Federal Complaint-Handling, Ombudsman,
and Advocacy Offices

Wendy R. Ginsberg
Analyst in Government Organization and Management
Frederick M. Kaiser
Specialist in American National Government
August 4, 2009
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RL34606
CRS Report for Congress
P
repared for Members and Committees of Congress

Federal Complaint-Handling, Ombudsman, and Advocacy Offices

Summary
Federal complaint-handling, ombudsman, and advocacy offices have different forms, capacities,
and designations. This report, which reviews the state of research in this field and the heritage of
such offices, examines and compares them, along with recent legislative developments and past
proposals to establish a government-wide ombudsman. In so doing, the report identifies the basic
characteristics of these offices, recognizing differences among them with regard to their powers,
duties, jurisdictions, locations, and resources, as well as control over them. This study covers only
ombudsman-like offices at the federal level that deal with the public, sometimes known as
“external ombudsmen.” It does not cover “internal ombudsmen,” that is, offices created to handle
complaints from employees and resolve disputes between them and management; ombudsman-
like offices in the private sector; or similar entities at other levels of government in the United
States or abroad, except to note differences among them.
Legislative interest, albeit sporadic, in establishing a government-wide ombudsman or
standardizing individual offices across-the-board dates to the early 1960s. These efforts extended
in the 1970s to proposals to establish an independent office of consumer representation or
consumer affairs, a plan that President Jimmy Carter later endorsed. Another initiative emerged in
1993, when President William Clinton—through an executive order “Setting Customer Service
Standards”—directed executive departments and agencies to make information, service, and
complaint-systems easily accessible and provide means to address such complaints. The order
also called for agencies to set customer service standards, survey customers, report to the
President on those surveys, and publish customer service plans. A subsequent government-wide
customer satisfaction survey, incidentally, found a similar range of satisfaction between the
private and public sectors.
Notwithstanding these efforts over the past five decades, no comprehensive, across-the-board
transformations have occurred. Nonetheless, numerous individual offices have been established,
modified, and proposed by administrative directives, public laws, and congressional bills. This
piecemeal approach—reflecting different demands in both the government and society over time
and across policy areas—has resulted in a variety of ombudsman-like offices. Although a
complete, authoritative identification and description of current offices does not exist, a number
of studies—from past and contemporary eras, along with the examples here—provide a wide
sampling of complaint-handling and advocacy offices for examination and consideration as
models.
This report consists of three parts: (1) an analysis of the ombudsman concept and a brief look at
which countries around the world have used ombudsmen; (2) a breakdown of the various ways in
which federal complaint-handling offices differ; and (3) an identification and description of
selected ombudsman-like offices, including specifics on their origins and operations.
This report will be updated as events warrant.

Congressional Research Service

Federal Complaint-Handling, Ombudsman, and Advocacy Offices

Contents
Overview .................................................................................................................................... 1
Broad-Scale Studies and Proposals.............................................................................................. 5
Congressional Sources .......................................................................................................... 5
Initiatives in the 1960s and 1970s.................................................................................... 5
Developments in the 1980s and 1990s ............................................................................. 6
GAO Study in 2000......................................................................................................... 6
Congressional Interest in the Internet and the “Digital Divide,” 1999-Present .................. 7
Complaint-Handling Offices and Congressional Casework.............................................. 8
Executive Sources............................................................................................................... 10
Non-Governmental Sources ................................................................................................ 11
Differences Among Offices ....................................................................................................... 13
Reasons for Differences ...................................................................................................... 13
Powers and Duties .............................................................................................................. 14
Jurisdictions........................................................................................................................ 14
Locations ............................................................................................................................ 15
Controls .............................................................................................................................. 15
Neutrality............................................................................................................................ 15
Resources ........................................................................................................................... 16
Electronic and Traditional Communications ........................................................................ 16
Development of E-government...................................................................................... 16
Websites and the Internet............................................................................................... 18
Benefits and Concerns................................................................................................... 20
Concluding Observations .......................................................................................................... 20

Appendixes
Appendix. Examples of Ombudsman-like Entities ..................................................................... 22

Contacts
Author Contact Information ...................................................................................................... 47

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Federal Complaint-Handling, Ombudsman, and Advocacy Offices

Overview
A variety of offices at the federal level respond to complaints, grievances, and concerns from the
public about government programs, services, and operations.1 These entities, which differ in
important respects, are variously referred to as complaint-handling, advocacy, public counsel,
coordinative, and ombudsman offices. Despite their differences, they exhibit a common
purpose—to represent the public in such matters—which is reflected in the classic ombudsman:
that is, a high-ranking official who may be situated outside the executive and possessing
independent resources and powers. This notion, which has developed over more than a century,
has its modern genesis in Sweden and its evolution largely in European parliamentary regimes.2
An “ombudsman,” which is a Swedish word that broadly means “one who represents someone,”
is viewed as a servant of the public. As such, the position has been described as follows:
an independent high-level officer who receives complaints, who pursues inquires [sic] into
the maters [sic] involved, and who makes recommendations for suitable action. He may also
investigate on his own motion. He makes periodic public reports. His remedial weapons are
persuasion, criticism and publicity. He cannot as a matter of law reverse administrative
action.3
In brief, the concept of ombudsman has come to mean, in the words of former Senator Edward
Long, “a guardian of the people’s rights against abuses and malfunctions by government, its
programs, and its officials—a sort of watchman over the law’s watchmen.”4

1 This report builds on several previous Congressional Research Service (CRS) studies: CRS Report 76-192, The
Ombudsman Concept: Background Information
, by Harold C. Relyea, available from the author; CRS Congressional
Distribution Memorandum, Federal Complaint-Handling Offices, by Frederick M. Kaiser, Aug. 20, 2000; and CRS
Congressional Distribution Memorandum, Options for Using the Internet to Improve Federal Complaint-Handling, by
Frederick M. Kaiser and Eric Fischer, Apr. 11, 2000.
2 Such offices have since extended worldwide. For studies of the concept and its adoption, in both the United States and
abroad, see Coalition of Federal Ombudsmen, Historical Perspective, available at http://www.federalombuds.ed.gov/
history.html; American Assembly, Columbia University, The Ombudsman: Report of the 32nd American Assembly
(Harriman, NY: American Assembly, 1967); Kent M. Weeks, Ombudsmen Around the World (Berkeley, CA: Institute
of Governmental Studies, University of California, 1978); Sam Zagoria, The Ombudsman: How Good Governments
Handle Citizens’ Grievances
(Washington: Seven Locks Press, 1988); Jeffrey S. Lubbers, Independent Advocacy
Agencies Within Agencies: A Survey of Federal Agency External Ombudsmen
, Report to the National Taxpayers
Advocate (Washington: Washington College of Law, American University, 2000, updated June, 2003); David R.
Anderson and Diane M. Stockton, “Federal Ombudsmen: An Underused Resource,” Administrative Law Journal, vol.
5, summer 1991, pp. 275-345; Walter Gellhorn, Ombudsmen and Others (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press,
1966); Donald C. Rowat, ed., The Ombudsman, Citizen’s Defender (London: Allen and Unwin, 1965); Stanley V.
Anderson, ed., Ombudsmen for American Government? (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1968); Stanley V.
Anderson (The American Assembly), Ombudsman Papers: American Experience and Proposals (Berkeley, CA:
Institute of Governmental Studies, University of California, 1969); Administrative Conference of the United States,
The Ombudsman: A Primer for Federal Agencies (Washington: ACUS, 1991); Katja Heede, European Ombudsmen:
Redress and Control at the Union Level
(Boston: Kluwer International, 2000); Roy V. Peel, The Ombudsman or
Citizen’s Defender: A Modern Institution
, in The Annals, vol. 377 (Philadelphia, PA: The American Academy of
Political and Social Science, 1968) (entire volume); Linda C. Reif, ed., The International Ombudsman Anthology:
Selected Writings from the International Ombudsman Institute
(The Hague: Kluwer Law International, 1999); and
Victor Ayeni, et al., Strengthening Ombudsman and Human Rights Institutions in Commonwealth Small and Island
States
(London: Commonwealth Secretariat, in collaboration with the International Ombudsman Institute, 2000).
3 American Assembly, The Ombudsman, p. 6.
4 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Administrative Practice and Procedure,
Ombudsman, hearings, 89th Cong., 2nd sess., Mar. 7, 1966, (Washington: GPO, 1966).
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The U.S. federal government has not adopted the “classic” ombudsman. Instead, the government
has multifarious forms of ombudsmen-like offices. Even the entities that carry the same title (of
“ombudsman,” for example) differ in their powers, functions, duties, activities, jurisdictions,
independence, and resources. In comparison to one another, for instance, some offices are limited
to receiving complaints or grievances from the public and passing them on to relevant units
within the agency—without necessarily following up on them. Other complaint-handling entities
do follow up on such charges, examine the agency’s operations, and, in some cases, mediate or
resolve disputes between the aggrieved party and the agency. Still other entities may be proactive;
that is, they seek out certain clientele groups to notify them about relevant government services,
assist them in gaining access to these, and ensure that such services are delivered properly and
fully. Separate from these functions and duties, some ombudsman-like offices issue reports
(periodic and/or episodic) to agency officials, Congress, and/or the public, while others have no
such obligation or practice.
Several recent statutes reflect these different characteristics, as well as varying position titles.
• The Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004, which expanded
the government’s powers to combat terrorism, established a new entity or added
to the responsibilities and roles of existing ones to help protect civil rights and
civil liberties. Three with enhanced responsibilities are in the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS): a Privacy Officer and an Officer for Civil Rights and
Civil Liberties, along with additional special duties for the inspector general
(IG).5 In addition, a new position—the Civil Liberties Protection Officer—was
created in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), to help
protect civil liberties and privacy in policies and procedures under the ODNI.6
• The National Defense Authorization Act for FY2008 incorporated a number of
separate bills, including the Wounded Warrior Act.7 The legislation is designed to
aid returning wounded military personnel in receiving appropriate medical care,
when they are in the service (and in the Department of Defense), as well as after
they are discharged (and under the jurisdiction of the Department of Veterans
Affairs). The provisions—based on the recommendations of several
governmental commissions (notably, the Dole-Shalala Commission) and
congressional panels that were highly critical of the care given to injured

5 P.L. 108-458; 118 Stat. 3867-3869, which amended P.L. 107-296, 116 Stat. 2135, codified at 6 U.S.C. § 142. The
special duty for the DHS inspector general makes it one of three—among the nearly 60 IGs under the Inspector General
Act of 1978, as amended (5 U.S.C. Appendix)—to have ombudsman-related responsibilities. The others are in the
Department of Justice and the Environmental Protection Agency. See CRS Report 98-379, Statutory Offices of
Inspector General: Past and Present
, by Frederick M. Kaiser.
6 P.L. 108-458, 118 Stat. 3658-3659. As a related development, the 2004 act also endorsed another recommendation of
the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, commonly called the “9/11 Commission,” by
mandating a Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board in the Executive Office of the President. P.L. 108-458; 118
Stat. 3684-3687. For an overview of the Board’s establishment, evolution, and functions, see CRS Report RS22078,
Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board: Congressional Refinements, by Harold C. Relyea, and CRS Report
RL34385, Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board: New Independent Agency Status, by Garrett Hatch. Details on
the requirements for protecting privacy and other legal rights with regard to information sharing are provided by U.S.
Information Sharing Environment (ISE), Purpose and Vision of the Information Sharing Environment; Background on
Protecting Information Privacy and Other Legal Rights in the Context of the ISE;
and Annual Report to the Congress
on the Information Sharing Environment
(2007), all available at http://www.ise.gov.
7 P.L. 110-181, Secs. 1611 and 1614.
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veterans8—established Federal Recovery Coordinators and Transition Patient
Advocates to assist them. These positions are intended to reduce, if not prevent,
complications, uncertainties, and delays from arising in the first place and, if they
do arise, mitigate their impact. If such problems arise, the coordinators and
advocates are positioned to respond on their own or at the behest of the veterans.
• Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) amendments signed into law on
December 31, 2007, created several new positions to assist the public in gaining
access to government information. Public Liaisons in each federal agency are to
be designated by a Chief FOIA Officer, who is also responsible for monitoring
FOIA implementation and facilitating public understanding of the purposes of
FOIA’s exemptions.9 The purposes of the Public Liaisons are to serve as an
official to whom a FOIA requester can raise concerns about service from the
FOIA Requester Center; to assist in reducing agency delays in responding to
requests and increase the transparency and understanding of the status of
requests; and to assist in the resolution of disputes between a requester and the
agency. The law also sets up an Office of Government Information Services in
the National Archives and Records Administration; it is to review compliance
with FOIA policies, recommend policy changes to Congress and the President,
offer mediation services between FOIA requesters and administrative agencies,
and issue advisory opinions if mediation has not resolved a dispute.10
• The American National Red Cross Governance Modernization Act of 2007
established an ombudsman in the American National Red Cross (ANRC).11
Although it is not a federal agency, the ANRC is federally chartered and charged
with assisting federal government efforts in disaster relief.12 The ombudsman’s
office, while modest at this stage, serves as a neutral party that provides
voluntary, confidential, and informal processes designed to facilitate the
resolution of problems between the ANRC and others.
Illustrating the ad hoc and specialized focus of ombudsmen-like offices at the federal level is one
advanced in the 111th Congress by the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. It has

8 For an overview, see U.S. Congress, House Committee on Armed Services, Wounded Warrior Assistance Act of 2007,
H.Rept. 110-68, 110th Cong., 1st sess., 2007; and Conference Committee, National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2008
, H.Rept. 110-477, 110th Cong., 2nd sess., 2008. Prominent among the commissions was the President’s
Commission on Care for America’s Returning Wounded Warriors, Serve, Support, Simplify (Washington: GPO, 2007).
The commission’s popular name comes from its co-chairs, former Senator Robert Dole and former Secretary of Health
and Human Services Donna Shalala.
9 P.L. 110-175, Secs. 6 and 10.
10 Shortly after the office was instituted, the Bush Administration proposed to abolish it and transfer its functions from
NARA to the Department of Justice. The proposal appears in a provision (Section 519) in the President’s budget
submission for the FY2009 appropriations for the Department of Commerce. U.S. Office of Management and Budget,
Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2009, Appendix (Washington: OMB, 2008), p. 239. Press
coverage: Elizabeth Williamson, “Is Ombudsman Already in Jeopardy?” Washington Post, Feb. 6, 2008, p. A17.
11 P.L. 110-26; 121 Stat. 110.
12 36 U.S.C. § 300101. For its assignments and duties related to the federal government, coordination with federal
agencies, and directives from the President, see 42 U.S.C. § 5143, 5152, and 5153; and 22 U.S.C. § 2601 note. One of
those responsibilities—coordinating mass care following a disaster—was transferred to the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) in the wake of the 2005 Gulf Coast Hurricanes. The primary reason for the shift was the
ANRC’s lack of authority to direct federal agencies’ resources to meet mass care needs. See U.S. Government
Accountability Office, National Disaster Response: FEMA Should Take Action to Improve Capacity and Coordination
between Government and Voluntary Sectors
, GAO Report GAO-08-369, Feb. 2008, pp. 1-2.
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proposed an Ombudsman for Intelligence Community (IC) Security Clearances, who would be
appointed by the Director of National Intelligence. Applicants for a security clearance in any
component in the IC would be given contact information for the ombudsman, who would report
annually to the House and Senate Select Committees on Intelligence with regard to the number of
persons contacting the ombudsman and a summary of their concerns, complaints, and questions.13
Attempts to establish a government-wide ombudsman at the federal level or to standardize
ombudsman-like offices have received attention—from Congress, the executive, international
organizations, academia, relevant professional societies, and the press—sporadically since at least
the mid-1960s. These across-the-board plans, however, have remained on the drawing board.
By comparison, national-level offices of ombudsman have proliferated in Sweden and elsewhere.
Finland established such an office nearly 100 years ago. In the 1960s, New Zealand, the
Netherlands, Spain, Tanzania, Great Britain, and Northern Ireland established ombudsmen. In the
1970s, France, Portugal, and Austria established such offices. Countries including South Africa,
Hungary, the Czech Republic, Columbia, the Republic of Georgia, and Zimbabwe have
established national or sub-national offices of ombudsman in the last 20 years to curb human
rights abuses and aid in democratic transitions. According to the International Ombudsman
Institute, about 120 countries currently employ ombudsmen at the national or sub-national level
of government.14 The European Union appointed its first European Ombudsman on July 12,
1995.15 Some of the ombudsmen in other countries serve at the national level and have broader
jurisdictions and a greater degree of independence—especially those in parliamentary regimes—
than their American namesakes.
This overview is not a comprehensive study of various complaint-handling, ombudsman, or
advocacy offices. Instead, it examines and provides examples of ombudsman-like offices,
recognizing their variations. Differences among these instrumentalities include those noted below.
• Origins: Was the office created internally within an agency, or mandated by
Congress or the President?
• Powers and duties: Does the entity simply receive complaints and pass them
along, or does it also follow up on complaints after an agency response; does it
resolve disputes between the agency and the complainant, or does it engage in
proactive efforts, such as providing outreach and special assistance to
individuals?

