5 U.S.C. § 572
Verified against govinfo.gov as of June 20, 2026View official text on govinfo.gov ↗
- (a)An agency may use a dispute resolution proceeding for the resolution of an issue in controversy that relates to an administrative program, if the parties agree to such proceeding.
- (b)An agency shall consider not using a dispute resolution proceeding if—
- (1)a definitive or authoritative resolution of the matter is required for precedential value, and such a proceeding is not likely to be accepted generally as an authoritative precedent;
- (2)the matter involves or may bear upon significant questions of Government policy that require additional procedures before a final resolution may be made, and such a proceeding would not likely serve to develop a recommended policy for the agency;
- (3)maintaining established policies is of special importance, so that variations among individual decisions are not increased and such a proceeding would not likely reach consistent results among individual decisions;
- (4)the matter significantly affects persons or organizations who are not parties to the proceeding;
- (5)a full public record of the proceeding is important, and a dispute resolution proceeding cannot provide such a record; and
- (6)the agency must maintain continuing jurisdiction over the matter with authority to alter the disposition of the matter in the light of changed circumstances, and a dispute resolution proceeding would interfere with the agency’s fulfilling that requirement.
- (c)Alternative means of dispute resolution authorized under this subchapter are voluntary procedures which supplement rather than limit other available agency dispute resolution techniques.