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E-Rulemaking
Neil Eisner
Assistant General Counsel for
Regulation and Enforcement
January 2003
The Informal Rulemaking Process
The Administrative Procedure
Act (APA) Requirements
Rulemaking
The “agency process for formulating,
amending, or repealing” “an agency
statement of general or particular
applicability and future effect designed
to implement, interpret, or prescribe law
or policy or describing the organization,
procedure, or practice requirements of
an agency….”
Formal Rulemaking
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Used where a statute other than APA
requires rule to “be made on the record
after opportunity for an agency hearing”
Rarely used, except for ratemaking,
food additives, and other limited
categories
Hybrid Rulemaking
Additional statutory requirements-e.g., OSHA, Clean Air Act, FTC
Act. . .
Adjudication
Used to issue an agency’s final disposition “in
a matter other than rulemaking but including
licensing”
Basic Requirements
for Informal Rulemaking
Simple process
ƒ NPRM (proposed rule or alternatives;
often provide data and explanation,
and ask questions)
ƒ Public comments
ƒ Final rule (respond to comments and
provide basis and purpose)
ƒ Exceptions
Docket
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Public Access
Rulemaking and supporting documents
„ Public comments
„ Summaries of Ex Parte communications
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Increasing internet-access
Publication Requirements
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Legislative rules
Must be published in Federal Register or personally
served to have effect
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Interpretative rules, policy statements and
staff manuals
If not published or actual and timely notice is not
provided, must be electronically available before the
agency can rely on them, use them, or cite them as
precedent
Extras
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ANPRM
SNPRM
IFR
Request for comments
Hearings
Second round of comments
Reply comments
Negotiated rulemaking
Other Requirements Make the
Process More Complex
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Substantive and Process Requirements
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Statutes
Executive Orders
Agency Regulations/Orders
Presidential/OMB Memoranda
Court Decisions
What is the Role of the Courts?
(Judicial Review)
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Various statutes impose different standards,
but under APA can challenge a rule because:
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Arbitrary, capricious, abuse of discretion,or illegal
Unconstitutional
In excess of statutory authority
Failed to follow legal procedure
Can also “compel action unlawfully withheld
or unreasonably delayed”
Implementation of Rules
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Guidance/interpretations
Policy statements
Compliance and enforcement activities
„ Training
„ Reporting requirements
„ Inspections
„ Enforcement/adjudication
Reviews of Existing Rules
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Required by statute and Executive Order
Some rules force via sunset dates
Good practice
ƒ Problems not always solved
ƒ Changes in state of the art
ƒ Etc.
ƒ Time consuming
ƒ Public can petition for changes under APA
How Does the Process Work?
Rulemaking Process Proposed Rule
IDENTIFICATION OF NEED
ƒStatutory Mandate
ƒAgency identification of problem
ƒInspector reports/agency
oversight
ƒAccident
ƒEnforcement issues
ƒRequests for interpretation
ƒPetition
ƒChanges in state-of-art
ƒPolicy initiatives
ƒIndependent agency recommendations
ƒEtc.
DEVELOPMENT
ƒAnalysis of alternatives
ƒConsideration of legal authority/ requirements
ƒConsideration of additional actions/rule stage
ƒBriefing of senior Departmental officials,
as appropriate
ƒPreparation of supporting analyses and
rulemaking documents
NONSIGNIFICANT
AGENCY REVIEW
ƒConcurrence of various
initiating office officials
ƒBriefing and coordination with
Departmental officials, as
appropriate
ƒApproval by Administrator (or
designate)
SIGNIFICANT
FEDERAL
REGISTER
DEPARTMENTAL REVIEW
OMB REVIEW
OMB must approve most rulemakings;
review may include other Federal agencies
ƒAppropriate review and approval by
secretarial offices
ƒIn some cases, other parts of
department may review
ƒSecretary must approve
Rulemaking Process - Final Rule
DEVELOPMENT
REVIEW OF
COMMENTS
Including decision whether
to issue final rule, SNPRM, withdraw, etc.
NONSIGNIFICANT
AGENCY REVIEW
SIGNIFICANT
DEPARTMENTAL
REVIEW
FEDERAL REGISTER
OMB
REVIEW
Rulemaking Process
Statute
Need for New
Statute/Rule
Rule
Implementation, etc.
What is E-Rulemaking?