13 U.S. Congress, House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2010
, H.Rept. 111-186 111th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 2009), p. 23.
14 International Ombudsman Institute, “Ombudsman History & Development,” available at http://www.law.ualberta.ca/
centres/ioi/About-the-I.O.I./History-and-Development.php, visited Dec. 12, 2007. A list of countries with ombudsman
offices at the national or sub-national level is available at http://www.law.ualberta.ca/centres/ioi/Links/Worldwide-
Offices.php, visited Dec. 21, 2007. Existing ombudsman examinations and investigations are limited because they are
dated (e.g., one of the most comprehensive, detailed studies was conducted in 1977); highly specialized, focusing on
particular offices or a single type of office (e.g., those titled ombudsmen); or cross-agency surveys that look at only a
selected aspect of complaint handling (e.g., use of the Internet to receive complaints) and, thus, do not provide a full
description of the offices and their duties, responsibilities, powers, capabilities, and resources.
15 The European Ombudsman and Authors, The European Ombudsman: Origins, Establishment, Evolution
(Luxemburg: Office of Official Publications of the European Communities, 2005), p. 92, available at
http://ombudsman.europa.eu/10anniversary/pdf/en/volume2005_en.pdf.
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• Jurisdictions: Is there one complaint-handling entity for an entire agency, or
several entities with separate jurisdictions; if the latter, how confined are these?
• Locations: Is the ombudsman-like office situated within a “parent” agency or
made independent of it?
• Resources: What is the level of funding and resources that the entity receives?
• Controls: Who appoints and removes the officer, and who determines the office’s
budget and spending priorities?
These criteria are not discrete. The characteristics overlap and are utilized in a variety of
combinations in federal agencies and organizations, offering a gamut of ways and means for the
public to petition the government. The variations among the attributes also suggest important
differences in the capacity and capability of each office.
Broad-Scale Studies and Proposals
Interest in institutionalizing a centralized or standardized complaint-handling role in the federal
government began in the mid-1960s. Although no proposals along these lines have been adopted,
a number of studies and recommendations have emerged over the years. These have come from
Members of Congress, executive and administrative officers, and nongovernmental organizations.
Congressional Sources
Over the past five decades, Congress has periodically looked into legislating complaint-handling
mechanisms with intense interest in the 1960s and sporadic attention in the following decades.
Initiatives in the 1960s and 1970s
Legislative proposals for complaint-handling mechanisms began in 1963. Three years later, the
Senate Subcommittee on Administrative Practice and Procedure launched an extensive
examination of ombudsmen and other complaint-handling offices and, in 1970, considered
proposals to create a public counsel corporation.16 On May 9, 1973, Representative Wayne Owens
introduced H.R. 7680 to create an Office of Congressional Ombudsman, which would have
allowed legislators to request investigations of federal agencies—drawing help from both the
Congressional Research Service and the General Accounting Office, now the Government
Accountability Office (GAO). The bill, however, was not reported by the House Committee on
House Administration. On November 6, 1973, Representative Les Aspin sponsored H.R. 11257,

16 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Administrative Practice and Procedure,
Ombudsman, hearings, 89th Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 1966); and U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on the
Judiciary, Public Counsel Corporation, hearings, 91st Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 1971). Legislation along
these lines was introduced as early as 1963. Among the initial advocates were Representative Henry S. Reuss, calling
for an Administrative Counsel, who would be limited to receiving complaints from congressional offices, and Senator
Edward V. Long, whose proposal for an Office of Administrative Ombudsman led the way to a hearing by his
Subcommittee on Administrative Practice and Procedure in 1966. Other legislative initiatives were undertaken later by
Senators Jacob Javits, Edward Kennedy, Birch Bayh, Robert Taft, and John Tunney. See CRS Report 76-192, The
Ombudsman Concept
, pp. 6-10, available from the author upon request.
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which proposed the addition of an ombudsman position within House members’ staffs. The same
fate awaited this bill; it was not reported by the House Committee on House Administration.
In the mid-1970s, the House Subcommittee on Commerce, Consumer, and Monetary Affairs
examined proposals for an office of consumer affairs, a plan that President Jimmy Carter later
endorsed. Despite the backing, it was not authorized.17 Shortly before this development, the
Senate Governmental Affairs Committee issued its Study on Federal Regulation, an extensive six-
volume effort that devoted an entire volume to public participation in agency proceedings.18 In
this study, the panel looked at different devices—including an office of public counsel, an
independent consumer agency, and various other complaint-handling offices—that served or
could serve as a conduit for citizen grievances, complaints, or questions about the implementation
of public policy or, beyond this, as an advocate for citizen interests. No legislation, however, was
enacted.
Developments in the 1980s and 1990s
A variety of complaint-handling offices were written into legislation throughout the late 1980s
and 1990s, including offices in the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Federal Student Aid Office
(FSA), and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).19 In the early 1990s, GAO examined
access to, and utilization of, the ombudsman program under the Older Americans Act, as well as
the handling of beneficiary complaints under Medicare.20
GAO Study in 2000
Many of the older and circumscribed ombudsman studies had been confined to the “paper age”
and did not consider the impact and implications of computers and the Internet on complaint-
handling entities, procedures, practices, and resources. An exception to this was a survey by GAO
of 32 “high impact agencies”—those handling about 90% of federal contact with the public—and
their use of electronic communications, especially the Internet, to receive citizen complaints and
comments.21 The study found that the overwhelming majority of agencies (i.e., 29 agencies) had a
website to receive complaints and comments from the public—21 had an e-mail link for program
comments and complaints, and 28 had an e-mail link for comments to the agency webmaster—in

17 For coverage, see Congressional Quarterly, Congress and the Nation, 1977-1980, vol. 5 (Washington: Congressional
Quarterly Service, 1981), pp. 353-357.
18 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Administrative Practice and Procedure, Public
Participation in
Federal Agency Proceedings, S. 2715, hearings, 94th Cong, 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 1976).
19 Congress created the Office of Taxpayer Ombudsman (now the Taxpayer Advocate) in 1988 under P.L. 100-647; the
Federal Student Aid Ombudsman in 1998 under P.L. 105-244; and the EPA’s Asbestos and Small Business
Ombudsman in 1982 under the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA), P.L. 104-121.
20 U.S. General Accounting Office, The Older Americans Act: Access to and Utilization of the Ombudsman Program,
GAO Report PEMD-92-21 (Washington: GAO, 1992); and Medicare: Improper Handling of Beneficiary Complaints of
Provider Fraud and Abuse
, GAO Report HRD-92-1 (Washington: GAO, 1992).
21 The study, released on July 7, 2000, surveyed 32 “High Impact Agencies,” that is, those that handle 90% of the
federal government’s contact with the public, as identified by the National Partnership for Reinventing Government.
These included bureaus and offices in 12 of the 14 Cabinet departments (omitting the Departments of Energy and
Housing and Urban Development), along with such major independent agencies as the Environmental Protection
Agency, Social Security Administration, and U.S. Postal Service. U.S. General Accounting Office, Internet: Federal
Web-based Complaint Handling
, Letter Report to Honorable Ernest F. Hollings and Honorable Ron Wyden, GAO
Report AIMD-00-238R (Washington: GAO, 2000) pp. 1, 2, and 8.
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addition to receiving information via telephone and mail. The survey, however, was limited in
two ways: (1) it did not include the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD),
which has substantial contact with the public; and (2) the survey inquired only about an agency’s
receipt of complaints and comments, not about such other possible Internet-based, website uses,
including categorizing, cataloging, storing, and disseminating information.22 Nonetheless, GAO’s
review represented the first such cross-agency survey of Internet-based complaint handling and
served as a first step to more extensive and detailed studies.
GAO’s review commented on the status of two federal efforts to develop centralized Internet-
based hubs for citizens attempting to access information about federal programs or services: (1)
http://www.consumer.gov/, operated by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC); and (2) the
USA.gov site, developed by the General Services Administration’s Office of Citizen Services and
Communications. The ongoing FTC site presents consumer information and links to complaint
forms grouped by topic or subject area (e.g., food, product safety, and health), rather than by
agency; because of this orientation, a citizen does not need to know the responsible agency when
submitting a comment or lodging a complaint. The GSA site serves as “the U.S. government’s
official web portal.”23 As such, it provides links to government grants, available jobs, and
information on combating identity theft. The site also links to the Federal Citizen Information
Center (FCIC),24 which has a list of federal agencies that document complaints against private
companies. In addition, the GSA site includes a page of links to government agencies and elected
officials.25
Congressional Interest in the Internet and the “Digital Divide,” 1999-Present
Beginning at the end of the 20th century and continuing into the 21st, Congress—as well as the
executive and private parties—has considered the rise of the Internet, its accessibility, and impact,
with particular attention to the “digital divide.”26 This phenomenon (discussed further in the
section on e-government) recognizes a distinct division between individuals, groups, and
organizations with access to, as well as skills and resources in using, the Internet versus those
without these attributes. Congressional hearings were held in 1999-2002, in part based on an
executive branch study (discussed below); these efforts, in turn, supported a provision in the E-
Government of 2002 to authorize a study to make recommendations to correct “disparities in
access to the Internet.”27

22 Ibid., pp. 1, 2, and 8.
23 U.S. General Services Administration, Office of Citizen Services and Communications, About USA.gov, available at
http://www.usa.gov/About.shtml.
24 Federal Consumer Information Center, available at http://www.pueblo.gsa.gov/complaintresources.htm.
25 U.S. General Services Administration, Office of Citizen Services and Communications, Contact Your Government,
available at http://www.usa.gov/Contact.shtml.
26 For differing views of the digital divide, see Pippa Norris, Digital Divide: Civic Engagement, Information Poverty,
and the Internet Worldwide
(New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001); Benjamin M. Compaine, ed., The Digital
Divide: Facing a Crisis or Creating a Myth?
(Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2001); Pew Internet & American Life
Project, The Internet and Democratic Debate, 2004, available at http://www.pewinternet.org; and K. Mossberg, et al.,
Virtual Inequality: Beyond the Digital Divide (Washington: Georgetown University Press, 2003).
27 P.L. 107-347; 116 Stat. 2944-2945. For a sampling of hearings, see U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small
Business, Subcommittee on Empowerment, The Digital Divide: Bridging the Technology Gap, hearing, 106th Cong., 1st
sess., July 21, 1999 (Washington: GPO, 2001); and U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and
Transportation, NTIA Digital Network Technology Program Act Report, S.Rept. 107-207, 107th Cong., 2nd sess.
(Washington: GPO, 2002); and U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation,
(continued...)
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Congress’s attention has extended to ways to increase Internet access, skills, and resources across
the board, but often with particular attention to the poor, minorities, and rural residents, the
groups most likely to be on the disadvantaged side of the “divide.” Proposed legislative remedies
center on increasing access to the Internet in general and computer equipment, skills, and
resources,28 rather than on Internet access to specific governmental operations and services in
particular, including complaint handling. Despite this orientation, such legislative efforts could,
indirectly and to varying degrees, contribute to a better understanding of the impact of the
Internet on complaint-handling and accessing information about government programs,
operations, and activities. Along these lines, two CRS memoranda in 2000 looked into the use of
the Internet in the context of complaint handling.29
Complaint-Handling Offices and Congressional Casework
Implicitly and often explicitly, proposals to establish a government-wide ombudsman have
generated concerns about its impact on congressional casework. In an earlier era, it was not
entirely clear what effects the creation of ombudsmen or complaint-handling offices in the
executive had on Congress in terms of the casework function of legislators. The question had
been complicated in the past—according to Stanley V. Anderson (an authority on ombudsmen),
writing in the late 1960s—by “a paucity of information on the treatment of grievances by elected
officials in general, and by legislators in particular.”30
Times have changed since then, as numerous studies have detailed the high priority and
significant resources Members and their offices devote to casework across the board.31 In political
scientist Richard F. Fenno Jr.’s 1978 seminal study, Home Style: House Members in their
Districts
, this activity is recognized as an essential, albeit time-consuming, ingredient in securing
the legislator’s elected office. According to Fenno, casework is
a highly valued form of activity. Not only is the constituent service universally recognized as
an important part of the job in its own right. It is also universally recognized as powerful
reelection medicine.32

(...continued)
Subcommittee on Science, Technology, and Space, S. 414, Digital Divide and Minority Serving Institutions, hearing,
107th Cong., 2nd sess., Feb. 27, 2002 (Washington: GPO, 2005).
28 Past initiatives have included the Digital Divide Elimination Act of 2003, H.R. 1131, 108th Cong., 1st sess. (2003);
and the Rural America Digital Accessibility Act, H.R. 3428, 110th Cong., 1st sess. (2007). In the 111th Congress, bills
that would affect Internet accessibility and computer skills, training, and/or equipment include the Reauthorization of
the Enhancing Education Through Technology Act of 2001, S. 818 (2009); Home School Opportunities Make
Education Sound Act of 2009, S. 100 (2009); Twenty-first Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of
2009, H.R. 3101 (2009); and the Permanent Internet Tax Freedom Act of 2009, H.R. 1560 (2009).
29 The CRS congressional distribution memoranda, whose analyses have been incorporated in this report, are Options
for Using the Internet to Improve Federal Complaint-Handling
, by Frederick M. Kaiser and Eric Fischer; and Federal
Complaint-Handling Offices
, by Frederick M. Kaiser.
30 Stanley V. Anderson, Ombudsman Papers: American Experience and Proposals, Institute of Governmental Studies
(Berkeley: University of California, 1969), p. 19.
31 For discussion and citations, see CRS Report RL33209, Casework in a Congressional Office: Background, Rules,
Laws, and Resources
, by R. Eric Petersen, pp. 1-3. See also CRS Report RL34148, Congress and the Internet:
Highlights
, by Walter J. Oleszek, on “Constituent Communications,” pp. 18-19.
32 Richard F. Fenno, Jr., Home Style: House Members in their Districts (New York: Addison-Wesley Educational
Publishers, Inc., 2003 ed.), p. 101. Additional sources on the difficulties, demands, and rewards of congressional
casework include CRS Report RL33209, Casework in a Congressional Office: Background, Rules, Laws, and
(continued...)
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This and supportive findings elsewhere may help to explain the general reluctance among
legislators to relinquish congressional casework to an administrative officer, who is not under
their immediate control and direction. This feature of executive ombudsmen is in stark contrast to
caseworkers in Member offices. In the latter, staffers are hired and promoted by the Members,
who also determine the caseworkers’ duties and assignments, and can insist on their
responsiveness to constituent requests. As a consequence, casework is well-institutionalized in
Member offices and sometimes beyond. It is even directly aided and reinforced by executive
agencies that provide casework resources, noticeably in high-demand, high-profile areas.33
Testimony on the earliest ombudsman proposals of Representative Henry Reuss raised concerns
that legislators would continue to act on public complaints by themselves, leaving the
ombudsman underutilized. In defending the 1965 incarnation of his legislation to create an
“American Ombudsman,” Reuss countered criticism by stressing the heavy workload brought
about by casework and its adverse impact on other congressional functions and responsibilities,
particularly lawmaking, which he saw as primary.
The role Congressmen have assumed as the citizen’s advocates against the bureaucracy is
important and valuable in our system of government. It has helped to prevent injustices and
to promote good administration. But the job of handling constituents’ cases has become so
burdensome that it is interfering with the primary job of Congressmen as legislators.34
The Member also emphasized that a government-wide ombudsman or public counsel would head
a professional office, with sufficient funding, trained and experienced personnel, and powers to
pursue complaints and inquiries (via congressional offices or directly from the public) effectively
and efficiently. The ombudsman’s reporting requirements to Congress, in Representative Reuss’s
view, could aid its oversight endeavors.35
At about the same time, however, opposing views gained currency in Congress. These centered
on the projected tangible costs of an overarching executive branch ombudsman, as well as the
intangible costs to congressional responsibilities and interests. A special Joint Committee on the
Organization of the Congress, reporting in 1966, addressed an ombudsman plan.36 After hearing
from some legislators in favor of such a government-wide office and recognizing its adoption in
other countries, however, the bipartisan, bicameral panel determined that such an entity at the
federal level in the United States would be expensive, both in its funding and its impact on
Congress.

