Chapter 5 Part III. 2 Negotiated Rulemaking What is reg-neg? How do you set it up? Why do it? Do you still have to do notice and comment? How does notice.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 44 Administrative Law Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Advertisements

Agency Drafts Statement of Scope Governor Approves (2) No Agency Drafts: Special Report for rules impacting housing Fiscal Estimate.
The Importance of Transparency in Regulatory Reform WTO Committee on Technical Barriers to Trade, Workshop on Good Regulatory Practice Panel on Internal.
Small Business and the SBA Office of Advocacy – An Overview Bruce Lundegren Assistant Chief Counsel Office of Advocacy U.S. Small Business Administration.
From Cutting Red Tape to Maximizing Net Benefits Alexander T. Hunt U.S. Office of Management and Budget Challenges on Cutting Red Tape Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Sources of Law Chapter 1.2.
Regulatory Paralysis after Business Roundtable A preview of the impact of “regulatory reform” legislation?
Critiques of Regulatory Policy. 2 Regulatory Analysis What is CBA? Why is CBA sometimes very controversial, especially for environmental regulations?
BACWA Wet Weather Management Workshop Spill Notification Requirements Melissa Thorme Downey Brand LLP Sacramento, CA
Air Resources Board Research Division Economic Studies Section.
1 Regulatory Impact Assessment: Methodology and Best Practices David Shortall INMETRO International Workshop on Conformity Assessment Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Cost Benefit Analysis Executive Order RIA for all new regulations Benefits > Costs Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) in OMB 1984-
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 17 Administrativ e Law.
1 Marketing Through State Procurements Elizabeth Haws Connally, Esq. Alston Hunt Floyd & Ing March 9,
Delmar Learning Copyright © 2003 Delmar Learning, a Thomson Learning company Nursing Leadership & Management Patricia Kelly-Heidenthal
Introduction: The Role of Agencies
 Equity and Funding. Historical Timeline 1975 PL
Chapter 14 Public Sector and Policy
Cost-Benefit & Risk Analysis in Public Policy
American Free Enterprise
Sustainable Procurement and Community Benefits Getting ready for Procurement Reform in Scotland Jennifer Marshall.
School Law and the Public Schools: A Practical Guide for Educational Leaders, 5e © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 11 The Instructional.
Technical Regulations – U.S. Procedures and Practices U.S.-Brazil Commercial Dialogue Digital Video Conference Series August 22, 2006 Mary Saunders Chief,
Rulemaking Part II. The Procedures of Notice-and-Comment Rulemaking.
1 Overview of National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)  Objective: Clarify the roles of NEPA and Negotiated Rulemaking Clarify the roles of NEPA and Negotiated.
Agency Drafts Statement of Scope Governor Approves Statement of Scope (2) No Agency Drafts: Special Report for rules impacting housing
Rulemaking. 2 Administrative Rules The Legislature can delegate the power to make rules to the agency Some agencies do not have rulemaking authority Rules.
Chapter 5. 2 Quick Review Chapter 2 – When do you get a hearing? Chapter 3 – Hearing basics Chapter 4 – Hearing Procedure These chapters deal with the.
Benefit-Cost Analysis in Environmental Decision Making Chapter 9 © 2004 Thomson Learning/South-Western.
Implementing the Regulatory Flexibility Act. 2 Background The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601–612) requires Federal agencies to— –Consider the.
Rulemaking Part IV. Ex Parte Communications in Litigation What is an ex parte communication in litigation? Why do we ban them in litigation? If a party.
Chapter 5. 2 Quick Review Chapter 2 When do you get a hearing? Chapter 3 Hearing basics Chapter 4 Hearing Procedure These chapters deal with the agency.
1 EPA’s Climate Change Strategy Robert J. Meyers Principal Deputy Assistant Administrator U.S. EPA, Office of Air and Radiation December 3, 2007.
Rulemaking Part IV. 2 Congressional Mandates (Hybrid Rulemaking) at the FTC issue an advance notice of proposed rulemaking, which describes the area of.
Session 71 Federal Involvement in Risk Assessment and Management is relatively recent.
4. Regulatory Measures and Procedures 1. General measures Include regulations or administrative rules of general applicability aimed at implementing or.
Infrastructure Development Bill [B ] Submission by the Centre for Environmental Rights to Portfolio Committee on Economic Development 14 January.
CHAPTER 5 CONSTITUTIONAL REGULATION OF BUSINESS DAVIDSON, KNOWLES & FORSYTHE Business Law: Cases and Principles in the Legal Environment (8 th Ed.)
© 2004 West Legal Studies in Business, a Division of Thomson Learning 7.1 Chapter 7 Government Regulation: Anatomy and Enforcement of a Regulation.
Rulemaking Part II. 2 Non-APA Requirements APA is only the default if there is no other statutory guidance National Environmental Policy Act imposes requirements.
Rulemaking Part III. 2 What is Formal Rulemaking? A rulemaking conducted as a trial type hearing The agency support for the rule must be presented at.
Chapter 5 Part III. 2 Executive Orders Regulating Rulemaking What is the president's authority over rulemaking? What about for independent agencies? Why.
Chapter 4 Administrative Law Chapter 4: Administrative Law
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 3 Administrative Law.
By Michelle Hoang Period 2 APES April 30, 2012 The Toxic Substances Control Act of 1976.
Rulemaking Part III. 2 Executive Orders Regulating Rulemaking What is the president's authority over rulemaking? What about for independent agencies?
Chapter 5 Constitutional Law.
Chapter Thirteen the bureaucracy.
Rulemaking by APHIS. What is a rule and when must APHIS conduct rulemaking? Under U.S. law, a rule is any requirement of general applicability and future.
Rulemaking Part III. 2 When is Formal Rulemaking Required? Grew out of ratemaking Just like formal adjudications Very time consuming and expensive Courts.
Chapter 2 Part III. Review: Executive Orders Orders from the President to agency heads Sets policy on discretionary decisions Not defined by the Constitution.
Chapter 2 Part II. 2 Tenure of Office Act – 1867 If Congress is silent on removal, the officer serves at the discretion of the President This Act limited.
Overview of Good Regulatory Practice Kent Shigetomi Office of the U.S. Trade Representative.
The Emperor Has No Clothes: Confronting the D.C. Circuit’s Usurpation of SEC Rulemaking Authority By James D. Cox & Benjamin J.C. Baucom Washington, D.C.
Chapter 5 Part III. 2 Executive Orders Regulating Rulemaking What is the president's authority over rulemaking? What about for independent agencies? Why.
The American Experience in Regulatory Review and Reform Dominic J. Mancini, PhD. Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs U.S. Office of Management.
Chapter 7 Part III. Inferring Tenure What is the assumption if there is no term of office? If there is no term of office, the starting assumption is that.
Chapter 3 Administrative Law Chapter 3: Administrative Law.
Executive Review of Rulemaking
An Overview of the Small Business Advocacy Review Panel Process
Executive Review of Rulemaking
Rulemaking Part II.
U.S. Coast Guard Regulatory Development
Rulemaking Part II.
Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs
Executive Review of Rulemaking
Rulemaking Part III.
Federal Rulemaking Process for Significant Regulatory Actions
Equity and Funding.
Shannon Joyce and Christine Kymn
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 5 Part III

