring such an enforcement action. Moreover, the advice given
to a small business may be considered in an enforcement action as evidence of the
reasonableness or appropriateness of any proposed fine, penalty, or damages sought against
that small business.
It is often most efficient for a party seeking advice to make a telephone
inquiry to the staff person responsible for the relevant area before deciding to request a
formal advisory opinion. Anyone seeking an advisory opinion should submit a statement
identifying the requester and stating the question, the relevant provision of law, and all
material facts. The request and two copies should be submitted to the Office of the
Secretary, Federal Trade Commission, Washington D.C. 20580. For further information, that
office may be reached by telephone at (202) 326-2515.
For inquiries involving most types of issues under the Health Care Guidelines,
the agency is committed to preparing advisory opinions within 90 days of the time that all
necessary information has been submitted. See Introduction, Statements of
Antitrust Enforcement Policy in Health Care, 4 CCH Trade Reg. Rep. ¶ 13,153 at p. 20,800.
For matters on other topics, the time for reply will depend on the complexity and novelty
of the issues raised.
16. 5 U.S.C. § 601 note.
17. In 1996, the Commission issued a rule implementing the
Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104-134) by making inflation adjustments
in the dollar amounts prescribed for each type of violation established by the statutory
civil penalty provisions within the FTC's jurisdiction. See 61 Fed. Reg. 54,548
(Oct. 21, 1996).
18. The criteria for assessing penalties for violations of
the Appliance Labeling Rule are set forth in Subpart K of Part 1 of the Commission's Rules
of Practice, 16 CFR §§ 1.92-1.97.
19. Generally, at least $15 million.
20. Generally, one of the businesses must have sales or
assets above $100 million and the other must have sales or assets above $10 million.
Because of the "size of person" and "size of transaction" thresholds,
many small businesses are not subject to the premerger notification reporting requirements
of the HSR Act.
21. The Commission's order enforcement cases are not
included in the SBREFA civil penalty leniency program because, as noted above, SBREFA
refers only to entities charged with violation of statutes and rules, not administrative
orders. Moreover, Section 5(l) defendants are, by definition, repeat offenders,
and therefore are unlikely to be good candidates for leniency. (As in all cases, however,
the agency would consider individual facts that may affect the penalty to be sought in
each particular case.)
22. In addition, the Commission often works with the State
Attorneys General and other federal agencies, such as the United States Postal Inspection
Service, to investigate conduct that may violate laws enforced by the Commission. In cases
where we work with certain agencies, the Commission must often enter conduct orders to
ensure that the violative behavior is prohibited nationwide.
23. This "maximum civil penalty" is not the same
as the maximum civil penalty for which the company might have been liable under the
statute. Even for large companies, the Commission often adjusts the penalty amount sought
based on the circumstances of the case. The figures stated here reflect additional
reductions applied to these small businesses.
24. Other Funeral Rule sweeps were conducted during the
reporting period, but the funeral homes had not enrolled in the FROP program by December
31, 1997, the cut-off date for this report. The Commission, therefore, is not reporting
them as achievements of its civil penalty leniency program at this time. In 1996,
twenty-three funeral homes entered the FROP program and made over $114,000 in voluntary
payments to the U.S. Treasury or to appropriate state funds.
25. Trade regulation rules are those that are not
statutorily required, but promulgated under the Commission's discretionary rulemaking
authority, as specified in the FTC Act. |