(...continued)
Resources, by R. Eric Petersen, Congress and Its Members (Washington: CQ Press, 2008), pp. 129-147; Charles L.
Clapp, The Congressman (Washington: Brookings Institution, 1963); and Walter Gellhorn, When Americans Complain
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1966).
33 A prime example is in immigration matters. See U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), Resources for
Congress: Resources for Caseworkers
, available at http://www.uscis.gov/portal/silte/uscis. Additional executive
agency casework websites are listed in CRS Report RL33209, Casework in a Congressional Office: Background,
Rules, Laws, and Resources
, pp. 15-16.
34 Rep. Henry Reuss, House debate, Congressional Record, vol. 111, part 2 (Feb. 3, 1965), p. 1881. Reuss introduced
nearly identical ombudsman bills in 1963, 1965, and 1967; one (i.e., the 1965 proposal) received committee
consideration.
35 Ibid., pp. 1880-1881.
36 U.S. Congress, Joint Committee on the Organization of the Congress, Organization of Congress, S.Rept. 89-1414,
89th Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 1966); and Congressional Quarterly Service, Congressional Quarterly
Almanac, 1966
(Washington: CQ Press, 1966), p. 545.
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The extent of the problem in the United States is such that the adoption of the proposal
would require creation of a large office or department.
The [J]oint [C]ommittee, after careful consideration, decided against recommending creation
of such an office at this time. We believe that casework is a proper function of the individual
Member of Congress and should not be delegated to an administrative body.37
Executive Sources
The executive has also conducted research and sponsored initiatives in this field over the past
three decades. In 1975, for example, the Office of Consumer Affairs in the Department of Health,
Education, and Welfare (now Health and Human Services (HHS)) contracted for a feasibility
study to improve the handling of consumer complaints. A part of that effort examined federal
government programs for resolving consumer complaints and their adequacy, examining 12
executives of independent agencies in depth.38
Later, as noted above, President Jimmy Carter supported the concept of an office of consumer
affairs or representation. When that broad effort failed, however, he settled for a consumer affairs
advisor.39
In 1990, the Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS) commissioned a study of
ombudsmen in federal agencies, including detailed case studies on six of them, along with a short
history of the ombudsman movement in America.40 The report supplemented an ACUS
recommendation to establish ombudsmen in “federal agencies that administer programs with
major responsibilities involving significant interactions with members of the general public.”41
Another related development was President Clinton’s 1993 Executive Order 12862 on “Setting
Customer Service Standards.” It called on agencies to make information, services, and complaint
systems easily accessible, and to provide a means to address customer complaints. A 1996 study
by the National Performance Review provided illustrations of efforts to meet these goals,
including the availability of toll-free phone lines and websites.42

37 Joint Committee on the Organization of the Congress, Organization of Congress, S.Rept. 89-1414, p. 36.
38 Technical Assistance Research Program (TARP), Inc., Feasibility Study to Improve Handling of Consumer
Complaints: Evaluation Report
, Report PB-244 182, Prepared for the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare
(Washington: Apr., 1975).
39 Congressional Quarterly, Congress and the Nation, 1977-1980, vol. 5 (Washington: Congressional Quarterly
Service, 1981), pp. 353-357.
40 David R. Anderson and Diane M. Stockton, Ombudsmen in Federal Agencies: The Theory and Practice (Report
Recommendation 90-2). Administrative Conference of the United States, Recommendations and Reports 1990
(Washington: Apr. 1990).
41 Administrative Conference of the United States, “The Ombudsman in Federal Agencies,” Recommendation 90-2,
June 7, 1990, Code of Federal Regulations, vol.1, sec. 305.90-2. The ACUS had been an independent advisory agency
within the executive branch. It was abolished in 1996, via the Treasury, Postal Service and General Government
Appropriations Act, Fiscal Year 1996 (P.L. 104-52). The 110th Congress has acted on legislation to revive ACUS (H.R.
3564—submitted to the president), but the prospects for funding are uncertain.
42 U.S. National Performance Review, The Best Kept Secrets in Government: A Report to President Bill Clinton
(Washington: GPO, 1996), pp. 23-40; an electronic version is available at http://govinfo.library.unt.edu/npr/library/
nprrpt/annrpt/vp-rpt96/toc.html, pp. 33-37.
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In 1999, the Commerce Department’s National Telecommunications and Information
Administration (NTIA) reported on its study of the “digital divide.”43 It found that computer use
in general, and Internet access in particular, had increased measurably in the previous few years.
Nonetheless, computer availability and Internet accessibility remained below the national average
for certain groups: minority, low-income, rural, and single-parent households. The focus of the
NTIA study was on computer resources, skills, and literacy—especially for the disadvantaged—
for education, jobs, careers, and business opportunities.44 Nonetheless, the NTIA review had
implications for access to government information and complaint-handling offices for the
disadvantaged—Americans who might need these the most.
A far-reaching survey appeared in 2000 and was updated in 2003. In a report to the National
Taxpayers Advocate on independent advocacy agencies, Jeffrey Lubbers examined nearly 30 such
entities, ranging from the IRS National Advocate Service itself to Long-Term Care
Ombudsmen.45 The report, in addition to describing some of the characteristics of the offices,
gave attention to state ombudsmen, as well as standards of conduct, such as those offered by the
American Bar Association (discussed below.). Professor Lubbers found “an increasing number of
independent officers and agencies established within existing departments and agencies” and that
these are “becoming prominent.”46 The offices, however, are not standardized. They vary, for
instance, in number within their parent departments and agencies, as well as in resources,
jurisdiction, and degree of independence.47
Non-Governmental Sources
The academic community, professional societies, and the press have also analyzed and assessed
complaint-handling mechanisms. As noted above, however, these are often limited to one or a few
entities. Nonetheless, several early studies opened a window into the organization and operation
of some ombudsman-like offices at the time.
Prominent among these was a 1968 volume from the American Academy of Political and Social
Science entitled The Ombudsman or Citizen’s Defender, which included several chapters on the
American scene.48 At the same time, the American Assembly raised the question of An
Ombudsman for American Government?
, examining practices and proposals affecting federal,
state, and local government.49 A further examination of the U.S. experience appeared the next

43 U.S. Department of Commerce, National Telecommunications and Information Administration, Falling through the
Net: Defining the Digital Divide: A Report on the Telecommunications and Information Technology Gap in America
,
covered in House Subcommittee on Empowerment, The Digital Divide, hearings (1999), pp. 4-6 and 56-71.
44 Ibid.
45 Jeffrey S. Lubbers, Independent Advocacy Agencies Within Agencies: A Survey of Federal Agency External
Ombudsmen
, Report to the National Taxpayers Advocate (Washington: Washington College of Law, American
University, 2000, updated June, 2003).
46 Ibid., p. 1.
47 Ibid., p. 2.
48 Sandler, An Ombudsman for the United States?; and Dalmas H. Nelson and Eugene Price, “Realignment,
Readjustment, Reform: The Impact of the Ombudsman on American Constitutional and Political Institutions,” in Peel,
ed., The Ombudsman or Citizen’s Defender.
49 Stanley V. Anderson, ed., Ombudsman for American Government? American Assembly, Columbia University
(Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall, Inc., 1968).
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year in a compilation of papers under the auspices of the Institute for Government Studies.50
Since then, other scholarly and legal studies have reviewed various aspects of complaint-handling
offices at the federal level. These include a proposal for a federal ombudsman (1972); the ways
and means by which certain federal agencies handled citizen complaints, based on survey
responses from 64 separate units (1974); improved complaint-handling procedures in the Federal
Bureau of Investigation (1979); and a comparison of ombudsmen-like offices in the United States
with similar ones in other countries (1985).51
Later accounts have also considered the ombudsman phenomenon in the United States. One
journal article reported that the United States lagged behind European democracies in the creation
of ombudsmen and showed no signs of catching up.52 U.S. ombudsmen also differed among
agencies; and a number of agencies that dealt with the public extensively did not have
institutionalized complaint-handling offices.53 Still other examinations focused on specific types
of complaint-handling procedures and practices (e.g., those associated with the Immigration and
Naturalization Service—now the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services) or on a specific
office (e.g., a proposal to create a public counsel in the National Labor Relations Board).54
Several professional societies—including the American Bar Association (ABA), the United States
Ombudsman Association, the Coalition of Federal Ombudsmen (CFO), and the International
Ombudsman Association (IOA)—offer ombudsman job listings, as well as training seminars for
investigation techniques. Additionally, the ABA and the United States Ombudsman Association
recommend standards to be adopted when instituting ombudsmen or modifying already existing
ombudsman offices.55 Moreover, the ABA’s website offers a definition of ombudsman and a
typology for its various iterations, separating them into four distinct categories: classical,
advocate, organizational, and executive.56 According to the ABA, an ombudsman protects “the
legitimate interests and rights of individuals with respect to each other; individual rights against
the excesses of public and private bureaucracies; and those who are affected by and those who
work within these organizations.”57 Only some of the more specific ombudsman categories apply

50 Stanley V. Anderson, Ombudsman Papers: American Experience and Proposals (Berkeley: Institute for Government
Studies, University of California at Berkeley, 1969).
51 Rogers C. Cramton, “A Federal Ombudsman,” Duke Law Journal, vol. 1972, Apr. 1972, pp. 1-14; Victor G.
Rosenblum, “Handling Citizen Initiated Complaints: An Introductory Study of Federal Agency Procedures and
Practices,” Administrative Law Review, vol 26, winter 1974, pp. 1-48; John T. Eliff, The Reform of FBI Intelligence
Operations
(Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1979), p. 179-188; and Donald C. Rowat, The Ombudsman
Plan
(New York: University Press of America, 1985).
52 Linda Gaglio, “Ombudsman,” Government Executive, vol. 23, Mar. 1991, pp. 36-39.
53 Ibid.
54 See, for example, Charles J. Morris, “Ombudspersons and the Limits of the General Counsel’s Authority Under the
National Labor Relations Act,” Labor Law Journal, vol. 47, June 1996, pp. 347-355; and Bill Ong Hing, “Border
Patrol Abuses: Evaluating Complaint Procedures Available to Victims,” Georgetown Immigration Law Journal, vol. 9,
fall 1995, pp. 757-799.
55 United States Ombudsman Association, “Governmental Ombudsman Standards,” Oct. 14 2003, available at
http://usoa.non-profitsites.biz/documents/PDF/References/USOA_STANDARDS.pdf. These standards, created in July
2000, expand on the ABA’s 1969 resolution defining the essential characteristics of ombudsmen. The Coalition of
Federal Ombudsmen is currently creating a detailed update of this document, using suggestions from ombudsmen
working in a variety of federal agencies. The updated document is expected to be published on the organization’s
website in late 2008.
56 American Bar Association, “Section of Administrative Law and Regulatory News Ombudsman Committee,”
available at http://www.abanet.org/adminlaw/ombuds/classicalombudsmen.html.
57 American Bar Association, Section of Administrative Law and Regulatory Practice, Ombuds, available at
http://www.abanet.org/dch/committee.cfm?com=AL322500.
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directly to U.S. federal ombudsman offices, while others exist in the United States only in a
modified form.
The Coalition of Federal Ombudsmen has stressed that ombudsmen must be “confidential [in
receiving and responding to complaints], neutral and independent.”58 The CFO also advocates a
single, government-wide pay scale for all federal ombudsman. In addition, the coalition seeks a
statute mandating that all federal ombudsmen—internal or external—constitute a separate,
autonomous office, and that they report directly to their agency heads.59
Differences Among Offices
Although most earlier studies are dated or limited to certain entities, these efforts reveal a wide
variety of complaint-handling mechanisms at the federal level. Differences in the current
collection of offices and positions that respond to complaints, grievances, concerns, and questions
from the public arise along a number of distinct dimensions: their powers and duties,
jurisdictions, locations, controls, neutrality, resources, and use of electronic and traditional
communications. Variations among the offices are reflected in their titles: Federal Student Aid
Ombudsman; Medicare Beneficiary Ombudsman; Taxpayer Advocate; Ombudsman at the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation; Federal Recovery Coordinators and Transition Patient Advocates
for wounded military personnel; Aviation Noise Ombudsman; Environmental Protection Agency
Public Liaison; Superfund Ombudsman; Freedom of Information Act Office of Government
Information Services and Public Liaisons; Construction Metrication Ombudsman; and Privacy
and Civil Liberties Officer or, alternatively, Civil Liberties and Civil Rights Officer.60
Reasons for Differences
The variations among the complaint-handling offices have emerged for a number of reasons.
These include the piecemeal fashion in which the offices were created; the unique set of
circumstances associated with each establishment; and different establishing mechanisms (e.g.,
legislation or administrative directive, issued by the agency head at his or her own volition or in
response to a presidential directive). Additional reasons for differences are the varied rationales
accompanying each construct. These range from protecting individual rights and liberties, to
safeguarding the health and welfare of the public, to assisting in determining an individual’s tax
obligations to the government. The rationales also extend to aiding selective clientele, such as
small businesses in obtaining government contracts and private firms in converting to the metric
system to meet federal construction specifications.

58 Coalition of Federal Ombudsmen, “Charter of the Coalition of Federal Ombudsmen,” available at
http://www.federalombuds.ed.gov/.
59 Discussed at CFO meeting, Jan. 9, 2007, at the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives national
headquarters in Washington, DC.
60 Federal agencies have been directed to establish “advocates for competition” in procurement contracting. These
positions are to be “responsible for challenging barriers to and promoting full and open competition in the procurement
of property and services by the executive agency.” (41 U.S.C. § 418(a) and (b).) Such advocates, however, do not
perform the basic ombudsman-like activities, such as responding to individual complaints and concerns. Instead, they
play a broad advisory role in the agency, reviewing relevant practices, procedures, and regulations and recommending
changes to the senior procurement executive, if these are seen as needed.
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In addition to these reasons are different expectations for each office, ranging from simply
receiving and passing on complaints to relevant units within an agency, to investigating such
complaints independently, to reaching out to the public proactively. Other explanations for the
variations are the absence of a philosophical consensus underlying the classic ombudsman
concept as applied to the United States; opposition to the creation of some ombudsman-like
offices; and conflict over certain powers, authorities, and responsibilities. These conditions have,
on occasion, resulted in initial compromises or later changes in the offices’ structure, location,
independence, and resources.
Consequently, existing federal complaint-handling offices vary with regard to their basic
characteristics—including powers and duties, jurisdiction, location, controls, neutrality, resources,
and communications. These differences, in turn, affect independence, autonomy, and capacity.
Powers and Duties
The complaint-handling office could be empowered only to receive complaints and pass them on
to the organization in the agency responsible for the program or operation. By comparison, the
office could be authorized to follow up on grievances, making recommendations for resolving a
problem, or determining whether the agency’s response is satisfactory. Still other ombudsman-
like entities, beyond being passive recipients of complaints, might adopt a proactive approach.
They could, for instance, be authorized to conduct surveys among persons or groups who receive
a government service or who are affected by an agency action, in order to identify a perceived
problem and determine how widespread and serious it is. The Environmental Protection Agency
Public Liaison can conduct independent investigations into cases that prompt concerns of
improper agency action. The office does not have legal force, but it publishes its findings,
offering the public a more transparent view of the EPA.
Separately, a complaint-handling office could be authorized—or required—to perform additional
duties to educate the public and keep the agency head and Congress informed. These could
include notifying the agency head (not just the bureau or program director) immediately about
serious or widespread concerns; issuing periodic reports summarizing the office’s findings,
actions, and agency responses to the agency head, Congress, and the public; and testifying before
congressional committees about the office’s findings, recommendations (if any), and subsequent
actions.
Jurisdictions
The jurisdictions of complaint-handling offices also differ, depending upon the range of agencies
and programs covered. An office’s jurisdiction could be limited to a particular program
administered by a single bureau within an agency or expanded to all programs administered by
the entire agency. The jurisdiction could also encompass a set of related programs or operations
that are carried out by several federal agencies.
The complaint-handling offices’ jurisdictions could differ on other grounds, including whether
they extend into the private sector. A jurisdiction could be confined to the agency, per se, thus
dealing only with complaints and concerns about the conduct of its employees and its
administration of programs; or it could be extended, where appropriate, to private sector
organizations or firms that the agency is regulating.
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Locations
The specific locations of complaint-handling offices could also vary. Offices could be placed
within agencies, as most are now, or exist independently of the agencies where they have
jurisdiction—like the Citizenship and Immigration Services Ombudsman. Some ombudsman-like
offices operate out of a centralized federal government location, like the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) ombudsman, while others have decentralized, regional offices, like
the Environmental Protection Agency’s Superfund Ombudsmen.
A single ombudsman-like office could be granted government-wide jurisdiction and located in the
Executive Office of the President. Although there is no such comprehensive ombudsman in the
federal government, a single office could serve as a central clearinghouse for complaints and
grievances affecting all federal agencies. Additionally, such a complaint-handling office—if it
were to exist under public law—could be given greater control over its resources and more
overall autonomy than the typical agency-specific offices in the federal government. An
alternative arrangement would be to establish several complaint-handling offices, each with
jurisdiction over a number of related agencies. Under this plan, each office would operate
independently of the agencies about which it receives complaints.
Controls
Different types of controls might be applied to a complaint-handling office and its head.
Appointment and removal powers over the head of the office could vary. He or she could be
appointed and be removed in one of three ways, which would affect the office’s independence. He
or she could be (1) appointed by, and removed by, the head of the agency—the usual way
currently; (2) appointed by, and removed by, the President alone; or (3) appointed by the
President with the advice and consent of the Senate, and removed by the President. Other controls
over the office could also be established to determine who in agency management would
supervise the office, to whom its head would report, and who would determine its resources.
Neutrality
Some ombudsman offices are created as neutral third parties that can facilitate dispute resolution.
Others, by contrast, are designed as advocates for the complainant. The ABA, for example, called
for a distinct category of “advocate ombudsmen,” which includes offices like the National
Taxpayer Advocate within the Internal Revenue Service, and Veterans Affairs Patient
Advocates.61 Other offices, like the Federal Student Aid Ombudsman, are required to perform as
neutral “fact-finders” when looking into a complaint.
In May 2006, the CFO updated the ABA’s Standards for the Establishment and Operations of the
Ombuds Offices.62 Both the CFO and ABA require an ombudsman to perform as a neutral actor
who “conducts inquiries and investigations in an impartial manner, free from initial bias and