Use of electronic technology to:
„ Provide the public with a more effective way
to participate in decision making
„ Provide agencies with more effective tools to
develop rulemakings and to manage, track,
and coordinate the rulemaking process
„ Provide the public with better access to
information about rules
Why Use E-Rulemaking?
Better access and tools = better participation
and better and more acceptable rules.
Use of E-Rulemaking
in the Process
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Tremendous opportunities
But: Problems
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Lack of budgetary resources
Lack of confidence (e.g., analysis of comments)
Lack of need/desire (e.g., drafting tool)
Need to do better job identifying what the
government employees and the public want/need
The following slides show many current or
planned uses of e-rulemaking
Development of Proposed
Legislation
Identification of Need
Accident Data
Development
Analysis of alternatives
Development
Consideration of Legal Authority/Requirements
Substantive
Authority/Requirements
Procedural Requirements
Development
Preparation of Supporting Analyses and
Rulemaking Documents
Templates
Drafting Assistance
Reviewing , Cutting and
Pasting from Electronic Docket
Agency/Departmental Review
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Coordination
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Within Department
With other agencies (OMB, SBA Advocacy,
Federal Register, etc.)
Tracking/Management
Agency/Departmental Review
Coordination
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Circulation
Agency/Departmental Review
Coordination
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Electronic Commenting and Editing
Agency/Departmental Review
Tracking and Management
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Data
Schedules
Reports
Automatic completion of some fields
Intranet access
Data
Schedule
Reports
Examples of Reports
Future Enhancement
Regulatory Agenda
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Public Information/Status Report
Public Participation
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Docket Records
List Serve
Comment Submission
Chat Rooms/Electronic Public Meetings
Docket Management System (DMS)
Rulemaking Docket
ƒ Centralized, Internet-Accessible,
Electronic Storage System.
ƒ Rulemaking and Supporting Material.
ƒ Public Comment.
ƒ Also used for Adjudicatory Dockets and
Data Quality Records.
ƒ User can electronically search, read, and
submit; can obtain reports and use links.
DMS History
• 1995: Electronic Dockets open.
• 1997: Internet Access.
• 1998: All DOT Agencies on system.
• 1998: Electronic Filing.
• 2002: List Serve.
• 2002: Data Quality Records.
DMS - List of Rulemakings
with Open Comment Periods
DMS - List of Items in
Particular Rulemaking Docket
DMS - Scanned Hard
Copy Submissions
DMS Successes
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Concurrent access to all dockets.
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Internet access (24X7).
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Before DMS, at most, 50-100 people a day would come in to review
records--now, web site receives over 2 million hits a year and over
287,000 users.
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System has over 1.4 million pages available.
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Space requirements cut in half.
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Staff reduced from 24 to 14; yet they have more expertise.
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Saves DOT over $1.3 million annually. Public saves, too.
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Especially valuable with anthrax mail-related problems.
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Improved security
Dockets
Future Enhancements
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Full-text search
Multi-media capabilities
Government-wide rulemaking comment
site/docket
Docket/Internet Access
Problems/Issues
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Signatures
Obscenity
Copyrighted material
Illegally obtained information
Privacy
DMS List Serve
DMS - Electronic
Comment Submission
Chat Room
Rule Implementation
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Guidance, Training and Policy
Electronic reporting
Adjudicatory dockets
Guidance, Training
and Policy
DOT-Wide
Guidance, Training
and Policy
Agency-Specific
Questions and Answers
Guidance, Training
and Policy
DOL: Interactive Site
Registration and Payment of Fees
E-Rulemaking - What’s Needed
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More resources
Better use of resources/more coordination
More “interaction” between proposal and
comment (e.g., a comment submission form with
questions needing answers)
Tools for reviewing/organizing comments (but will
or can it be relied on)
More standard forms (but will they lessen
analysis and remember that one-size does not
always fit all)
What’s Needed - Continued
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More electronic supplements to the comment process
„ Public meetings/hearings
„ Advisory committees
„ Negotiated rulemaking
More links among regulations, statutes, and
interpretations
Better ways for the public to identify proposed and final
rules that apply to them (e.g., more interactive software)
Ways to get more people to participate in the process
and to do it more effectively -- especially small entities
And the list goes on . . . .
Conclusion
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Significant improvements
More needed
But: remember budgetary constraints
and significant differences among
agencies