{"database": "openregs", "table": "cfr_sections", "is_view": false, "human_description_en": "where part_number = 77 and title_number = 34 sorted by section_id", "rows": [["34:34:1.1.1.1.23.0.113.1", 34, "Education", "", "", "77", "PART 77\u2014DEFINITIONS THAT APPLY TO DEPARTMENT REGULATIONS", "", "", "", "\u00a7 77.1 Definitions that apply to all Department programs.", "ED", "", "", "[45 FR 22529, Apr. 3, 1980, as amended at 45 FR 37442, June 3, 1980. Redesignated at 45 FR 77368, Nov. 21, 1980, as amended at 45 FR 86298, Dec. 30, 1980; 54 FR 21776, May 19, 1989; 57 FR 30342, July 8, 1992; 59 FR 34739, July 6, 1994; 64 FR 50392, Sept. 16, 1999; 77 FR 18679, Mar. 28, 2012; 78 FR 49355, Aug. 13, 2013; 79 FR 76094, Dec. 19, 2014; 80 FR 2608, Jan. 20, 2015; 82 FR 35449, July 31, 2017; 83 FR 18421, Apr. 27, 2018; 85 FR 62611, Oct. 5, 2020; 89 FR 70340, Aug. 29, 2024]", "(a) [Reserved]\n\n(b) Unless a statute or regulation provides otherwise, the following definitions in 2 CFR part 200 apply to the regulations in subtitles A and B of this title. The following terms have the definitions given those terms in 2 CFR 200.1. Phrasing given in parentheses references the term or terms used in title 34 that are consistent with the term defined in title 2.\n\nContract.  (See definition in 2 CFR 200.1.)\n\nEquipment.  (See definition in 2 CFR 200.1.)\n\nFederal award.  (See definition in 2 CFR 200.1.) (The terms \u201caward,\u201d \u201cgrant,\u201d and \u201csubgrant\u201d, as defined in paragraph (c) of this section, have the same meaning, depending on the context, as \u201cFederal award\u201d in 2 CFR 200.1.).\n\nPeriod of performance.  (See definition in 2 CFR 200.1.) (For discretionary grants, the Department uses the term \u201cproject period,\u201d as defined in paragraph (c) of this section, instead of \u201cperiod of performance,\u201d to describe the period during which funds can be obligated by the grantee.).\n\nPersonal property.  (See definition in 2 CFR 200.1.)\n\nReal property.  (See definition in 2 CFR 200.1.)\n\nRecipient.  (See definition in 2 CFR 200.1.)\n\nSubaward.  (See definition in 2 CFR 200.1.) (The term \u201csubgrant,\u201d as defined in paragraph (c) of this section, has the same meaning as \u201csubaward\u201d in 2 CFR 200.1).\n\nSupplies.  (See definition in 2 CFR 200.1.)\n\n(c) Unless a statute or regulation provides otherwise, the following definitions also apply to the regulations in subtitles A and B of this title:\n\nAcquisition  means taking ownership of property, receiving the property as a gift, entering into a lease-purchase arrangement, or leasing the property. The term includes processing, delivery, and installation of property.\n\nAmbitious  means promoting continued, meaningful improvement for program participants or for other individuals or entities affected by the grant, or representing a significant advancement in the field of education research, practices, or methodologies. When used to describe a performance target, whether a performance target is ambitious depends upon the context of the relevant performance measure and the baseline for that measure.\n\nApplicant  means a party applying for a grant or subgrant under a program of the Department.\n\nApplication  means a request for a grant or subgrant under a program of the Department.\n\nAward  has the same meaning as  \u201cGrant\u201d in this paragraph (c).\n\nBaseline  means the starting point from which performance is measured and targets are set.\n\nBudget  means a recipient's financial plan for carrying out the project or program.\n\nBudget period  means an interval of time into which a project period is divided for budgetary purposes.\n\nConstruction  means the preparation of drawings and specifications for a facilities project; erecting, building, demolishing, acquiring, renovating, major remodeling of, or extending a facilities project; or inspecting and supervising the construction of a facilities project. Construction does not include minor remodeling.\n\nContinuous improvement  means using plans for collecting and analyzing data about a project component's implementation and outcomes (including the pace and extent to which project outcomes are being met) to inform necessary changes throughout the project. These plans may include strategies to gather ongoing feedback from participants and stakeholders on the implementation of the project component.\n\nDemonstrates a rationale  means that there is a key project component included in the project's logic model that is supported by citations of high-quality research or evaluation findings that suggest that the project component is likely to significantly improve relevant outcomes.\n\nDepartment  means the U.S. Department of Education.\n\nDirector of the Institute of Education Sciences  means the Director of the Institute of Education Sciences or an officer or employee of the Institute of Education Sciences acting for the Director under a delegation of authority.