61 For more information on advocate ombudsmen, see the American Bar Association, “About Advocate Ombudsman,”
available at http://www.abanet.org/adminlaw/ombuds/advocateombudsmen.html.
62 The American Bar Association, Standards for the Establishment and Operations of the Ombuds Offices, available at
http://www.abanet.org/adminlaw/ombuds/115.pdf.
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conflicts of interest.”63 Impartiality, however, does not prohibit the ombudsman from advocating
“within the entity for change where the process demonstrates a need for it.”64
Resources
Each office’s budget, staff, and other resources—and control over them—could also differ,
depending upon its statutory authority, range of duties and responsibilities, degree of
independence, and internal office priorities. For instance, a complaint-handling office might
invest heavily in computer technology—for example, setting up its own website and inputting
information from paper correspondence into its own computerized data base—while other offices
might maintain a more traditional approach, such as receiving and responding to grievances and
questions primarily by mail, facsimile, and phone.
The office’s budget and resources could be controlled independently by agency administration, be
derived from the administrative and operating expenses of the agency to which it is attached, or
be given a line item in the agency’s appropriation act.
Hiring authority and practices could also differ—as could control of other resources, such as
office space, supplies, communications equipment, training programs, and travel funds. In this
regard, the head of the complaint-handling office might possess specific authority that would
enable him or her to control all such resources. By contrast, the officer might not be granted such
authority; in this case, the head would have to rely, for instance, on existing agency personnel
who would rotate in and out of the office and on receiving office space, supplies, and equipment
at the discretion of agency management.
Electronic and Traditional Communications
Though many government agencies do not have a formal or institutionalized public complaint-
handling office, all have established ways, new or old, for the general public to contact agencies.
These include the Internet, as well as telephone lines and the traditional mail system.
Development of E-government
The adoption and development of electronic government (e-gov)65 have been both a cause and
effect of the E-Government Act of 2002.66 It was intended to “promote the use of the Internet and
other information technologies to provide increased opportunities for citizen participation in

63 Coalition of Federal Ombudsmen, Standards for the Establishment and Operation of Ombuds Offices, revised Feb.
2004, p. 3. This document is an update of the ABA’s Aug. 2001 document of the same title.
64 Ibid., p. 4.
65 A working definition of electronic government (e-gov) is “the use of information technology to integrate government
information and services for citizen, business, government, and other institutional uses.” CRS Report RL34104, State
E-Government Strategies: Identifying Best Practices and Applications
, by Jeffrey W. Seifert and Glenn J. McLoughlin.
For an overview of e-government in the United States and abroad, see Peter Hernon, Rowena Cullen, and Harold C.
Relyea, eds., Comparative Perspectives on E-government: Serving Today and Building for Tomorrow (Lanham, MD:
Scarecrow Press, Inc., 2006). This volume examines such issues as access and security, citizen responses and
perspectives, government portals and websites, broadband Internet access and the digital divide, and e-government’s
accomplishments and potentialities.
66 P.L. 107-347; 116 Stat. 2890-2971.
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Government ..., to provide citizen-centric Government information and services ..., [and] to
promote access to high quality Government information and services across multiple channels.”67
E-gov, in general, and the E-Government Act, in particular, have added new modes of
communication between government and citizens, and have increased the accessibility, speed, and
efficiency of receiving and responding to public inquiries.68
Despite these advances, some recent studies have discovered weaknesses and limitations in
several aspects of e-gov: what it currently does (e.g., primarily providing information); how well
it does it (declining levels of satisfaction); and what it has been unable to do satisfactorily
(particularly, progressing into the “transactions stage,” referring to exchanges among entities in
the same agency, among agencies at the same level of government, among governments at
different levels, and among government agencies, private sector stakeholders, and the general
public).69
Despite such growing pains, e-gov and the Internet have become prominent features of the
government-citizen interaction, including within the ombudsman and complaint-handling
function. Even with this advance, however, government-citizen communications continue through
traditional forms as well.

67 116 Stat. 2901. Some observers have seen a much different reason behind the adoption of e-gov. Rather than to
increase efficiency and accessibility, e-gov is a way to “reduce the high costs associated with face-to-face service
provision [and] ... compensate for the loss of human workers and other resources,” which were the result of “deep
budget cuts” in the early and mid-1990s. H. Brinton Milward and Louise Ogilvie Snyder, “Electronic Government:
Linking Citizens to Public Organizations Through Technology,” Journal of Public Administration Research and
Theory
, vol. 6, Apr. 1996, p. 264.
68 One of the goals of the 2002 E-Government Act (116 Stat. 2916-2917) was to improve the accessibility and usability
of government information. The Bush Administration’s views on its e-gov initiatives are spelled out in U.S. Office of
Management and Budget, Expanding E-Government: Improved Service Delivery for the American People Using
Information Technology
, Dec. 2005; and Report to the Congress on the Benefits of E-Government Initiatives (3rd
annual), Feb. 2008; both available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/egov. An earlier exploration by Congress
appeared in U.S. Congress, House Committee on Government Reform, Subcommittee on Technology, Information
Policy, Intergovernmental Relations, and the Census, Electronic Government: A Progress Report on the Successes and
Challenges of Government-wide Information Technology Solutions,
hearings, 108th Cong., 2nd sess., Mar. 24, 2004
(Washington: GPO, 2004).
69 Notwithstanding the apparent increased availability and use of e-gov, an independent survey of government websites
in 2008 found that public satisfaction with e-government has continued to wane since mid-2007, dropping to its lowest
level since 2005. According to the study’s coordinator, the decrease might be the result of rising public expectations
coupled with uncertainty about the forthcoming election and accompanying government transition less than a year
away, rather than a decline of e-gov’s quality, utility, and accessibility. American Consumer Satisfaction Index: E-
Government Satisfaction Index
, Commentary and Analysis by Larry Freed, President and CEO, ForeSee Results, Mar.
18, 2008, available at http://www.ForeSeeResults.com, pp. 2-4. See also, “Citizen Satisfaction with E-Government
Falls to Lowest in Three Years,” PA Times, vol. 31, Apr. 2008, pp. 1-2. For further interpretations about this and other
aspects of e-gov, see a symposium on “New Perspectives on E-Government”; it discusses a number of weaknesses,
limitations, and challenges facing e-gov in its second decade: David Coursey and Donald F. Norris, “Models of E-
Government: Are They Correct?”; Yu-Che Chen and Kurt Thurmaier, “Advancing E-Government: Financing
Challenges and Opportunities”; Caroline J. Tolbert, et al., “Institutions, Policy Innovation, and E-Government in the
American States”; and Mark D. Robins, et al., “Citizens and Resource Allocation: Improving Decision Making with
Interactive Web-Based Citizen Participation,” Public Administration Review, May/June 2008, pp. 523-575.
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Websites and the Internet
The 2002 E-Government Act called upon federal agencies to establish domain directories for their
websites.70 Many of these are for general access to information sources, not necessarily for
complaint handling specifically. Nonetheless, several different websites—major and minor—
demonstrate a range of offerings.
In July 2003, the General Services Administration (GSA) unveiled USA Services, which
promised to answer all citizen inquiries—whether submitted by e-mail, conventional mail,
telephone, or in-person—within two days. The initiative was described as a “comprehensive
‘customer service department’” for citizens.71 USAServices.gov serves as the initiative’s web
portal and offers citizens and agencies assistance in communication and information access.
Additionally, the federal government offers an Internet gateway to all of its agencies and services:
USA.gov, formerly known as both WebGov and FirstGov. The website lists all government
agencies, and offers links to each one’s website, along with links to state, local, and tribal
government websites. Citizens, visitors, employees, and businesses are offered their own entry
portals into the website through a web page designed to offer information and services that would
be most pertinent to that user. The site also includes a link to the Federal Citizen Information
Center,72 which offers a list of agencies the public can use to register complaints against private
businesses.
Another federal site—Data.gov—was started by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in
2009. As an information resource, Data.gov is intended “to increase public access to high value,
machine readable datasets generated by the Executive Branch of the Federal Government.”73
Although most agencies and departments have websites that outline their mission and duties,
there remains a general dearth of formal agency-wide ombudsman-like offices, even at those that
serve a substantial number of people. Instead, agencies have adopted other similar offices for
more specialized or select clientele. The Social Security Administration (SSA), for example, has a
toll-free telephone number (1-800-772-1213 or TTY 1-800-325-0778) for complaints and an
online complaint form.74 The SSA also has a website that informs members of the public of
various administrative services that are available online, on the phone, or at their offices.75
Online, for example, clients can calculate their benefits or apply for help with Medicare
prescription drug costs. The website also includes maps and directions to local offices. If clients
are dissatisfied with the response to their complaints—whether made over the phone or at the
local SSA office—they may appeal to a higher level of the SSA.76

70 P.L. 107-347; 116 Stat. 2916-2917.
71 U.S. General Services Administration, “GSA Launches USA Services: New Initiative Rapidly Connects Citizens
with the Federal Government Service; Answers Citizens’ Web, E-mail and Telephone Questions in Two Days or Less,”
at http://www.gsa.gov/Portal/gsa/ep/contentView.do?contentType=GSA_BASIC&contentId=8953&noc=T.
72 Federal Citizen Information Center, “Filing a Complaint,” available at http://www.pueblo.gsa.gov/
complaintresources.htm.
73 OMB, Data.gov, available at http://www.data.gov. Data Policy is spelled out at http://www.data.gov/datapolicy.
74 Social Security Online, “Comments and Feedback,” available at http://www.ssa.gov/feedback/complaints.htm.
75 U.S. Social Security Administration, “Do you need an appointment?” Social Security Administration, available at
http://www.socialsecurity.gov/appointment.htm.
76 U.S. Social Security Administration, Social Security Online - Social Security Organizational Structure and
Functional Information
, available at http://www.ssa.gov/org/orgoig.htm.
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The Department of Transportation hosts an Aviation Consumer Protection Division (ACPD) that
serves as a last resort for airline consumers who are dissatisfied with service and attempts by a
company to remedy the problem.77 The ACPD clearly states that the individual airlines are better
suited to resolving disputes with consumers, but the division offers consumers the opportunity to
have their complaints published in the division’s monthly Report of Consumer Complaints, as
well as to register the complaints in the federal database. Although this service handles grievances
about private sector operations, for the most part, it also responds to consumer complaints that
involve an aviation regulatory issue. Complaints about airline safety are channeled to the Federal
Aviation Administration’s hotline,78 while transportation security issues are handled in-house or
routed to the Transportation Security Administration in the Department of Homeland Security.79
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has four different, topically organized online
complaint forms available for consumers.80 The complaint topics are general complaints,
obscenity and indecency, slamming,81 and telemarketing. Consumers who do not have online
access may send complaints and supporting documentation via mail.82
Similarly, other “high-impact” federal agencies provide e-mail links or online forms for citizens
or customers to use when lodging their complaints.83 The U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission’s website, for example, includes a toll-free customer hotline and online complaint
forms for the general public, doctors, fire investigators, police, or others to use to report an injury
or death caused by a product.84 Although such complaints are usually generated by private sector
products, the submissions could also involve the Commission’s regulatory and enforcement
responsibilities.
Another site for e-gov communications is http://www.business.gov/. Launched in 2004 as the
official business link to the U.S. government, it is managed by the Small Business Administration
in partnership with 21 other federal agencies.85

77 Complaints about general airline service, including late departures or being bumped from a flight, can be registered
via telephone (202-366-2220; TTY 202-366-0511); online at http://airconsumer.ost.dot.gov/escomplaint/es.cfm; or by
mail (Aviation Consumer Protection Division, C-75, U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Ave., S.E.,
Washington, DC 20590).
78 Toll-free line: 1-800-TELL-FAA.
79 For more information, including a mailing address and the types of security issues the FAA oversees, see
http://www.faa.gov/passengers/travel_problems/consumer_hotline/. TSA accepts complaints via a toll-free hotline
(1-866-289-9673) or e-mail TSA-ContactCenter@dhs.gov.
80 The complaint-filing page is available at http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/complaints.html.
81 According to the FCC, “slamming” is “the illegal practice of changing a consumer’s telephone service ... without
permission.” See http://www.fcc.gov/slamming/.
82 The e-mail addresses for the FCC follow: (1) its websites, fccinfo@fcc.gov and slamming@fcc.gov for slamming
complaints; (2) its facsimile phone numbers, 1-866-418-0232 and 202-418-0035 for slamming complaints; and (3)
telephone, 1-888-CALL-FCC and 1-888-TELL-FCC for telephone typewriter (TTY). A mediation specialist assists
with complainants.
83 According to a 2000 GAO letter, 32 “high-impact” organizations handle about 90% of the federal government’s
contact with the public. U.S. General Accounting Office, Internet: Federal Web-based Complaint Handling, GAO
letter AIMD-00-238R, July 7, 2000, pp. 1-2.
84 Hotline at 800-638-2772 and TTY 800-638-8270; forms available at http://www.cpsc.gov/talk.html.
85 Rob Kleinsteuber, “Business.gov Unveils New Search Features,” The Small Business Advocate, Feb. 2008, p. 3.
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Benefits and Concerns
Use of the Internet for government-citizen communications, especially for complaint handling,
offers benefits, while at the same time, raising concerns.
Benefits
The potential of the Internet for making complaint handling more efficient and effective is
significant. Ideally, government web portals could provide “one stop” for inputting and accessing
complaint-related information for an entire agency—or at least a particular office or program.
This, in turn, could lead to increased sharing of information and data within and among federal
agencies, between the federal government and state and local governments, and between the
federal government and private sector organizations and the general public. This development
might also encourage standardization in receiving and responding to complaints, as well as other
operational and organizational characteristics of ombudsman-like offices, including resources and
independence.
Concerns
Nonetheless, concerns exist with regard to the inclusiveness, accessibility, and availability of
Internet-based information and the government’s responsiveness to complaints. Reflective of this
is the “digital divide,” which sees the population separated into “haves and have-nots” in terms of
Internet access and use (discussed above). This divide separates those with requisite computer
skills, resources, and Internet access from those without these. The latter group lacks the
capability to issue complaints and comments through this medium and to discover what
information is held in Internet-based data banks.
Another concern about reliance on the Internet for complaint handling is that it might be
manipulated. For instance, an organized interest group might encourage its membership to flood a
website with complaints—substantiated or not, witnessed first-hand or not—about a particular
agency or program. Although this same problem could arise by way of other means of
communications (mail or telephone, for example), these traditional avenues would be more
cumbersome, more difficult, and possibly more costly to use. In effect, it would be easier to
mount massive attacks through the Internet than through more traditional communications media.
Use of the Internet as a source for collecting public complaints also prompts worries about
maintaining the anonymity of the complainant. These worries might be mitigated, to a degree,
through the rise in toll-free hotlines and centralized websites like USA.gov, which could allow for
anonymous reporting and protecting a complainant’s identity.
Concluding Observations
Although there is no authoritative, comprehensive, detailed survey of current federal complaint-
handling offices, earlier studies (even if dated and limited), along with the coverage here, provide
useful information with which to describe, examine, and compare them. One observation, for
instance, is that such offices appear to be growing in number and prominence as well as range of
activities, duties, and services.
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As noted throughout this report, federal complaint-handling offices exhibit different forms,
capacities, and designations. The variations range from the individual office’s powers, resources,
duties, and functions, to its jurisdiction, location, controls, neutrality, and adoption of new
technologies—notably the Internet. The activities, services, and duties of ombudsman-like
entities, for instance, cross a wide spectrum, from the nearly passive to the proactive. The range
extends from simply receiving a complaint and passing it on to appropriate offices; to following
up on it and notifying the complainant of the results; to helping resolve disputes between the
agency and complainant. Some offices report findings to agency officials, Congress, and/or the
public, while others do not. Some are proactive—for instance, conducting outreach efforts to the
public or select groups—while others are not. A few even embark on preemptive efforts—that is,
they intervene on behalf of clientele from the beginning to the end of a service, thereby reducing,
if not preventing, problems from arising in the first place—while most offices do not.
The variations among the offices reflect their piecemeal establishment—at different times, for
different reasons, and for different purposes, duties, and functions. Some, for instance, are
designed to assist a particular clientele who conduct business with an agency or who are the
primary recipients of its services. Other entities may be intended to meet the needs of the public
at large or broad sectors of it. Variations also arise over time and across policy areas, as the needs
and demands of government and society change. Recent constructs demonstrate this. The
Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs Federal Recovery Coordinators for wounded
military veterans were prompted by instances of inadequate medical care. And the creation of a
Privacy Officer and an Officer for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties in the Homeland Security
Department was due to concerns about the possible intrusiveness and potential impact of the
government’s new anti-terrorism powers.
Efforts to establish a government-wide ombudsman, create complaint-handling offices throughout
the executive branch, and/or standardize such entities have existed since the mid-1960s. None of
these one-size-fits-all initiatives, however, has been enacted into law. Instead, the legislative and
administrative solutions—to meet the challenge of responding to a large and growing number of
inquiries, grievances, and concerns from the public—have arisen on an ad hoc basis, focusing on
particular agencies and specific problem areas.86 Even in the few cases where a single statute has
called for similar offices in a number of agencies—such as Freedom Of Information Act (FOIA)
pubic liaisons, construction metrication ombudsmen, and banking agency ombudsmen—these
entities have been highly specialized, responding to a select clientele in a distinct policy or
subject area.
As a consequence of their varied attributes and development, ombudsman-like entities vary in
their roles, capabilities, and independence. These constructs thus reflect certain fundamental
characteristics of American national government: dispersed and decentralized power, the absence
of uniformity and standardization among similar institutions, and competition between the
executive and legislature for control over government organizations and operations.