2 Negotiated Rulemaking What is reg-neg? How do you set it up? Why do it? Do you still have to do notice and comment? How does notice and comment prevent the agency from being bound by reg-neg agreements? What is the representation problem in reg-neg? Who got left out in the woodstove reg-neg? Why?

3 Executive Orders What is an executive order? Do they require notice and comment? What if the agency needs a rule to make the change?

4 Federal Executive Orders and 9/11 How does the country respond to disasters that are not anticipated in statutes or regulations? What can the president do through executive orders, without statutory authorization? Homeland Security

5 SARS and Bioterrorism What can the state do in an emergency such as a SARS epidemic? How does the specificity or generality of statutory authority affect this?

6 State Executive Orders - What are the Real Limits on State Action? What would we need to do? Who is going to do it? What is going to pay for it Who is going to get sued for it?

7 Regulatory Analysis What is CBA? Why is CBA sometimes very controversial, especially for environmental regulations? What is the value of regulatory analysis?

8 Cost-benefit and Risk-benefit analysis What is Justice Breyer's tunnel vision problem? What was his environmental law example and why does it matter? The cost of removing the last 5% of crap What about asbestos and brown fields? High tech medicine v. basic preventive medicine

9 What are areas where CBA can have adverse effects? Do the costs and benefits always fall on the same group? How does the diffuse and long term nature of benefits complicate CBA? Should we use CBA for health regulations?

10 Following slides are moved to chapter 7, part III.

11 Acronyms OMB - Office of Management and Budget OIRA - Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs

12 Executive Order OIRA must review rules that have an impact of more than 100M aggregate or substantial impact on a segment of the economy or any thing else.

13 The Regulatory Philosophy Federal agencies should promulgate only such regulations as are required by law, are necessary to interpret the law, or are made necessary by compelling public need, such as material failures of private markets to protect or improve the health and safety of the public, the environment, or the well-being of the American people. In deciding whether and how to regulate, agencies should assess all costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives, including the alternative of not regulating.

14 CBA under Costs and benefits shall be understood to include both quantifiable measures (to the fullest extent that these can be usefully estimated) and qualitative measures of costs and benefits that are difficult to quantify, but nevertheless essential to consider. Further, in choosing among alternative regulatory approaches, agencies should select those approaches that maximize net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public health and safety, and other advantages; distributive impacts; and equity), unless a statute requires another regulatory approach. Pretty simple? :-)

15 What must the agency provide OIRA - I An assessment, including the underlying analysis, of benefits anticipated from the regulatory action (such as, but not limited to, the promotion of the efficient functioning of the economy and private markets, the enhancement of health and safety, the protection of the natural environment, and the elimination or reduction of discrimination or bias) together with, to the extent feasible, a quantification of those benefits;

16 What must the agency provide OIRA - II An assessment, including the underlying analysis, of costs anticipated from the regulatory action (such as, but not limited to, the direct cost both to the government in administering the regulation and to businesses and others in complying with the regulation, and any adverse effects on the efficient functioning of the economy, private markets (including productivity, employment, and competitiveness), health, safety, and the natural environment), together with, to the extent feasible, a quantification of those costs;

17 What must the agency provide OIRA - III An assessment, including the underlying analysis, of costs and benefits of potentially effective and reasonably feasible alternatives to the planned regulation, identified by the agencies or the public (including improving the current regulation and reasonably viable nonregulatory actions), and an explanation why the planned regulatory action is preferable to the identified potential alternatives.

18 What are the potential effects on agencies of these mandates? Does this undermine the intent of their enabling laws? How can the president do this without legislation?

and Rulemaking What if the statute says no CBA - can the president impose it anyway? Why is there a special provision for analyzing impact on small businesses?

20 Unfunded Mandates What is an unfunded mandate? How is this stealth regulatory reform? Unfunded Mandates Act of Agency must do a CBA if the costs exceed 100M What would be the impact of banning unfunded mandates? What are the types and impact of unfunded mandates on public schools?

21 End of the chapter!