\n\nED  means the U.S. Department of Education.\n\nEDGAR  means the Education Department General Administrative Regulations (34 CFR parts 75, 76, 77, 79, 81, 82, 84, 86, 97, 98, and 99).\n\nElementary school  means a day or residential school that provides elementary education, as determined under State law.\n\nEvaluation  means an assessment using systematic data \n\ncollection and analysis of one or more programs, policies, practices, and organizations intended to assess their implementation, outcomes, effectiveness, or efficiency.\n\nEvidence-based, for the purposes of 34 CFR part 75  means the proposed project component is supported by one or more of strong evidence, moderate evidence, promising evidence, or evidence that demonstrates a rationale.\n\nEvidence-building  means a systematic plan for identifying and answering questions relevant to programs and policies through performance measurement, exploratory studies, or program evaluation.\n\nExperimental study  means a study that is designed to compare outcomes between two groups of individuals (such as students) that are otherwise equivalent except for their assignment to either a treatment group receiving a project component or a control group that does not. Randomized controlled trials, regression discontinuity design studies, and single-case design studies are the specific types of experimental studies that, depending on their design and implementation ( e.g.,  sample attrition in randomized controlled trials and regression discontinuity design studies), can meet What Works Clearinghouse (WWC) standards without reservations as described in the WWC Handbooks:\n\n(i) A randomized controlled trial employs random assignment of, for example, students, teachers, classrooms, or schools to receive the project component being evaluated (the treatment group) or not to receive the project component (the control group).\n\n(ii) A regression discontinuity design study assigns the project component being evaluated using a measured variable ( e.g.,  assigning students reading below a cutoff score to tutoring or developmental education classes) and controls for that variable in the analysis of outcomes.\n\n(iii) A single-case design study uses observations of a single case ( e.g.,  a student eligible for a behavioral intervention) over time in the absence and presence of a controlled treatment manipulation to determine whether the outcome is systematically related to the treatment.\n\nFacilities  means one or more structures in one or more locations.\n\nFiscal year  means the Federal fiscal year\u2014a period beginning on October 1 and ending on the following September 30.\n\nGEPA  means the General Education Provisions Act.\n\nGrant  means financial assistance, including cooperative agreements, that provides support or stimulation to accomplish a public purpose. 2 CFR part 200, as adopted in 2 CFR part 3474, uses the broader, undefined term \u201cAward\u201d to cover grants, subgrants, and other agreements in the form of money or property, in lieu of money, by the Federal Government to an eligible recipient. The term does not include\u2014\n\n(i) Technical assistance, which provides services instead of money;\n\n(ii) Other assistance in the form of loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, or insurance;\n\n(iii) Direct payments of any kind to individuals; and\n\n(iv) Contracts that are required to be entered into and administered under procurement laws and regulations.\n\nGrantee  means the legal entity to which a grant is awarded and that is accountable to the Federal Government for the use of the funds provided. The grantee is the entire legal entity even if only a particular component of the entity is designated in the grant award notice (GAN). For example, a GAN may name as the grantee one school or campus of a university. In this case, the granting agency usually intends, or actually intends, that the named component assume primary or sole responsibility for administering the grant-assisted project or program. Nevertheless, the naming of a component of a legal entity as the grantee in a grant award document shall not be construed as relieving the whole legal entity from accountability to the Federal Government for the use of the funds provided. (This definition is not intended to affect the eligibility provision of grant programs in which eligibility is limited to organizations that may be only components of a legal entity.) The term \u201cgrantee\u201d does not include any secondary recipients, such as subgrantees and contractors, that may receive funds from a grantee pursuant to a subgrant or contract.\n\nGrant period  means the period for which funds have been awarded.\n\nIndependent evaluation  means an evaluation of a project component that is designed and carried out independently of, but in coordination with, the entities that develop or implement the project component.