86 In addition to the examples covered in this report, more than 100 bills in the 110th Congress have incorporated
provisions for an “ombudsman” or “ombudsmen.” The list is available at http://www.congress.gov/cgi-lis/query.
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Appendix. Examples of Ombudsman-like Entities
American National Red Cross
Although it is not a federal government agency, the American National Red Cross (ANRC) is an
organization chartered by public law.87 Its charter established the basic purposes of the
organization, one of which is serving as a disaster relief organization for the United States.
Congress also mandated, in the Governance Modernization Act of 2007,88 an ANRC
Ombudsman, who began operating in October 2007. Besides the Ombudsman, the office
presently consists of three positions: two analysts, who compile annual reports to Congress and
the ANRC Board of Governors, and an ombudsman service representative, who receives
incoming telephone complaints.89
While the ombudsman position was created by Congress, the duties of the office have been
delineated by the organization’s Board of Governors. The post is to serve as a neutral party that
• provides a voluntary, confidential, and informal process to facilitate fair and
equitable resolutions to problems brought before it; and
• explores a range of alternatives or options to resolve the problems.90
• The position serves as both an internal and external ombudsman, fielding
complaints from employees, blood donors, volunteers, financial donors, disaster
victims, and other Red Cross clients.91
Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Small
Business Ombudsman

In the Department of Commerce, the Bureau of the Census houses an Office of the Small
Business Ombudsman. It is the “primary advocate between the small business community and the
Census Bureau and ... provide[s] services and opportunities for the small business community in

87 A charter is a document that legally establishes a corporation and its most fundamental characteristics, such as its
legal purpose, basic governance structure, and means of public accountability. The ANRC’s charter is codified at 36
U.S.C. § 300101. Other duties and charges related to the federal government are at 10 U.S.C. § 2602; 22 U.S.C. § 2601
note; and 42 U.S.C. § 5152 and 5153. These have been modified recently with regard to directing and managing mass
care following disasters and might still require further modification, according to two U.S. Government Accountability
Office (GAO) reports: National Disaster Response, GAO Report GAO-08-369 (Washington: GAO, 2008); and
Voluntary Organizations: FEMA Should Fully Assess Organizations’ Mass Care Capabilities and Update the Red
Cross Role in Catastrophic Events
, GAO Report GAO-08-823 (Washington: GAO, 2008). For additional information
on the unusual establishment of the ANRC, as an independent organization with statutory responsibilities to the
government, see CRS Report RL33314, The Congressional Charter of the American National Red Cross: Overview,
History, and Analysis
, by Kevin R. Kosar, available from the author upon request.
88 P.L. 110-26; 121 Stat. 110.
89 Information provided by telephone by Corporate Ombudsman Beverly Ortega Babers, Jan. 2, 2008.
90 American Red Cross, “The American Red Cross Code of Business and Ethics Conduct,” available at
http://www.redcross.org/static/file_cont5875_lang0_2860.pdf.
91 American Red Cross, “Ombudsman to Strengthen ‘Sacred Trust’ with Public,” press release, Oct. 27, 2007, available
at http://www.abanet.org/adminlaw/ombuds/115.pdf.
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an effort to simplify and reduce the reporting burden on requested forms.”92 As such, the
Ombudsman
• provides technical assistance through a small business toll free number and a
small business website;
• provides Internet assistance for small businesses in completing report forms; and
• expands the use of electronic reporting, data sharing, and the use of
administrative records.
Department of Defense
The Department of Defense (DOD) has a number of different ombudsman-like offices. Most of
these, however, are “internal; “that is, the offices and positions, such as the Federal Recovery
Coordinators, provide services to military and civilian personnel within the department.
Nonetheless, DOD also has several different types of external ombudsman-like offices, as the
following examples illustrate:
• Base Transition Coordinators (BTCs) attached to individual military bases
undergoing realignments and closings (BRAC), whose involvement ends with the
completion of the base closure and reuse;
• Defense Procurement and Acquisition Policy (DPAP) Ombudsman, whose
jurisdiction covers both domestic and foreign contractors;
• Ombudsman of the Employer Support of the National Guard and Reserve
(ESGR), a permanent office whose participation on behalf of eligible service
personnel might be a one-time event or recurrent; and
• select ombudsmen operating at Navy medical centers, whose voluntary
participation on behalf of family members of patients at individual command
centers might be short-term and sporadic or long-term and continuous.
Base Transition Coordinators for Military Base Reuse
Introducing its community guide to military base reuse, the Department of Defense recognizes
that it “has been closing military bases and assisting Defense-impacted communities through its
Defense Economic Adjustment Program for more than 35 years.”93 The program has increased in
prominence most recently, because of the Base Realignment and Closing (BRAC) initiative
affecting a large number of military bases.94 Among the many local, state, and federal entities
involved in each case is a DOD Base Transition Coordinator (BTC), described as “the local, on-
site, Federal point of contact who works as an ombudsman for the community.”95 As such, the

92 U.S. Census Bureau, Office of the Small Business Ombudsman, Mission, available at http://www.census.gov/eos/
www/osbonew/mission.html.
93 U.S. Department of Defense, Office of Economic Adjustment, Community Guide to Base Reuse (Washington: DOD,
2007), p. 1.
94 For background, see CRS Report RS22147, Military Base Closures: Socioeconomic Impacts, by Tadlock Cowan and
Oscar R. Gonzales; and CRS Report RL34709, Economic Development Assistance for Communities Affected by
Employment Changes Due to Military Base Closures (BRAC)
, by Oscar R. Gonzales.
95 DOD, Community Guide, p. 5; see also pp. A-1 and A-2.
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BTC “is a key contact, problem solver and information source for the local community, especially
in relation to environmental cleanup and property disposal.”96
Defense Procurement and Acquisition Policy Ombudsman
The role of the DPAP Ombudsman is to assist companies, both domestic and foreign, interested in
performing contracts to satisfy DOD requirements, following the instructions of the DPAP
Contract Policy and International Contracting Directorate.97 In the case of a foreign company, it
may contact the Ombudsman if the company “has difficulty fully understanding contracting rules
and regulations, or if it thinks it was unfairly excluded from defense procurement.... ”98 The
DPAP Ombudsman also provides contact information for the benefit of U.S. companies in doing
business with various foreign governments.
Employer Support of the National Guard and Reserve Ombudsman
The Employer Support of the National Guard and Reserve (ESGR) Ombudsman is designed to
ensure smooth transitions for soldiers returning from their military duty by ensuring that they
return to their civilian jobs—or equivalent positions—without complication. This assignment
results in the ESGR being a combination of an internal ombudsman (for active duty military
personnel) as well as an external ombudsman (for discharged personnel reentering the private
sector).
President Richard M. Nixon established the ESGR in 1971 as a “conduit between the DOD and
the nation’s employers when the United States changed to an all-volunteer force,” by ensuring
that service members would have their prior civilian jobs or equivalent jobs when they returned to
their homes.99 In 1994, Congress passed the Uniformed Service Employment and Reemployment
Rights Act (USERRA). Its purposes are
(1) to encourage noncareer service in the uniformed services by eliminating or minimizing
the disadvantages to civilian careers and employment which can result from such service; (2)
to minimize the disruption to the lives of persons performing service in the uniformed
services as well as to their employers, their fellow employees, and their communities, by
providing for the prompt reemployment of such persons upon their completion of such
service, and (3) to prohibit discrimination against persons because of their service in the
uniformed services.100
The ESGR is currently tasked to
• recognize outstanding support from employers of service members;
• increase awareness of the law; and

96 Ibid., p. 5.
97 DPAP, “Contract Policy and International Contracting,” available at http://www.acq.osd.mil/dpap/cpic/indx/html.
98 Ibid.
99 Information provided via e-mail by Commander Robert Lyon, Chief of Ombudsman Services.
100 38 U.S.C. § 4301. The full enactment (38 U.S.C. § 4301-4333) spells out the requirements, including reemployment
rights, health plans, pension benefit plans, reports, and outreach matters.
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• resolve employment conflicts through informal mediation.101
More than 900 ombudsmen are located within 56 ESGR “field committees” that help resolve
disputes between employers and employees. Complaints against an employer can be filed
online.102 If the ombudsman is not making progress toward the resolution of a dispute within
seven days, the case is referred to the Department of Labor.103 The ombudsmen, however, report
their findings and suggestions to the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Reserve
Affairs. A service member seeking to nominate his or her employer for outstanding service can
fill out an online nomination form at the ESGR website.104
NMCP Navy Family Ombudsman
The Navy Family Ombudsman, operating out of the Naval Medical Center Portsmouth (NMCP),
assists families of military personnel needing medical services there.105 The Ombudsman duties
include providing information, referrals, and contacts with regard to complaints, concerns, and
questions. The Ombudsman, “an officially appointed volunteer,” serves as: the primary
communications link between families and the command; the channel of official information
from the command; and a link to related services and facilities, including legal assistance,
military medical facilities, professional counseling, and various relief societies.106 Through
outreach programs and other ways, the Ombudsman also acts “as an advocate for the command’s
families.”107
USNHGUAM Ombudsman
The Ombudsman attached to the U.S. Navy Hospital in Guam is, like the one at the NMCP, a
volunteer, trained to “offer support and guidance to command families and acts as an official
liaison between command and the command families.”108 As such, the Ombudsman serves as the
primary link between the command families and the command; serves as a communicator of
information between the two; communicates regularly with command families, via newsletters,
careline, phone tree, and e-mail; provides information and outreach to family members; interacts
and cooperates with relevant organizations, including the American Red Cross as well as
appropriate military legal and medical treatment entities; refers individuals in need of
professional assistance to appropriate resources (for counseling, for instance); and acts as an
advocate for command families.109

101 Information provided by e-mail by Commander Robert Lyon, Chief of Ombudsman Services, Jan. 17, 2008, contact
at USERRA@osd.mil.
102 Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve, “ESGR USERRA Complaint Request Form 100,” available at
http://www.esgr.org/forms.asp?p=complaintrequest.
103 Ibid. Cases that do not involve employee wages are given 14 days to progress toward mediated resolution.
104 Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve, “Mainpage,” available at http://www.esgr.net/.
105 U.S. Naval Medical Center Portsmouth, Ombudsman, The Role of the NMCP Command Ombudsman, available at
http://www-nmcp.med.navy.mil/ombudsman/role.asp.
106 Ibid.
107 Ibid.
108 U.S. Naval Hospital Guam, Ombudsman, “History of the Ombudsman Program” (OPNAV Instruction 1750.1),
available at http://www.usnhguam.med.navy.mil/us/ombudsman/default.htm.
109 Ibid.
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Department of Education Federal Student Aid Ombudsman
The Department of Education houses the Federal Student Aid (FSA) Ombudsman. Created in
1998 by amendments to the 1965 Act of Higher Education,110 the FSA Ombudsman’s office
received its first cases in late September 1999.111 Appointed by the FSA’s Chief Operating Officer
(COO), the FSA Ombudsman serves as a neutral fact-finder in disputes between students with
loans and the FSA. The officer serves at the discretion of the COO (there is no fixed term for the
position) and reports directly to the COO. The Ombudsman can recommend resolutions, but
cannot compel the FSA to overturn its previous decisions. The service is free, but operates only as
a last resort—provided the FSA has not already begun legal proceedings against a person
receiving the loan.
Though the Ombudsman cannot enforce his or her decisions, the position was created to
• resolve disputes from a neutral, independent viewpoint;
• informally conduct impartial fact-finding about complaints;
• recommend solutions (without the authority to reverse decisions);
• work to bring about changes that will help prevent future problems for other
student loan borrowers; and
• research problems and determine whether the complainants have been treated
fairly.112
If the Ombudsman determines that a complaint is justified, he or she is to help a student negotiate
with the agency or other parties involved in the dispute.113
Prior to requesting help from the FSA Ombudsman, a person seeking assistance is asked to
review an online checklist of other options for resolving the dispute. If the person then determines
himself or herself qualified for ombudsman assistance, he or she may send a letter to the office,
telephone, or fill out the online Ombudsman Assistance Request Form.114 The ombudsman office
does not assist the public in filling out loan forms, nor does it help find ways to pay off loans.
Department of Health and Human Services
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) houses a number of distinct complaint-
handling and client-assistance offices. Among them are the following.

110 P.L. 105-244; codified at 20 U.S.C. § 1018.
111 U.S. Department of Education, “FSA Ombudsman,” available at http://www.ombudsman.ed.gov/about/about.html.
112 U.S. Department of Education, “About the FSA Ombudsman,” available at http://www.ombudsman.ed.gov/about/
about.html.
113 Ibid.
114 U.S. Department of Education, “Contact the FSA Ombudsman,” available at http://www.ombudsman.ed.gov/about/
contactus.html.
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Food and Drug Administration Ombudsman
When Food and Drug Administration (FDA) employees were found to be inadequately
performing their duties in reviewing pre-market generic drug applications, the commissioner
issued a “managerial fiat” creating the FDA Office of the Ombudsman.115 The Ombudsman
provides several services, including the following:
• reviews marketing or investigational applications;
• provides information on import or export issues;
• offers explanations in response to citizen petitions or general inquiries; and
• ensures a fair hearing of claims of unfair or unequal treatment.116
• The office also serves as the FDA’s Product Jurisdiction Officer, who determines
the jurisdiction of a product headed for review if the jurisdiction is questionable.
The office, however, predominantly handles complaints about regulatory issues
or FDA policies.
Long-term Care Ombudsman
The Long-term Care Ombudsman (LTCO) began as a demonstration program in 1972, but was
mandated by statute in the Older Americans Act, which is currently administered by the
Administration on Aging (AOA).117 The LTCO office consists of more than 1,000 paid, and
nearly 14,000 volunteer, staffers, who are located in the 50 states and three additional locales—
Washington, DC, Guam, and Puerto Rico.118 Serving an estimated 280,000 people per year, the
ombudsman
• identifies, investigates, and resolves complaints made by, or on behalf of,
residents;
• provides information to residents about long-term care services;
• represents the interests of residents before governmental agencies and seek
administrative, legal, and other remedies to protect residents;
• analyzes, comments on, and recommends changes in laws and regulations
pertaining to the health, safety, welfare, and the rights of residents;
• educates and informs consumers and the general public regarding issues and
concerns related to long-term care, and facilitates public comment on laws,
regulations, policies, and actions;
• promotes the development of citizen organizations to participate in the program;

115 Lubbers, Report to the National Taxpayer Advocate, Independent Advocacy Agencies Within Agencies, pp. 16-17.
116 U.S. Food and Drug Administration, “When to Contact the Office of Ombudsman,” available at http://www.fda.gov/
oc/ombudsman/whencon.htm.
117 P.L. 102-375; 106 Stat. 1195. Though the original Older Americans Act became law in 1965, the 1992 amendments
created Title VII, which called for “Vulnerable Elder Rights Protection Activities.”
118 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration on Aging, “Elder Rights and Resources,” available
at http://www.aoa.gov/eldfam/Elder_Rights/LTC/LTC.asp.
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• provides technical support for the development of resident and family councils to
protect the well-being and rights of residents; and
• advocates for changes to improve residents’ quality of life and care.119
LTC ombudsmen are a blend of state and federal oversight. Though each state ombudsman office
operates differently, most house their Office of the State LTC Ombudsman within the individual
state’s unit on aging. The National Long Term Care Ombudsman Resource Center offers
“support, technical assistance and training to the State Long Term Care Ombudsman Programs
and their statewide networks of almost 600 regional (local) programs.”120 The ombudsmen tread a
line between acting as neutral fact-finders and as advocates for older Americans. Additionally, the
ombudsmen often deal with third party private entities—an apparent rarity for federal government
ombudsmen.
Medicare Beneficiary Ombudsman
Created by the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003,121 the
Medicare Beneficiary Ombudsman is intended to ensure that those eligible for Medicare have
reliable and current information about
• their Medicare benefits and whether they have the information needed to make
good health care decisions;
• their rights and protections under the Medicare Program; and
• the procedures for getting problems and disputes resolved.122
The Ombudsman is to aid Medicare recipients in filing appeals if they believe their insurance did
not pay proper amounts for their medical services. Recipients can also file complaints or ask for
help joining or leaving a given Medicare program. The job of the Ombudsman requires him or
her to take an overview of the Medicare system and ensure that the appeals process is operating
properly at all government levels.123 The officer reports to both the Medicare Administrator and
the Director of the Office of External Affairs, and is also required to submit an annual report to
Congress.
Specialized Jurisdictional Ombudsmen
The FDA also has four additional ombudsmen who serve as the points of contact for specific
public complaints connected to the subject of their jurisdiction. The specialized ombudsmen are
located at four centers:
• Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER);

