Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge HARRY T. EDWARDS.
Circuit Judge:
This is an appeal from the dismissal of a complaint, grounded in the Federal Advisory Committee Act (“FACA” or “Act"), 5 U.S.C. app. I §§ 1-15 (1976 & Supp. V 1981), challenging the composition and procedures of the Executive Committee of the President’s Private Sector Survey on Cost Control (“Survey”) and three task forces established to assist the Survey in the study of domestic feeding programs for low-income persons. The appellants, the National Anti-Hunger Coalition and two low-income individuals (“Coalition”), argue that the Survey violates several requirements of the FACA. They claim, first, that the composition of the Executive Committee, consisting almost exclusively of executives of large corporations and containing no representatives of the feeding programs under consideration, cannot be squared with the “balanced membership” requirement of the Act. And they contend, second, that the Survey’s task forces are themselves advisory committees whose structure and procedures contravene various provisions of the Act.
We approve the reasoning under which the District Court rejected the appellants’ contentions, and we affirm its decision on the basis of the record on appeal. We note, however, that certain fundamental assumptions underlying the trial court’s decision allegedly have been called into question by new evidence concerning the scope of the Survey’s inquiry and the manner in which its recommendations are formulated. We therefore emphasize that nothing in this decision is intended to foreclose the possibility of further judicial consideration in light of facts not presently before the court on this record.
I
The facts underlying the District Court’s decision are adequately recounted in its opinion,
National Anti-Hunger Coalition v. Executive Committee of the President’s Private Sector Survey on Cost Control,
The final two stages of the Survey’s inquiry, the Government concedes, are subject to the requirements of the FACA, but the applicability of the Act to the earlier stages is hotly disputed. Congress enacted the FACA in 1972 “to control the advisory committee process and to open to public scrutiny the manner in which government agencies obtain advice from private individuals.”
Food Chemical News, Inc. v. Davis,
II
The District Court began its analysis of the Survey’s consistency with the governing principles established by the FACA with the threshold question of standing. Relying heavily on dicta in our recent decision in
Physicians’ Education Network, Inc. v. HEW,
The District Court then turned to the merits of the Coalition’s “balance” claim. Although it recognized that virtually every member of the Executive Committee was an executive of a major corporation and that no public interest representatives or beneficiaries of federal feeding programs had been appointed, the court rejected the challenge to the Committee’s composition because “the function to be performed by the Private Sector Survey is narrow and explicit.”
On the basis of the record before it, the District Court’s conclusion that the Executive Committee’s members represent a fair balance of viewpoints given the functions to be performed is unimpeachable. Although the Coalition argued that the Committee had broadly interpreted its mandate and was considering substantive changes in federal policies and programs, it failed adequately to document this assertion.
Since the time when the District Court rendered its decision, a considerable amount of new evidence, allegedly bearing on the scope of the Survey’s inquiry, has become available. According to the appellants, this evidence, which consists primarily of the reports of several task forces, conclusively demonstrates that the advisory bodies are studying and recommending major programmatic cutbacks in federal feeding programs. As a result, the appellants claim, the District Court’s reasoning now supports their contention that the Executive Committee’s membership is unbalanced. The Government argues, on the other hand, that, while the line between “policy” and “management” is not always a bright one, *1075 the task forces’ recommendations are oriented more to management than to policy. We recognize that the task force reports, whether characterized as “newly discovered evidence” or “changed circumstances,” may bear heavily on the fundamental premise underlying the District Court’s decision, but we cannot conclude that they warrant reversing or vacating its judgment.
As we have previously recognized, “[a]ppellate review is ordinarily unaffected by matters not contained in the record.”
Goland v. CIA,
has no factfinding function. It cannot receive new evidence from the parties, determine where the truth actually lies, and base its decision on that determination. Factfinding and the creation of a record are the functions of the district court; therefore, the consideration of newly-discovered evidence is a matter for the district court. The proper procedure for dealing with newly discovered evidence is for the party to move for relief from the judgment in the district court under rule 60(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Id.; see Weisberg v. U.S. Department of Justice,
This rationale also justifies an affirmance of the District Court’s holding with respect to the task forces. On the basis of the record before it, the court’s characterization of the task forces as the Executive Committee’s “staff” and its conclusion that the task forces are “not providing] advice directly to the President or any agency,”
Ill
For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the District Court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. Accordingly, we reject the Government’s contention that the “fairly balanced” requirement of § 5(b)(2) is not binding on the President. Although we have previously suggested in dicta that the requirement may not be applicable to advisory committees that are not created by legislation,
Physicians’ Educ. Network, Inc. v. HEW,
The Government finds support for its position in the use of the word “guidelines” and the phrase “to the extent they are applicable” in § 5(c). This reliance is misplaced. The term “guidelines” is used in the Act’s legislative history to describe subsection (b), see H.R.Rep. No. 1017, 92d Cong., 2d Sess. 6 (1972), U.S. Code Cong. & Admin.News 1972, 3491, yet the “guidelines” are clearly mandated in the case of congressionally created advisory committees. And § 5(c) provides that these precepts “shall be followed” by the President and agency officials. These factors compel us to reject the contention that § 5(c) should be read as if it stated that “the requirements of § 5(b) shall serve as guidelines for the President.” Congress’ use of the phrase “to the extent they are applicable” also is easily explained: in some cases (i.e., the appropriations provision in § 5(b)(4)), a requirement of § 5(b) is clearly inapplicable to advisory committees created by the President or an agency. But the balanced membership requirement of § 5(b)(2) has clear relevance to all types of advisory committees, and, under the terms of § 5(c), must be followed by the President.
This conclusion, we believe, constitutes no affront to the constitutional authority of the President. The FACA, of course, was not “intended to intrude upon the day-to-day functioning of the presidency or in any way to impede casual, informal contacts by the President or his immediate staff with interested segments of the population or restrict his ability to receive unsolicited views on topics useful to him in carrying out his overall executive and political responsibilities.”
Nader v. Baroody,
. In
Physicians’ Education Network,
we found that the plaintiff lacked standing to challenge the “balance” of an advisory committee because there was no likelihood that the relief requested would redress the complained-of economic injury. But, in the course of doing so, we observed that the plaintiff did “not allege that it sought and was denied participation in the panel’s meetings, or that it sought and was denied representation on the panel itself. Allegations of this kind have been found sufficient in other cases to support standing to invoke the provisions of the [FACA] against an agency.”
As the Government points out, the cases on which we relied in
Physicians’ Education Network
involved attempts to enforce rights conferred by § 10 of the Act; unlike § 10, the Government argues, § 5 confers no specific right on anyone, and a violation of the latter provision does not give rise to an injury-in-fact. In the Government’s view, the appellants’ claim of injury can rest only on the possibility of an ultimate diminution of federal food benefits, and “the asserted harm is speculative and conjectural
in the purest sense." Metcalf v. National Petroleum Council,
Like the District Court, however, we can find “no distinction between requirements under § 5 and requirements under § 10 of the Act” for purposes of standing.
. It has sometimes been suggested that, “[t]o be ‘newly discovered’ [within the meaning of Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b)(2) ], evidence must have been in existence at the time of the trial.”
Goland v. CIA,
. The Supreme Court has held that the filing of an appeal does not affect the right to seek or obtain relief from a judgment under rule 60(b).
Standard Oil Co. v. United States,
. The availability of the rule 60(b) procedure allows us to avoid considering whether this court, in the exercise of its appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 2106 (1976), should remand the case for further proceedings in light of the new facts. Assuming, for the moment, that we possess “ample revisory power under section 2106
in appropriate cases,” Goland v. CIA,