\n\nLocal educational agency  means:\n\n(i) A public board of education or other public authority legally constituted within a State for either administrative control of or direction of, or to perform service functions for, public elementary or secondary schools in:\n\n(A) A city, county, township, school district, or other political subdivision of a State; or\n\n(B) Such combination of school districts or counties a State recognizes as an administrative agency for its public elementary or secondary schools; or\n\n(ii) Any other public institution or agency that has administrative control and direction of a public elementary or secondary school.\n\n(iii) As used in 34 CFR parts 400, 408, 525, 526 and 527 (vocational education programs), the term also includes any other public institution or agency that has administrative control and direction of a vocational education program.\n\nLogic model  (also referred to as a theory of action) means a framework that identifies key project components of the proposed project ( i.e.,  the active \u201cingredients\u201d that are hypothesized to be critical to achieving the relevant outcomes) and describes the theoretical and operational relationships among the key project components and relevant outcomes.\n\nMinor remodeling  means minor alterations in a previously completed facilities project. The term also includes the extension of utility lines, such as water and electricity, from points beyond the confines of the space in which the minor remodeling is undertaken but within the confines of the previously completed facility. The term may also include related designs and drawings for these projects. The term does not include construction or renovation, structural alterations to buildings, facilities maintenance, or repairs.\n\nModerate evidence  means evidence of effectiveness of a key project component in improving a relevant outcome for a sample that overlaps with the populations or settings proposed to receive that component, based on a relevant finding from one of the following:\n\n(i) A practice guide prepared by the WWC using version 2.1, 3.0, 4.0, 4.1, or 5.0 of the WWC Handbooks reporting \u201cstrong evidence\u201d or \u201cmoderate evidence\u201d for the corresponding practice guide recommendation;\n\n(ii) An intervention report prepared by the WWC using version 2.1, 3.0, 4.0, 4.1, or 5.0 of the WWC Handbooks reporting \u201cTier 1 strong evidence\u201d of effectiveness or \u201cTier 2 moderate evidence\u201d of effectiveness or a \u201cpositive effect\u201d on a relevant outcome based on a sample including at least 20 students or other individuals from more than one site (such as a State, county, city, local educational agency (LEA), school, or postsecondary campus), or a \u201cpotentially positive effect\u201d on a relevant outcome based on a sample including at least 350 students or other individuals from more than one site (such as a State, county, city, LEA, school, or postsecondary campus), with no reporting of a \u201cnegative effect\u201d or \u201cpotentially negative effect\u201d on a relevant outcome; or\n\n(iii) A single experimental study or quasi-experimental design study reviewed and reported by the WWC most recently using version 2.1, 3.0, 4.0, 4.1, or 5.0 of the WWC Handbooks, or otherwise assessed by the Department using version 5.0 of the WWC Handbook, as appropriate, and that\u2014\n\n(A) Meets WWC standards with or without reservations;\n\n(B) Includes at least one statistically significant and positive ( i.e.,  favorable) effect on a relevant outcome;\n\n(C) Includes no overriding statistically significant and negative effects on relevant outcomes reported in the study or in a corresponding WWC intervention report prepared under version 2.1, 3.0, 4.0, 4.1, or 5.0 of the WWC Handbooks; and\n\n(D) Is based on a sample from more than one site (such as a State, county, city, LEA, school, or postsecondary campus) and includes at least 350 students or other individuals across sites. Multiple studies of the same project component that each meet the requirements in paragraphs (iii)(A) through (C) of this definition may together satisfy the requirement in this paragraph (iii)(D).\n\nNational level  means the level of scope or effectiveness of a project component that is able to be effective in a wide variety of communities, including rural and urban areas, as well as groups with different characteristics (such as socioeconomic status, race, ethnicity, gender, disability, language, and migrant status), populations, and settings.\n\nNonprofit,  as applied to an agency, organization, or institution, means that it is owned and operated by one or more corporations or associations whose net earnings do not benefit, and cannot lawfully benefit, any private shareholder or entity.\n\nNonpublic,  as applied to an agency, organization, or institution, means that the agency, organization, or institution is nonprofit and is not under Federal or public supervision or control.