119 Ibid.
120 U.S. Office of Management and Budget, “National Long Term Care Ombudsman Resource Center,” available at
http://www.ltcombudsman.org/ombpublic/49_151_940.CFM.
121 P.L. 108-173; 117 Stat. 2066.
122 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, How the Medicare Beneficiary Ombudsman Works for You,
available at http://www.medicare.gov/Publications/Pubs/pdf/11173.pdf.
123 Information provided by telephone by the Medicare Ombudsman, Daniel Schreiner, Dec. 21, 2007.
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• Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER);
• Center for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH); and
• Center for Veterinary Medicine (CVM) Ombudsman
If any of them cannot resolve or remedy a complaint, the issue is to be sent to the FDA Office of
Ombudsman.
Department of Homeland Security
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) houses a number of ombudsman-like offices. In
addition to several connected with immigration and transportation matters, three others are an
outgrowth of the authorities and responsibilities that the department received under legislation
dealing with anti-terrorism. The 2004 Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act (IRTPA),
importantly, gave additional duties to the Privacy Officer and Officer for Civil Rights and Civil
Liberties, as well as the inspector general, in the Department of Homeland Security.124 All three
entities originated in the Homeland Security Act of 2002, which established the department.125
Privacy Officer
The Privacy Officer’s “mission is to minimize the impact on the individual’s privacy, particularly
the individual’s personal information and dignity, while achieving the mission of the Department
of Homeland Security.”126 According to DHS, to meet this end, the Officer, who reports directly
to the Secretary,
• requires compliance with the letter and spirit of federal laws promoting privacy;
• centralizes Freedom of Information Act and Privacy Act operations within the
Privacy Office to provide policy and programmatic oversight and support
operational implementation within the components;
• provides education and outreach to build a culture of privacy and adherence to
fair information principles across the department;
• communicates with the public through published materials, formal notices, public
workshops, and meetings; and

124 P.L. 110-181; 118 Stat. 3867-3869. Notwithstanding these protective entities, concerns have arisen in Congress and
elsewhere over the Department’s domestic intelligence program; attention has focused, for instance, on a new National
Applications Office, which promotes the use of overhead surveillance for homeland security purposes. See letter to
Hon. Michael Chertoff, Secretary, Department of Homeland Security, regarding the National Applications Office, from
Hon. Bennie Thompson, Chairman, House Committee on Homeland Security; Hon. Jane Harman, Chairwoman,
Subcommittee on Intelligence; and Hon. Christopher Carney, Chairman, Subcommittee on Management,
Investigations, and Oversight, Apr. 7, 2008. See also Siobhan Gorman, “Privacy Fears Threaten Satellite Program,”
Wall Street Journal, Apr. 8, 2008, p. 1.
125 P.L. 107-296; 116 Stat. 2135.
126 U.S. Department of Homeland Security, “The Privacy Office of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security,”
available at http://www.dhs.gov/xabout/structure/editorial_0338.shtm, p. 1. Statutory authority is at 6 U.S.C. § 142, as
amended by P.L. 108-458; 118 Stat. 3868-3869.
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• coordinates with the Officer for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, to ensure that
relevant programs, policies, and procedures are addressed in an integrated and
comprehensive manner and that Congress receives appropriate reports.127
Officer for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties
The mission of the DHS Officer for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties (OCRCL) is to “protect civil
rights and civil liberties and to support homeland security by providing the Department with
constructive advice on the full range of civil rights and civil liberties issues the Department will
face, and by serving as an information and communication channel with the public regarding all
aspects of these issues.”128
According to its statutory authority, the OCRCL is to
• review and assess information concerning abuses of civil rights, civil liberties,
and profiling on the basis of race, ethnicity, or religion, by employees and
officials of DHS;
• make public through the Internet, radio, television, or newspaper advertisements
information on the responsibilities and functions of, and how to contact, the
OCRCL;
• help the DHS Secretary, directorates, and offices of DHS to develop, implement,
and periodically review DHS policies and procedures to ensure that the
protection of civil rights and civil liberties is appropriately incorporated into
DHS programs and activities;
• oversee compliance with constitutional, statutory, regulatory, policy, and other
requirements relating to the civil rights and civil liberties of individuals affected
by the programs and activities of DHS;
• coordinate with the Privacy Officer to ensure that programs, policies, and
procedures involving civil rights, civil liberties, and privacy considerations are
addressed in an integrated and comprehensive manner; and that Congress
receives appropriate reports regarding such programs, policies, and procedures;
and
• investigate complaints and information indicating possible abuses of civil rights
or civil liberties, unless the inspector general of the Department determines that
any such complaint or information should be investigated by the inspector
general.129

127 U.S. Department of Homeland Security, “The Privacy Office of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security,”
available at http://www.dhs.gov/xabout/structure/editorial_0338.shtm, p. 1; and U.S. Department of Homeland
Security, “DHS Privacy Office—About the Privacy Office,” available at http://www.dhs.gov/xabout/structure/
editorial_0375.shtm.
128 U.S. Department of Homeland Security, “About the Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties,” and “Report to
Congress on Implementation of Section 705 of the Homeland Security Act and the Establishment of the Office of Civil
Rights and Civil Liberties,” June 2004, both available at http://www.dhs.gov/xabout/structure/editorial_0375.shtm.
129 6 U.S.C. § 345(a), as amended by P.L. 108-458; 118 Stat. 3867.
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Office of Inspector General
The third component, the inspector general in the Department of Homeland Security, has been
given certain ombudsman-like responsibilities (similar to those required of the IG in the
Department of Justice). The DHS IG is to
• receive and review complaints and information from any source alleging abuses
of civil rights and liberties by DHS officials and employees, including
contractors;
• initiate investigations of such alleged abuses;
• consult with and refer investigations which the IG decides not to investigate to
the Officer for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties; and
• publicize and provide convenient public access to information regarding the
procedures to file complaints and the status of corrective action taken by the
Department.130
Transportation Security Administration Office of Civil Rights and Liberties
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) operates two distinct ombudsman-like offices.
One handles internal matters, for the most part,131 while the other deals with external complaints.
Most public inquiries and concerns are handled by the Office of Civil Rights and Liberties in the
External Compliance Division of TSA. The Office’s mission is:
• to ensure that the civil rights and liberties of the traveling public are respected
throughout screening processes, without compromising security;
• to ensure that agency processes and procedures do not discriminate against the
traveling public, and respect the constitutional freedoms of the traveling public;
• to ensure that the External Compliance Division meets its mission by providing
civil rights guidance and services to TSA program offices, including security
offices, technology offices, and communications offices; and
• to review TSA policies and procedures to ensure that the civil rights and liberties
of the traveling public are taken into account.132

130 5 U.S.C. Appendix, as amended by P.L. 108-458; 118 Stat. 3868. The DHS inspector general, moreover, is required
to report semi-annually to the Secretary and Congress, by the IG Act of 1978, as amended (5 U.S.C. Appendix). The
inspector general in DHS appears to be one of three, among the nearly 60 IGs under the Inspector General Act of 1978,
to have been given ombudsman-related responsibilities. The other two are in the Department of Justice and
Environmental Protection Agency.
131 The TSA Office of the Ombudsman operates primarily internally, handling workplace related problems, issues, and
concerns. U.S. Transportation Security Administration, Ombudsman, Helping You Find Solutions, available at
http://www.tsa.gov/join/benefits/careers_benefits_ombudsman.shtm. Contact at TSA.OCR-
ExternalCompliance@dhs.gov.
132 U.S. Transportation Security Administration, External Compliance Division, Civil Rights for Travelers, available at
http://www.tsa.gov/what_we_do/civilrights/travelers.shtm.
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United States Citizenship and Immigration Services Ombudsman
The 2002 Homeland Security Act created the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services
(USCIS) Ombudsman.133 Unlike most other ombudsman-like offices in the federal government,
the USCIS Ombudsman operates separately from the agency about which it receives complaints.
The Ombudsman, instead, is located under the aegis of the Department of Homeland Security and
reports to the DHS Secretary or Deputy Secretary, not to a USCIS official. The USCIS
Ombudsman’s mission, as specified in its establishing legislation, is threefold:
• assist individuals and employers in resolving problems with USCIS;
• identify areas in which individuals and employers have problems dealing with
USCIS; and
• propose changes to mitigate identified problems.134
A client seeking Ombudsman services may fill out an online form and mail it to the USCIS
Washington, DC, office, where it is to be reviewed.135 Potential clients should receive a response
to their case within 45 days. As with other complaint-handling offices, complainants may leave
anonymous postings on the office’s website. Like the Federal Student Aid Ombudsman, the
USCIS Ombudsman can neither overturn the agency’s decisions nor make exceptions to its
regulations. The Ombudsman may, however, facilitate a resolution and offer formal and informal
recommendations to USCIS to help it serve patrons. The office also submits an annual report to
the House and Senate Judiciary Committees.
Unlike offices that act as conduits only, the USCIS Ombudsman serves as an advocate for the
complainants—including those experiencing delays because of the backlogs in processing
immigration requests. The office also conducts outreach programs, including teleconferences and
site visits. It is attempting, moreover, to create an online form that can be submitted via the
Internet to expedite complaint processing, as well as establish a Virtual Ombudsman Office
online that would offer a way to eliminate costly data entry.136
Department of the Interior, Office of Insular Affairs,
CNMI Ombudsman

The Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI), Office of Insular Affairs in the
Department of the Interior (DOI) has an affiliated Ombudsman with a confined jurisdiction and
clientele: the Ombudsman is charged with providing “assistance to the Commonwealth of the

133 P.L. 107-296; codified at 6 U.S.C. § 272. A year earlier, before certain of INS’s immigration and citizenship
responsibilities were transferred to DHS, the INS Restructuring Plan of Nov. 11, 2001, created a Customer Relations
Office in the Service Bureau and an Ombudsman Office in the Enforcement Bureau. CRS Report RL33319, Toward
More Effective Immigration Policies: Selected Organizational Issues
, by Ruth Ellen Wasem, p. 15.
134 6 U.S.C. § 272. See also U.S. Department of Homeland Security, USCIS Ombudsman, Citizenship and Immigration
Services Ombudsman Annual Report to Congress 2008
, pp. v-vii and 1, available at http://www.dhs.gov/xlibrary/assets/
CISOMB_Annual_Report_2008.pdf. Further contact information is available at cisombudsman@dhs.gov or
cisombudsman.trends@dhs.gov.
135 DHS Form 7001, available at http://www.dhs.gov/cisombudsman.
136 The office expects “to have a Virtual Ombudsman pilot program in place before the end of the fiscal year.” USCIS
Ombudsman, 2008 Annual Report, pp. v. For a further description of its outreach program, see ibid., pp. 73-75.
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Northern Mariana Islands’ 30,000 [foreign] workers with labor and immigration complaints.”137
Often known as the Federal Ombudsman, the office was established to assist foreign workers to
gain a better understanding of the laws and policies affecting them. In so doing, according to a
press release, the Ombudsman’s office “works hand-in-hand with the CNMI’s Department of
Labor and Immigration, the U.S. Attorney’s Office, and the Department of the Interior to ensure
activities are properly coordinated and developed.”138
Department of Justice Office of Inspector General
The USA PATRIOT Act of 2001, passed shortly after the 9/11terrorist attacks, gave the Office of
Inspector General (OIG) in the Department of Justice (DOJ) certain ombudsman-related
responsibilities, particularly related to civil rights and liberties matters.139 One of the provisions of
the act, which expanded government powers in anti-terrorism efforts, directs the IG to designate
an official to carry out certain duties:
• review information and receive complaints alleging a violation of civil rights and
civil liberties;
• make information about the functions and responsibilities of the office, including
how to contact the official, available through the Internet, radio, newspapers, and
television; and
• report semi-annually to the House and Senate Committees on the Judiciary about
the implementation of these requirements.
These functions are connected to complaints from individuals alleging abuses of civil rights and
civil liberties by DOJ employees, including contractors. To respond to relevant allegations, the IG
has established two special entities—a Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Complaints unit, along
with a special section in the OIG Investigations Division—which are directed to
• review information and receive complaints alleging such abuses;
• identify the more serious allegations and assign them to OIG employees for
investigation; and
• refer other complaints to department components for their review and handling
(and refer still others to different federal departments and agencies which have
jurisdiction over the policies in question).140

137 U.S. Department of the Interior, Office of Insular Affairs, “Federal Ombudsman’s Office,” p. 1, available at
http://www.doi.gov/oia/Firstpginfo/Ombudsman.htm. To carry out its duties, the office employs a staff of professional
caseworkers/interpreters who speak Mandarin, Taiwanese, Tagalog, Bengali, Hindu, Urdu, and Singhalese. Ibid.
138 U.S. Department of the Interior, Office of Insular Affairs, “James J. Benedetto Named Federal Ombudsman,”
available at http://www.doi.gov/oia/press/2002/Benedettorelease2.htm.
139 P.L. 107-56; 115 Stat. 391. Contact at inspector.general@usdoj.gov. As noted elsewhere, the Justice Department
inspector general is one of only three—the others being in DHS and EPA—among the more than 60 offices of
inspector general given ombudsman-like responsibilities and duties.
140 U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the Inspector General, Report of Violations of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties,
Feb. 2008, available at http://www.usdoj.gov/oig/FOIA/hotline2.htm, pp. 3-8. DOJ also houses a separate Privacy and
Civil Liberties Office (PCLO) within the Office of the Deputy Attorney General; the PCLO oversees and makes
recommendations for departmental policy in this area. It has established a departmental Privacy and Civil Liberties
Board, chaired by the Chief Privacy Officer and composed of representatives of major divisions and bureaus in DOJ.
(continued...)
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Department of Transportation, Federal Aviation Administration,
Aviation Noise Ombudsman

An Aviation Noise Ombudsman (ANO) is located in the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA),
Department of Transportation. Created by the Federal Aviation Reauthorization Act of 1996,141
the office “serves as a public liaison for issues about aircraft noise questions or complaints.”142
The ANO usually intervenes, however, only when a complainant thinks FAA officials who had
been contacted about noise problems are not responsive to an inquiry or grievance.143
Department of the Treasury
Several different types of ombudsman-like offices are located in the Department of the Treasury.
One responds to the general public, while the others respond to a select clientele in the banking
industry.
Internal Revenue Service Taxpayer Advocate Service
The Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS), headed by the National Taxpayer Advocate (NTA), in the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has undergone a number of permutations over its history, which
dates from the late 1970s. Formerly titled the Office of Ombudsman, TAS is located within the
Internal Revenue Service, but operates independently of any other office within the agency. Each
state, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico has at least one local taxpayer advocate, who
attempts to expedite lingering taxpayer issues and recommend “administrative and legislative
changes” to IRS policies and operations.144
The first taxpayer advocate was appointed by the IRS commissioner in 1979. In 1988, the Office
of Taxpayer Ombudsman was officially mandated by Congress in P.L. 100-647. Later, the 1996
Taxpayer Bill of Rights 2—intended “to provide increased taxpayer protections”145—changed the
title and altered the responsibilities of the office by creating the Taxpayer Advocate.
Two years later, the IRS Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998, which also created an IRS
Oversight Board, changed the name of the office and its head again: the Office of the Taxpayer

(...continued)
One of the Board’s duties is to “refer credible information pertaining to possible privacy or civil liberties violations by
any federal employee or official to the appropriate office for prompt investigation.” U.S. Department of Justice, Privacy
and Civil Liberties Office, Initial and First Annual Report to Congress, 2007, available at http://www.usdoj.gov/pclo/
reporttocongress101606.pdf, p. 11. See also U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Inspector General, “Civil Rights and
Civil Liberties,” Top Management and Performance Challenges in the Department of Justice—2006, and Top
Management and Performance Challenges in the Department of Justice—2007
, both available at
http://www.usdoj.gov/oig/challenges/.
141 P.L. 104-264; 110 Stat. 3282.
142 U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, “Aircraft Noise Issues,” available at http://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/
headquarters_offices/aep/aircraft_noise/.
143 Ibid.
144 U.S. Internal Revenue Service, “Taxpayer Advocate Service: Troublesome Tax Issues?” p. 1, available at
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p1546.pdf.
145 P.L. 104-168, 110 Stat. 1452. For congressional initiatives, see U.S. Congress, House Committee on Ways and
Means, Taxpayer Bill of Rights 2, H.Rept. 104-506, 104th Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GP0, 1996).
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Advocate under the supervision and direction of the National Taxpayer Advocate.146 The 1998 act
also strengthened the office’s oversight functions. The NTA is now required to submit an annual
report to the House Committee on Ways and Means and the Senate Committee on Finance by
June 30 of each year. The report must include Advocate initiatives to improve IRS services, as
well as potential recommendations to the existing system. No employee of the IRS, including the
commissioner, is permitted to review or comment on the report before it is submitted to Congress.
In addition, the 1998 amendments reinforced the expanded duties of the Office of the Taxpayer
Advocate, requiring it to
• assist taxpayers in resolving problems with the Internal Revenue Service;
• identify areas in which taxpayers have problems in dealings with the Internal
Revenue Service;
• propose changes, to the extent possible, in the administrative practices of the
Internal Revenue Service to mitigate problems; and
• identify potential legislative changes that may be appropriate to mitigate such
problems.147
In 2000, the office became known as the Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS), which handles both
systemic IRS issues and individual taxpayer complaints. The Advocate currently reports directly
to the IRS commissioner and has no term limit. The National Taxpayer Advocate is appointed by
the Secretary of the Treasury, after consultation with both the Commissioner of the IRS and the
IRS Oversight Board.
Though the TAS has the word “advocate” in its title, the position has a two-fold goal: it advocates
for fair and efficient operation of the IRS, as well as directly for individual taxpayers themselves.
Any person or business suffering “economic harm” or “experiencing delays” in the resolution of a
tax problem has free access to a taxpayer advocate.148 A taxpayer may seek an advocate by
contacting the TAS via a toll-free number and asking an IRS employee to complete and submit a
required form (form 911). The taxpayer may also request and fill it out himself or herself. The
completed form is sent to the appropriate taxpayer advocate, who—once assigned—is required to
remain an advocate for the private party until any IRS dispute is resolved. The advocate, whose
service is confidential, is independent of all other IRS offices.
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency Ombudsman
The Ombudsman in the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC)—which operates under
the Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994—is one of five in
“appropriate federal banking agencies” established by the act and one of two in the Department of
the Treasury.149 The ombudsman is to

146 P.L. 105-206; 112 Stat. 699.
147 P.L. 105-206; 112 Stat. 698-699.
148 U.S. Internal Revenue Service, “Taxpayer Advocate Service: Troublesome Tax Issues?”, p. 1, available at
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p1546.pdf. A “delay” occurs if any issue that takes more than 30 days to resolve or if
the taxpayer has not received a response by the date promised. Taxpayer advocates are also to be brought in when “IRS
actions prevent [the affected person] from providing for necessities such as housing, transportation or food.” Ibid., p. 2.
149 P.L. 103-325; 108 Stat. 2160; codified at 12 U.S.C. § 4806. The act calls for Ombudsmen in the National Credit
(continued...)
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• act as a liaison between the agency and any affected person with respect to any
problem in dealing with the agency resulting from its regulatory activities; and
• assure that safeguards exist to encourage complainants to come forward and
preserve confidentiality.150
In so doing, the OCC Ombudsman is to report weaknesses in OCC policy and may stay any
appealable agency decision.151
Office of Thrift Supervision Ombudsman
The Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) is one of the five federal entities required by the
Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994 to have an Ombudsman.152
All five Ombudsmen are to follow the same statutory directives, that is, to serve as liaisons
between the agency and any affected parties with respect to problems in dealing with agency
regulatory activities and to encourage complainants to come forward. The jurisdictions and
clientele differ among these Ombudsmen. The OTS ombudsman is to respond to questions,
concerns, and complaints from federally chartered thrift institutions. He or she is to “assist the
thrift community in resolving such matters relating to regulatory oversight that may hinder their
institution.”153 Although hired and paid by OTS, the Ombudsman is to be “an advocate for equity
... and is required to perform his duties in an objective and neutral manner.”154
Department of Veterans Affairs
The Department of Veterans Affairs (DVA) houses several ombudsman-like offices,155 including
the following.

(...continued)
Union Administration Board and each “appropriate Federal banking agency,” meaning the Comptroller of the
Currency, Office of Thrift Supervision, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
150 Ibid.
151 U.S. Department of the Treasury, Comptroller of the Currency Administrator of National Banks, “National Banks
Appeal Process,” available at http://www.occ.treas.gov/NationalBankAppeals.htm.
152 P.L. 103-325; 108 Stat. 2160.
153 U.S. Department of the Treasury, Office of Thrift Supervision, Frequently Asked Industry Questions about the
Ombudsman
, available at http://www.ots.treas.gov/pagehtml.cfm?catnumber=84.
154 Ibid.
155 A bill in the 110th Congress—H.R. 2192, with an amended version approved by the House Veterans Affairs
Subcommittee on Health on June 5, 2008—would establish an Office of Ombudsman in the Department. The
Ombudsman, designated by the Secretary and reporting directly to the head, would act as a liaison for veterans and
their families with respect to health care and benefits. The new officer, assisted by an Ombudsman Director in each
Administration of the Department, would provide: information about relevant services; problem resolution services;
patient advocacy; and assistance in understanding and receiving available benefits, including submitting claims or
applications for benefits and fielding complaints. U.S. House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Subcommittee on
Health, Establishing an Ombudsman in the Department of Veterans Affairs, hearings, 110th Cong., 2nd sess., June 14,
2007. One press account noted, however, that the DVA does not support the bill, with the department arguing that the
new office would create an unnecessary level of bureaucracy, in light of patient advocates and state-level counselors.
Andy Leonatti, “House bill creates VA ombudsman’s office,” CongressDaily, June 9, 2008, available at
http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=40193&dcn=e_gvet.
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Board of Veterans’ Appeals Ombudsman
For military service members who claim that they have been unfairly denied medical treatment
for an injury received or condition caused during duty, the Board of Veterans’ Appeals (BVA) is
to determine whether they are eligible to receive benefits. The BVA Ombudsman is to assist in
this matter in two basic ways:
• remedy unsatisfactory experiences with the department; and
• make certain that communication with the BVA is clear and timely.156
The BVA website also offers links to a variety of VA offices, including the Debt Management
Center and the National Personnel Records Center. Like similar ombudsman positions, the BVA
Ombudsman does not have the ability to require other VA centers or offices to take specific
action. The Ombudsman, however, receives complaints from eligible parties and attempts to
ensure that the BVA is operating effectively.
Federal Recovery Coordinators and Transition Patient Advocates
For injured combat veterans, there are two newly created statutory positions to handle aspects of
their recovery.157 Though neither the Transition Patient Advocate (TPA) nor the Federal Recovery
Coordinator operates in the classic ombudsman capacity, they both serve to help returning
soldiers navigate the veterans’ medical system.
One hundred TPAs currently operate within VA hospitals across the country. The TPA program,
which began in May 2007, consists almost entirely of former soldiers who offer assistance and
advice as peers to soldiers who return from service with a severe injury.158 The TPAs are part of a
three-person team assigned to each returning Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring
Freedom (OIF/OEF) soldier with a severe injury. The other two members of the team are a
program manager and a case manager—usually a nurse or social worker. The TPA’s job is to
“ensure a smooth transition of wounded service members through VA’s health care system.”159 In
so doing, the TPA can aid in meeting the everyday needs—including scheduling medical
appointments—of a returning soldier who is enrolled at any of the 1,308 VA facilities.
In addition to the 100 TPAs working at the Veterans Affairs medical treatment centers, the VA
joined forces with the Department of Defense (DOD) to add 10 “Federal Recovery Coordinator”
positions.160 The two departments created the coordinator positions after the Report of the

156 U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, “Board of Veterans’ Appeals Ombudsman (Customer Service): Complements,
Questions, Concerns, Etc.,” available at http://www.va.gov/vbs/bva/contactbva.htm.
157 P.L. 110-181, Secs. 1611 and 1614.
158 Information provided by telephone by the Department of Veteran Affairs, Jan. 8, 2008.
159 Ibid.
160 The positions were created after published news and other accounts reported unsatisfactory conditions at Walter
Reed Army Medical Center. See, among others, Michael Abramovitz and Steve Vogel, “Army Secretary Ousted;
Second Firing Follows Walter Reed Revelations; Bush Vows a Probe,” Washington Post, Mar. 3, 2007, p. A1; Anne
Hull and Dana Priest, “Hospital Officials Knew of Neglect; Complaints About Walter Reed Were Voiced for Years,”
Washington Post, Mar. 1, 2007, p. A1; Dana Priest and Anne Hull, “Swift Action Promised at Walter Reed;
Investigations Urged as Army Moves to Make Repairs, Improve Staffing,” Washington Post, Feb. 21, 2007, p. A8; and
Steve Vogel, “Review At Walter Reed Is Ordered; Defense Secretary Vows Accountability,” Washington Post, Feb.
24, 2007, p. A1.
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President’s Commission on Care for America’s Returning Wounded Warriors, commonly known
as the Dole-Shalala Commission, recommended their creation.161 The recovery care coordinators,
who are separate from a three-person case management team, are to
• coordinate services between VA and DOD and, if necessary, private sector
facilities;
• serve as the ultimate resource for families with questions or concerns about VA,
DOD, or other federal benefits; and
• ensure the appropriate oversight and coordination for care of active duty service
members and veterans with major amputations, severe traumatic brain injury,
spinal cord injury, severe sight or hearing impairments, and severe multiple
injuries.162
The Federal Recovery Coordinator focuses on the long-term recovery of each returning wounded
soldier,163 whereas the TPA focuses on day-to-day needs. Also, in contrast to the TPAs, the
recovery coordinators may offer their services to all returning injured soldiers, regardless of
whether they are receiving treatment at VA facilities.
Environmental Protection Agency
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has several prominent complaint-handling offices.
Office of Inspector General Public Liaison
The Public Liaison (formerly the ombudsman) currently operates within the Office of Inspector
General (OIG) of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).164 Congress created an
ombudsman function within the Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response with an
amendment to the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act in 1984.165 The position initially
dealt only with hazardous waste matters. Later, EPA extended the position past its 1988
legislative authorization and expanded its jurisdiction to include Superfund sites.166 After a July

161 Bob Dole and Donna Shalala, “Serve, Support, Simplify: Report of the President’s Commission on Care for
America’s Returning Wounded Warriors,” July 2007, available at http://www.pccww.gov/docs/Kit/
Main_Book_CC%5BJULY26%5D.pdf.
162 U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of Public Affairs Media Relations, “VA, DOD Announce ‘Recovery
Coordinators,’” press release, Oct. 31, 2007, available at http://www1.va.gov/opa/pressrel/pressrelease.cfm?id=1407.
163 Reflecting the long-term orientation of the coordinators, the Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs set up a
Joint VA/Defense Federal Recovery Coordinator Program for wounded military personnel. It plans to provide a “life
map for recovery” for those eligible, designed to integrate their health records and identify and list followup services.
U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, VA and DoD Cooperation and Collaboration on Caring for the
Families of Wounded Warriors
, hearing, Mar. 11, 2008, 110th Cong., 2nd sess. See also Bob Brewin, “Defense, VA lay
out plans to improve health care for wounded soldiers,” Government Executive, available at http://www.govexec.com/
story_page.cfm?filepath=/dailyfed/0308/031108bb1.htm.
164 As noted above, this OIG is one of only three with ombudsman-like responsibilities among the nearly 60 offices
operating under the Inspector General Act of 1978, as amended (5 U.S.C. Appendix). The others are in the
Departments of Homeland Security and Justice. For background, see CRS Report 98-379, Statutory Offices of Inspector
General: Past and Present
.
165 P.L. 98-616; 98 Stat. 3221.
166 While the national ombudsman covers all issues pertaining to hazardous waste, the regional ombudsmen focus more
on Superfund issues. Superfund is the name of the federal program that addresses issues associated with abandoned
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2001 GAO report critical of the ombudsman office, EPA proposed a controversial transfer of the
Office of Congressional and Public Liaison to the Office of Inspector General (OIG). The GAO
report found several structural weaknesses in the ombudsman office at the time:
EPA’s national ombudsman is located within the Office of Solid Waste and Emergency
Response (OSWER), the organizational unit whose decisions the ombudsman is responsible
for investigating, and his budget and staff resources are controlled by unit managers within
OSWER.... [T]his arrangement undermines another fundamental requirement of an effective
ombudsman: impartiality.167
EPA Administrator Christine Todd Whitman determined that moving the ombudsman into the IG
office would give the ombudsman “more independence and the impartiality necessary to conduct
credible inquires,” while critics of the move—including Robert J. Martin, the EPA Ombudsman at
the time—insisted that the transfer would “put the ombudsman even more firmly under the
authority” of EPA administrators.168 In January 2002, Martin filed a motion in federal district
court to block the proposed move.169 Three months later, however, a federal district judge
dismissed the motion,170 paving the way for the ombudsman to be moved into the OIG. Martin
resigned his post, which was renamed Public Liaison, shortly after the move.171 According to the
EPA, the Public Liaison
• receives, reviews, and processes complaints and allegations about agency
programs and activities;172
• writes and publishes reports of agency needs and desired assessments;173 and
• prevents and detects fraud, waste, and abuse.174
In addition to the Public Liaison, 10 regional EPA ombudsmen receive complaints about
regulatory polices regarding Superfund sites. The public can contact the Office of Congressional
and Public Liaison, located in Washington, DC, by telephone, mail, facsimile, or e-mail.

(...continued)
hazardous waste sites around the United States. See U. S. General Accounting Office, Hazardous Waste: EPA’s
National and Regional Ombudsmen Do Not Have Sufficient Independence
, GAO Report GAO-01-813 (Washington:
2001), also available at http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d01813.pdf. An overview of the Public Liaison activities is
available at http://www.epa.gov/oig. For additional information on Superfund, see U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, “Superfund: Basic Information,” available at http://www.epa.gov/superfund/about.htm.
167 GAO also found that the position did not have adequate “independence from any person who may be the subject of
a complaint or inquiry.” It added that EPA’s ombudsman failed to file an annual report and did not meet many of the
relevant professional standards for the post. Ibid., abstract and p. 3.
168 Edward Walsh, “EPA to Transfer Ombudsman,” Washington Post, Nov. 29, 2001, p. A3. See also Megan Twohey,
“Whitman Under Fire for Dropping Ombudsman,” Federal Paper, Feb. 29, 2001, pp. 1, 3.
169 “EPA Ombudsman Files Suit to Prevent Pending Move,” Federal Times, Jan. 14, 2002, p. 2.
170 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Whitman Pleased with Judge’s Dismissal; Relocation Proceeds, Allowing
for Greater Independence of Ombudsman,” press release, Apr. 12, 2002, available at http://yosemite.epa.gov/opa/
admpress.nsf/6427a6b7538955c585257359003f0230/f7d547b2dd8aae2f85256b990073237a!OpenDocument.
171 “Hill Report Criticizes EPA on Watchdog Autonomy,” Washington Post, Nov. 15, 2002, p. A5.
172 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of the Inspector General, “Public Liaison (Ombudsman) & Hotline,”
available at http://www.epa.gov/oig/ombudsman-hotline.htm.
173 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of the Inspector General, “Public Liaison Reports,” available at
http://www.epa.gov/oig/reports/liaison.htm.
174 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of the Inspector General, “Public Liaison (Ombudsman) & Hotline,”
available at http://www.epa.gov/oig/ombudsman-hotline.htm.
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Although the Public Liaison cannot require EPA to make changes to policies or practices, he or
she can “refer” cases to agency management for “review or action,” or refer the case to an outside
agency—such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation—for further review, if warranted.175 In most
cases, the complaint comes in through the Public Liaison’s “hotline,” which includes a toll-free
phone number. It may also be submitted via e-mail, traditional mail, or in-person. Complainants
may remain anonymous. The Liaison then reviews the complaint and determines whether the
agency has performed its duties in an acceptable manner. All other waste management complaints
are to be handled by the liaison, while criminal investigations are to be referred to a different
office.
Small Business Ombudsman
The EPA created the Small Business Ombudsman (SBO) function in 1982. In 1986, the SBO
began also serving as the EPA’s Asbestos Ombudsman. The position is established to
• serve as a liaison between small businesses and the EPA to promote
understanding of Agency policy and small business needs and concerns;
• staff a small business hotline that provides regulatory and technical assistance
information;
• maintain and distribute an extensive collection of informational and technical
literature developed by the various EPA program offices;
• make personal appearances as a speaker or panelist at small business-related
meetings;
• meet with more than 45 key national trade associations representing several
million small businesses and with state and regional ombudsmen who serve
businesses on the local level;
• provide guidance on the development of national policies and regulations that
impact small businesses; and
• track development and implementation of regulations affecting small business in
support of the Regulatory Flexibility Act.176
The Ombudsman’s primary responsibility is to respond to telephone inquiries about regulatory
requirements and pollution prevention.177 The office also prepares a semi-annual newsletter that is
sent to its constituency, which includes members of the public, small business owners, legislators,
employees, and agency managers. In addition to the main ASBO office, there are 10 Regional
Fairness Boards, each consisting of five members, who are small business owners in their local
communities.178