\n\nPeer-reviewed scholarly publication  means a final peer-reviewed manuscript accepted for publication, that arises from research funded, either fully or partially, by Federal funds awarded through a Department-managed grant, contract, or other agreement. A final peer-reviewed manuscript is defined as an author's final manuscript of a peer-reviewed scholarly paper accepted for publication, including all modifications resulting from the peer review process. The final peer-reviewed manuscript is not the same as the final published article, which is defined as a publisher's authoritative copy of the paper including all modifications from the publishing peer review process, copyediting, stylistic edits, and formatting changes. However, the content included in both the final peer-reviewed manuscript and the final published article, including all findings, tables, and figures should be identical.\n\nPerformance measure  means any quantitative indicator, statistic, or metric used to gauge program or project performance.\n\nPerformance target  means a level of performance that an applicant would seek to meet during the course of a project or as a result of a project.\n\nPreschool  means the educational level from a child's birth to the time at which the State provides elementary education.\n\nPrivate,  as applied to an agency, organization, or institution, means that it is not under Federal or public supervision or control.\n\nProject  means the activity described in an application.\n\nProject component  means an activity, strategy, intervention, process, product, practice, or policy included in a project. Evidence may pertain to an individual project component or to a combination of project components ( e.g.,  training teachers on instructional practices for English learners and follow-on coaching for these teachers).\n\nProject period  means the period established in the award document during which Federal sponsorship begins and ends (See, 2 CFR 200.1  Period of performance).\n\nPromising evidence  means evidence of the effectiveness of a key project component in improving a relevant outcome, based on a relevant finding from one of the following:\n\n(i) A practice guide prepared by the WWC reporting \u201cstrong evidence\u201d, \u201cmoderate evidence\u201d, or \u201cpromising evidence\u201d for the corresponding practice guide recommendation;\n\n(ii) An intervention report prepared by the WWC reporting \u201cTier 1 strong evidence\u201d of effectiveness, or \u201cTier 2 moderate evidence\u201d of effectiveness, or \u201cTier 3 promising evidence\u201d of effectiveness, or a \u201cpositive effect,\u201d or \u201cpotentially positive effect\u201d on a relevant outcome, with no reporting of a \u201cnegative effect\u201d or \u201cpotentially negative effect\u201d on a relevant outcome; or\n\n(iii) A single study assessed by the Department, as appropriate, that\u2014\n\n(A) Is an experimental study, a quasi-experimental design study, or a well-designed and well-implemented correlational study with statistical controls for selection bias (such as a study using regression methods to account for differences between a treatment group and a comparison group);\n\n(B) Includes at least one statistically significant and positive ( i.e.,  favorable) effect on a relevant outcome; and\n\n(C) Includes no overriding statistically significant and negative effects on relevant outcomes reported in the study or in a corresponding WWC intervention report.\n\nPublic,  as applied to an agency, organization, or institution, means that the agency, organization, or institution is under the administrative supervision or control of a government other than the Federal Government.\n\nQuality data  encompasses utility, objectivity, and integrity of the information. \u201cUtility\u201d refers to how the data will be used, either for its intended use or other uses. \u201cObjectivity\u201d refers to data being accurate, complete, reliable, and unbiased. \u201cIntegrity\u201d refers to the protection of data from being manipulated.\n\nQuasi-experimental design study  means a study using a design that attempts to approximate an experimental study by identifying a comparison group that is similar to the treatment group in important respects. This type of study, depending on design and implementation ( e.g.,  establishment of baseline equivalence of the groups being compared), can meet WWC standards with reservations, but cannot meet WWC standards without reservations, as described in the WWC Handbooks.\n\nRegional level  means the level of scope or effectiveness of a project component that is able to serve a variety of communities within a State or multiple States, including rural and urban areas, as well as groups with different characteristics (such as socioeconomic status, race, ethnicity, gender, disability, language, and migrant status). For an LEA-based project, to be considered a regional-level project, a project component must serve students in more than one LEA, unless the project component is implemented in a State in which the State educational agency is the sole educational agency for all schools.