175 Ibid.
176 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “About SBO,” available at http://www.epa.gov/sbo/aboutus.htm. The
Regulatory Flexibility Act is 5 U.S.C. 601-612.
177 Information provided by telephone by the ASBO, Dec. 7, 2007.
178 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Policy, Economics, and Innovation, “Environmental Assistance
Services for Small Businesses: A Resource Guide,” EPA-231B-01-001, Aug. 2001, p. 9, available at
http://www.epa.gov/sbo/pdfs/ea-resourceguide.pdf.
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Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Ombudsman
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), which insures deposits in U.S. banks,
includes an Office of the Ombudsman (OO). It is one of five such offices established by the
Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994.179 The OO has two primary
charges under the act:
• act as a liaison between the agency and any affected person with respect to any
problem such party may have in dealing with the agency resulting from the
regulatory activities of the agency; and
• assure that safeguards exist to encourage complainants to come forward and
preserve confidentiality.180
The OO, however, does not act as an “advocate” for individual complainants and it cannot
conduct in-depth investigations or require changes in management decisions.181 Nonetheless, it
may clarify FDIC policies and direct complaints to the appropriate division or office, while
maintaining the complainant’s anonymity. The rash of bank failures in 2008 and 2009, moreover,
prompted an expansion in the ombudsman office; it includes a new unit designed to give
“borrowers an additional venue for having their concerns addressed by the FDIC,” additional
staff, and a new guide for borrowers confronted by a failed bank and the subsequent receivership
process.182
Freedom of Information Act Entities
The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Amendments of 2007 created two ombudsman-like
posts: Public Liaisons and an Office of Government Information Services.183
Public Liaisons
The 2007 amendments to the Freedom of Information Act required the creation of public liaison
positions throughout much of the executive branch to ensure prompt and proper responses to the
public’s FOIA requests. The amendments called for the designation of “one or more FOIA Public
Liaisons” in each agency, leaving the determination of the size of the staff up to department and
agency heads. As instructed by the amendments, “each agency shall make available its FOIA
Public Liaison, who shall assist in the resolution of any disputes between the requester and the
agency.”184 The Liaison is permitted, moreover, to attempt non-binding dispute resolutions as an

179 P.L. 103-325; 108 Stat. 2160; codified at 12 U.S.C. § 4806. This statute required that all “appropriate Federal
banking agencies” create ombudsmen, including the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, the National Credit Union
Administration, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and the Office of Thrift Supervision, as well as the FDIC.
180 Enabling legislation, FDIC, Office of the Ombudsman, available at http://www.fdic.gov/regulations/resources/
ombudsman/legislation.html. Contact at ombudsman@fdic.gov.
181 U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, “What the FDIC Ombudsman Cannot Do,” available at
http://www.fdic.gov/regulations/resources/ombudsman/cannot.html.
182 FDIC, FDIC Announces Expansion of Ombudsman’s Office to Assist Customers with Loans at Failed Banks, Press
Release, May 5, 2009.
183 P.L. 110-175; 121 Stat. 2524.
184 Ibid. The law also states that the Public Liaison “shall be responsible for assisting in reducing delays, increasing
transparency and understanding of the status of requests, and assisting in the resolution of disputes.”
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alternative to litigation. In addition, each agency is to designate a Chief FOIA Officer who will, in
turn, “designate one or more FOIA Public Liaisons.”185
Office of Government Information Services
The 2007 FOIA Amendments also provided for the creation of an Office of Government
Information Services (GISO) within the National Archives and Records Administration.186 The
law required the new office to
• review policies and procedures of administrative agencies under this section;
• review compliance with this section by administrative agencies; and
• recommend policy changes to Congress and the President to improve the
administration of this section.187
General Services Administration Construction
Metrication Ombudsman

The General Services Administration (GSA) has established a highly specialized ombudsman
with narrow jurisdiction: the Construction Metrication Ombudsman (CMO), located in the
Administration’s Senior Procurement Executive.188 The CMO, as with counterparts in other
agencies, stems from a statutory requirement that
the head of each executive agency that awards construction contracts within the United
States and its territories shall designate a senior agency official to serve as a construction
metrication ombudsman who shall be responsible for reviewing and responding to
complaints from prospective bidders, subcontractors, suppliers, or their designated
representatives related to—(A) guidance or regulations issued by the agency on the use of
the metric system of measurement in contracts for the construction of Federal buildings; and
(B) the use of the metric system of measurement for services and materials required for
incorporation in individual projects to construct Federal buildings.189
In so doing, the CMO is required to respond to each complaint in writing within 60 days and
make a recommendation to the head of the agency for an appropriate resolution. After the agency
head has made a decision, based on this recommendation, the ombudsman is to communicate it in

185 Ibid.
186 Ibid. GISO’s future location, however, is uncertain, in light of reported White House objections to placing the office
in NARA. President Bush’s FY2009 budget includes language that would repeal GISO’s establishment (within NARA)
and place its responsibilities in the Department of Justice. The proposed change reads: “The Department of Justice shall
carry out the responsibilities of the office established in 5 U.S.C. 552(h), from amounts made available in the
Department of Justice appropriation for ‘General Administration Salaries and Expenses’. In addition, subsection (h) of
section 552 of title 5, United States Code, is hereby repealed, and subsections (i) through (l) are redesignated as (h)
through (k).” This provision is included in the President’s budget submission covering the 2009 appropriations for the
Department of Commerce. U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal
Year 2009: Appendix
(Washington: GPO, Feb. 2008), sec. 519, p. 239.
187 121 Stat. 2524.
188 GSA Acquisition Manual, sec. 511.002-71, “Construction metrication ombudsman,” available at
http://www.acquisition.gov/gsam/current/html/Part511.html.
189 15 U.S.C. § 205(f).
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writing to the affected parties and to the public in a timely manner, as well as to all appropriate
offices within the agency. The CMO is also charged with monitoring the implementation of the
decision.190
National Aeronautics and Space Administration Procurement
Ombudsman and Center Procurement Ombudsman

In 1996, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) established a Procurement
Ombudsman, along with related Center Procurement Ombudsmen in the Administration’s eight
centers. Created administratively (NPD 5101.32), the Procurement Ombudsman is to “take action
to resolve concerns, disagreements, and recommendations submitted by interested parties that
cannot be resolved at the Center level, or those having agency-wide implications.”191 Basically,
the office was created “to address the procurement concerns of NASA contractors before they
become problems.”192
To accomplish this, the NASA Ombudsman is to respond to relevant inquiries and concerns, work
with appropriate NASA officials to resolve concerns, and refer specific matters to appropriate
Center Procurement Ombudsmen. Additional responsibilities for the Agency and Center
Procurement Ombudsmen include collecting and distributing relevant facts and information,
reviewing and resolving complaints relative to certain types of contracts, and maintaining a log to
track individual cases from receipt to disposition.193
National Credit Union Administration Ombudsman
The National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) houses an Ombudsman, who “investigates
complaints and recommends solutions” related to “regulatory issues that cannot be resolved at the
operational (regional) level.”194 The Ombudsman is to help the complainants resolve disputes by
defining options and recommending actions to the parties involved. The Ombudsman, however,
cannot decide on matters in dispute or advocate the position of the complainant, NCUA, or other
parties.195
The position is one of five created by the Community Development and Regulatory Improvement
Act of 1994, which also covers the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Federal Reserve
Board of Governors, Office of Thrift Supervision, and Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency.196 The enactment directs them to act as liaisons between the agency and any affected

190 Ibid.
191 U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, “NASA Ombudsman,” NASA Procedural Requirements,
Chapter 1, available at http://nodis3.gsfc.nasa.gov.
192 “Ombudsman Program Established to Address Procurement Concerns,” Spaceport News, Feb. 2, 1996, p. 2,
available at http://www-pao.ksc.nasa.gov/kscpao/snews/1996/feb/feb02-5.htm.
193 U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, “NASA Ombudsman,” NASA Procedural Requirements,
Chapter 1.
194 U.S. National Credit Union Administration, “NCUA’s Ombudsman,” available at http://www.ncua.gov/
Ombudsman/Index.htm.
195 Ibid.
196 P.L. 103-325; 108 Stat. 2160; codified at 12 U.S.C. § 4806.
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persons with respect to problems associated with regulatory activities and to encourage
complainants to come forward.197
Office of the Director of National Intelligence Civil Liberties
Protection Officer

The Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 provided for a number of
ombudsman-like offices connected with the protection of civil rights, civil liberties, and
individual privacy. In addition to those in the Department of Homeland Security is the Civil
Liberties Protection Officer (CLPO) in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence
(ODNI); the CLPO is appointed by and reports directly to the Director.198 The Civil Liberties
Protection Officer’s duties, among others, are to ensure that
• the protection of civil liberties and privacy is appropriately incorporated in the
relevant ODNI policies and procedures;
• the use of technologies sustains, and does not erode, privacy; and
• complaints and other information indicating possible abuses of civil liberties and
privacy in the administration of programs and operations of the ODNI are
reviewed and assessed and, as appropriate, investigated.199
Small Business Administration
Two separate offices in the Small Business Administration (SBA)—Ombudsman and
Advocacy—provide various types of complaint-handling services, information, outreach, and
other forms of assistance to clients in the small business community. In light of their possible
overlap, the two offices issued a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to foster increased
cooperation between them, recognizing that “both work to provide a more small business friendly
regulatory environment.”200 The MOU spells out their separate roles and responsibilities.
SBA Ombudsman
Congress created the SBA’s Small Business and Agriculture Regulatory Enforcement
Ombudsman, now known as the National Office of the Ombudsman, in the Small Business
Regulatory Fairness Enforcement Act of 1996.201 Under the act, the Office is designed to
• establish a means to receive comments from small businesses regarding federal
agency compliance and enforcement activities;

197 Ibid.
198 P.L. 108-458; 118 Stat. 3658-3659.
199 Ibid., p. 3659. See also U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligence, “Civil Liberties Protection Office,”
available at http://odni.gov/CivilLiberties.htm.
200 Office of Advocacy and Office of Ombudsman, Small Business Administration, Memorandum of Understanding,
Nov. 17, 2006, p. 1, available at http://www.sba.gov/advo/laws/law_mouombu02.pdf.
201 P.L. 104-121; 110 Stat. 857; codified at 15 U.S.C. § 657.
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• conduct hearings in each of the 10 federal regions to solicit comments on small
business concerns to ensure that these businesses have an avenue through which
they can comment on agency enforcement activities; and
• issue annual reports to the SBA Administrator and Congress evaluating the
enforcement activities of agency personnel, including a rating of the agency’s
responsiveness to small businesses.202
In receiving comments, the Ombudsman serves as a liaison between small businesses and federal
agencies. These comments are to be forwarded to federal agencies for a high-level review; and
the agencies are requested to consider the fairness of their enforcement actions, after which the
Ombudsman is to send a copy of the agencies’ responses to the small businesses.203 In some
cases, fines have been lowered or eliminated and decisions changed in favor of small businesses.
Nonetheless, the Ombudsman cannot change, stop, or delay a federal agency enforcement action.
SBA Office of Advocacy
SBA also houses a distinct Office of Advocacy, headed by a chief counsel.204 The office,
established in 1976, is broadly designed to examine the role of small businesses in the American
economy, including the impact and effectiveness of regulations on them, and make
recommendations with regard to such determinations.205 In so doing, the Office is to provide
relevant data and information to the small business community and the federal government. The
Advocacy Office may also file amicus curiae briefs on regulatory matters before federal appellate
courts. The regional advocates are to help to ensure communication between the small business
community and the chief counsel, and provide a link between the counsel, local businesses, and
state and local governments. Part of this process may involve receiving complaints and concerns
from small businesses, but the Advocate is not obligated to respond to individual pleas as is the
Ombudsman.206

202 Ibid.; and SBA Office of the National Ombudsman, National Ombudsman’s 2006 Report to Congress, available at
http://www.sba.gov/idc/groups/public/documents/sba_program_office/ombud_ono2006.pdf. Contact at
ombudsman@sba.gov.
203 SBA Office of the National Ombudsman, “About the Office,” available at http://www.sba.gov/aboutsba/
sbaprograms/ombudsman/aboutus.
204 15 U.S.C. § 634a.; P.L. 96-354; 94 Stat. 1164, as amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness
Act of 1996, 110 Stat. 847. A primary charge of the agency is to ensure that the SBA is in compliance with the
Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, which requires semi-annual publication of federal regulation changes that will
affect small businesses. In 1999, a General Accounting Office report questioned the independence of the Office of
Advocacy from the SBA’s managers. U.S. General Accounting Office, Small Business Administration: Review of
Selected Personnel Practices
, GAO/GGD-99-68 (Washington: GAO, 1999). In 2001 and 2003, bills that would have
created a stronger “firewall” between the SBA and the Office of Advocacy’s Chief Counsel, who heads the office, were
considered by congressional committees; but these initiatives were not enacted. U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on
Small Business, Independent Office of Advocacy, S.Rept. 107-5, 107th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 2001); and
House Committee on Commerce, Small Business and Advocacy Improvement Act of 2003, 108th Cong., 1st sess.,
H.Rept. 108-162 (Washington: GPO, 2003). The office may also file amicus curiae briefs in court. For background, see
Lubbers, Report to the Taxpayer Advocate, Independent Advocacy Agencies Within Agencies.
205 An example is the Advocacy Office’s urging federal acquisition councils to consider exempting small firms from a
regulation that would compel contractors to verify workers’ employment eligibility by using a Homeland Security
database, specifically, DHS’s E-Verify system. Elizabeth Newell, “Advocacy office says small firms deserve break on
E-Verify,” Government Executive, Aug. 14, 2008, available at http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=
40715&dcn=e_gvet.
206 SBA Office of Advocacy, About Advocacy, and The Office of Advocacy, both available at http://www.sba.gov/advo/
(continued...)
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U.S. Agency for International Development Acquisition and
Assistance Ombudsman

The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) established an Acquisition and
Assistance (AA) Ombudsman in 1999, in part prompted by the earlier Federal Acquisition
Streamlining Act.207 The role of the Ombudsman is to ensure “equitable treatment of all parties
participating in USAID’s grants and contracts (for acquisitions and assistance) throughout the
process.”208 The AA Ombudsman is tasked with managing complaints about specific AA
proceedings and with facilitating the resolution of differences through an informal, impartial
administrative review of the agency action in question. Operating as a neutral intermediary, the
Ombudsman is to maintain the anonymity and confidentiality of complainants.209
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission Small
Business Ombudsman

In 1996, the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) established a Small Business
Ombudsman (SBO) to serve as a liaison to that community to answer inquiries, provide
information, and proffer advice and guidance about compliance with the statutes, regulations, and
policies under the CPSC’s jurisdiction.210 The SBO also is to provide technical guidance to small
businesses attempting to resolve problems with the Office of Compliance and the Office of
Hazard Identification and Reduction.211 Along with these activities, the Ombudsman is to
maintain a liaison with its counterpart in the Small Business Administration and “an ongoing
dialogue with national trade associations that represent small businesses.”212
U.S. Postal Service Consumer Advocate
In 1970, Congress passed the Postal Reorganization Act (PRA),213 which transformed the
struggling United States Post Office Department into the United States Postal Service (USPS), an
independent establishment in the executive branch. One of its components is a Consumer
Advocate.
The workload of USPS, the largest federal civilian employer, is heavy. It delivers more than 212
billion pieces of mail annually to more than 120 million homes and businesses in the United
States and its territories and commonwealths. When customer complaints arise over its service,

(...continued)
about.html. Contact advocacy@sbs.gov.
207 U.S. Agency for International Development, Acquisition and Assistance Ombudsman, available at
http://www.usaid.gov/business/reviewprocess.html. Contact AandAOmbudsman@usaid.gov.
208 Ibid.
209 Ibid.
210 U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, Small Business Ombudsman, Small Business Ombudsman, available at
http://www.cpsc.gov/BUSINFO/ombud.html. Contact at sbo@cpsc.gov.
211 Ibid.
212 Ibid.
213 84 Stat. 719.
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Federal Complaint-Handling, Ombudsman, and Advocacy Offices

responses usually follow several stages, initially with the local post office. At the national level,
the Postal Service established a Consumer Advocate of the Postal Service as another way to
improve customer service. The Advocate, created in 1971 by then-Postmaster Winton M. Blount,
is to respond to customer concerns in several ways. It aids customers whose insured parcels were
lost or damaged during mailing. If USPS denies the indemnity claim, the Customer Advocate
adjudicates an appeal. The Advocate also independently measures customer satisfaction and
customer perspectives, relying on nearly 900,000 survey results annually.214 A patron seeking
assistance from the Consumer Advocate can request it from the local mail carrier; call, write, or
visit the local post office; or call the USPS national hotline.

Author Contact Information

Wendy R. Ginsberg
Frederick M. Kaiser
Analyst in Government Organization and
Specialist in American National Government
Management
fkaiser@crs.loc.gov, 7-8682
wginsberg@crs.loc.gov, 7-3933





214 Information provided electronically by the USPS Consumer Advocate, Jan. 31, 2008.
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