\n\nRelevant outcome  means the student outcome(s) or other outcome(s) the key project component is designed to improve, consistent with the specific goals of the program.\n\nScientific data  include the recorded factual material commonly accepted in the scientific community as of sufficient quality to validate and replicate research findings. Such scientific data do not include laboratory notebooks, preliminary analyses, case report forms, drafts of scientific papers, plans for future research, peer reviews, communications with colleagues, or physical objects and materials, such as laboratory specimens, artifacts, or field notes.\n\nSecondary school  means a day or residential school that provides secondary education as determined under State law. In the absence of State law, the Secretary may determine, with respect to that State, whether the term includes education beyond the twelfth grade.\n\nSecretary  means the Secretary of the Department of Education or an official or employee of the Department acting for the Secretary under a delegation of authority.\n\nService function,  with respect to a local educational agency:\n\n(i) Means an educational service that is performed by a legal entity\u2014such as an intermediate agency:\n\n(A)( 1 ) Whose jurisdiction does not extend to the whole State; and\n\n( 2 ) That is authorized to provide consultative, advisory, or educational services to public elementary or secondary schools; or\n\n(B) That has regulatory functions over agencies having administrative control or direction of public elementary or secondary schools.\n\n(ii) The term does not include a service that is performed by a cultural or educational resource.\n\nState  means any of the 50 States, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia, Guam, American Samoa, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.\n\nState educational agency  means the State board of education or other agency or officer primarily responsible for the supervision of public elementary and secondary schools in a State. In the absence of this officer or agency, it is an officer or agency designated by the Governor or State law.\n\nStrong evidence  means evidence of the effectiveness of a key project component in improving a relevant outcome for a sample that overlaps with the populations and settings proposed to receive that component, based on a relevant finding from one of the following:\n\n(i) A practice guide prepared by the WWC using version 2.1, 3.0, 4.0, 4.1, or 5.0 of the WWC Handbooks reporting \u201cstrong evidence\u201d for the corresponding practice guide recommendation;\n\n(ii) An intervention report prepared by the WWC using version 2.1, 3.0, 4.0, 4.1, or 5.0 of the WWC Handbooks reporting \u201cTier 1 strong evidence\u201d of effectiveness or a \u201cpositive effect\u201d on a relevant outcome based on a sample including at least 350 students or other individuals across more than one site (such as a State, county, city, local educational agency (LEA), school, or postsecondary campus), with no reporting of a \u201cnegative effect\u201d or \u201cpotentially negative effect\u201d on a relevant outcome; or\n\n(iii) A single experimental study reviewed and reported by the WWC most recently using version 2.1, 3.0, 4.0, 4.1, or 5.0 of the WWC Handbooks, or otherwise assessed by the Department using version 5.0 of the WWC Handbook, as appropriate, and that\u2014\n\n(A) Meets WWC standards without reservations;\n\n(B) Includes at least one statistically significant and positive ( i.e.,  favorable) effect on a relevant outcome;\n\n(C) Includes no overriding statistically significant and negative effects on relevant outcomes reported in the study or in a corresponding WWC intervention report prepared under version 2.1, 3.0, 4.0, 4.1, or 5.0 of the WWC Handbooks; and\n\n(D) Is based on a sample from more than one site (such as a State, county, city, LEA, school, or postsecondary campus) and includes at least 350 students or other individuals across sites. Multiple studies of the same project component that each meet the requirements in paragraphs (iii)(A) through (C) of this definition may together satisfy the requirement in this paragraph (iii)(D).\n\nSubgrant  means an award of financial assistance in the form of money, or property in lieu of money, made under a grant by a grantee to an eligible subgrantee. The term includes financial assistance when provided by contractual or any other form of legal agreement, but does not include procurement purchases, nor does it include any form of assistance that is excluded from the definitions of \u201cGrant or Award\u201d in this part (See 2 CFR 200.92, \u201cSubaward\u201d).\n\nSubgrantee  means the government or other legal entity to which a subgrant is awarded and that is accountable to the grantee for the use of the funds provided.\n\nWhat Works Clearinghouse (WWC) Handbooks (WWC Handbooks)  means the standards and procedures set forth in the WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Version 5.0, or in the WWC Standards Handbook, Version 4.0 or 4.1, or in the WWC Procedures Handbook, Version 4.0 or 4.1, the WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Version 3.0 or Version 2.1 (all incorporated by reference; see \u00a7 77.2). Study findings eligible for review under WWC standards can meet WWC standards without reservations, meet WWC standards with reservations, or not meet WWC standards. WWC practice guides and intervention reports include findings from systematic reviews of evidence as described in the WWC Handbooks documentation.\n\nWork of art  means an item that is incorporated into a facility primarily because of its aesthetic value."], ["34:34:1.1.1.1.23.0.113.2", 34, "Education", "", "", "77", "PART 77\u2014DEFINITIONS THAT APPLY TO DEPARTMENT REGULATIONS", "", "", "", "\u00a7 77.2 Incorporation by reference.", "ED", "", "", "[89 FR 70343, Aug. 29, 2024]", "Certain material is incorporated by reference into this part with the approval of the Director of the Federal Register under 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR part 51. All approved incorporation by reference (IBR) material is available for inspection at the Department of Education (the Department) and the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). Contact the Department at: Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance, 550 12th Street SW, PCP-4158, Washington, DC, 20202-5900; phone: (202) 245-6940; email:  Contact.WWC@ed.gov . For information on the availability of this material at NARA, visit  www.archives.gov/federal-register/cfr/ibr-locations  or email  fr.inspection@nara.gov . The following material may be obtained from Institute of Education Sciences, 550 12th Street SW, Washington, DC, 20202; phone: (202) 245-6940; website:  http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/Handbooks .\n\n(a) What Works Clearinghouse Procedures and Standards Handbook, WWC 2022008REV, Version 5.0, August 2022; Revised December 2022; IBR approved for \u00a7 77.1.\n\n(b) What Works Clearinghouse Standards Handbook, Version 4.1, January 2020, IBR approved for \u00a7 77.1.\n\n(c) What Works Clearinghouse Procedures Handbook, Version 4.1, January 2020, IBR approved for \u00a7 77.1.\n\n(d) What Works Clearinghouse Standards Handbook, Version 4.0, October 2017, IBR approved for \u00a7 77.1.\n\n(e) What Works Clearinghouse Procedures Handbook, Version 4.0, October 2017, IBR approved for \u00a7 77.1.\n\n(f) What Works Clearinghouse Procedures and Standards Handbook, Version 3.0, March 2014, IBR approved for \u00a7 77.1.\n\n(g) What Works Clearinghouse Procedures and Standards Handbook, Version 2.1, September 2011, IBR approved for \u00a7 77.1."]], "truncated": false, "filtered_table_rows_count": 2, "expanded_columns": [], "expandable_columns": [], "columns": ["section_id", "title_number", "title_name", "chapter", "subchapter", "part_number", "part_name", "subpart", "subpart_name", "section_number", "section_heading", "agency", "authority", "source_citation", "amendment_citations", "full_text"], "primary_keys": ["section_id"], "units": {}, "query": {"sql": "select section_id, title_number, title_name, chapter, subchapter, part_number, part_name, subpart, subpart_name, section_number, section_heading, agency, authority, source_citation, amendment_citations, full_text from cfr_sections where \"part_number\" = :p0 and \"title_number\" = :p1 order by section_id limit 101", "params": {"p0": "77", "p1": "34"}}, "facet_results": {"title_number": {"name": "title_number", "type": "column", "hideable": false, "toggle_url": "/openregs/cfr_sections.json?part_number=77&title_number=34", "results": [{"value": 34, "label": 34, "count": 2, "toggle_url": "https://www.pawtectors.org/openregs/cfr_sections.json?part_number=77", "selected": true}], "truncated": false}, "agency": {"name": "agency", "type": "column", "hideable": false, "toggle_url": "/openregs/cfr_sections.json?part_number=77&title_number=34", "results": [{"value": "ED", "label": "ED", "count": 2, "toggle_url": "https://www.pawtectors.org/openregs/cfr_sections.json?part_number=77&title_number=34&agency=ED", "selected": false}], "truncated": false}, "part_number": {"name": "part_number", "type": "column", "hideable": false, "toggle_url": "/openregs/cfr_sections.json?part_number=77&title_number=34", "results": [{"value": "77", "label": "77", "count": 2, "toggle_url": "https://www.pawtectors.org/openregs/cfr_sections.json?title_number=34", "selected": true}], "truncated": false}}, "suggested_facets": [], "next": null, "next_url": null, "private": false, "allow_execute_sql": true, "query_ms": 849.8125080368482, "source": "Federal Register API & Regulations.gov API", "source_url": "https://www.federalregister.gov/developers/api/v1", "license": "Public Domain (U.S. Government data)", "license_url": "https://www.regulations.gov/faq"}