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WASHINGTON STATE LEGISLATIVE HISTORY and ADMINISTRATIVE LAW RESEARCH Bridge the Legal Research Gap 2008 Mary Whisner & Cheryl Nyberg
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What’s coming … Exposure to Washington legislative history and administrative law research Why not all the details? –Tedious, time-consuming –Will only make sense to you when you’re doing it for real
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Why? Legislative history –Important tool of statutory construction –Common assignment for externs and summer associations Administrative law –Hey it’s the law –Affects many areas
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How a Bill Becomes Law Introduced (House or Senate)– first reading Referred to committee Committee holds hearings Committee recommends action Referred to Rules Committee
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Second reading – debate on merits Third reading – roll call vote on final passage Sent to second house (repeat all the steps above) To governor (approve, veto, partial veto)
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Elements of Legislative History Language of session law Committee reports Debate on House and Senate floor Sequential versions of the bill Hearings
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Problem: A new law in Washington provides penalties for harassment of a guide dog. It is called Layla’s law. Why was it enacted? Why is it called Layla’s law? Why did the National Federation of the Blind oppose this legislation?
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Internet Sources Find This Law: –Start with RCW sectionRCW section –Read session law (ch. 112)ch. 112 Bill information for 2001 SB 5942SB 5942
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Internet (cont.) Read Committee Reports House and Senate Journals (floor action) –Not online before ‘05; in print Committee hearings on TVWTVW Who was Layla? How can we find out? –http://seattletimes.nwsource.comhttp://seattletimes.nwsource.com
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Paper The legislature’s online materials only go back to 1997. But you’ll often care about statutes that were enacted before then. Buck up: it’s not that bad. Remember: the research guide will help!
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Print Process: RCW to session law to bill number Versions of bill Final Legislative Report Legislative Digest and History of Bills House and Senate Journals Olympia: archives, tapes
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Final Legislative Report Full pages here.here
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Legislative Digest and History of Bills
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Legis. Digest cont.
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Senate Journal
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Polygon NW Co., 2008 WL 921390 (Wash. App.) Our costs statute, RCW 4.84.010, * * * does not include an award of reasonable attorney fees. * * * Indeed, the legislative history of that statute indicates that reasonable attorney fees were specifically omitted. See SENATE JOURNAL * * * (“* * * They would not get reasonable attorneys' fees.”).RCW 4.84.010
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Legislative History Research - Tips Find an article, book chapter, court opinion, or brief that cites legislative history Determine time to spend on project and weigh the likelihood of success Use legislature’s site, not WL or LN
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Administrative Law
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A Two-Headed Beast 1. Rules & regulations are quasi-legislative 2. Decisions & orders are quasi-judicial
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Rules & Regulations Issued by executive branch & independent agencies Under statutory authority (specific or general)specific general Have the force of law
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Sources Washington State Register –Chronological –Proposed & final regulations Washington Administrative Code (WAC) –In-force regulations –Arranged by agency
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Free Online
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Commercial Services LexisNexis WASH;WAADMN, current WASH;WAREGS, WAC and State Register combined Westlaw WA-ADC
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History of a Regulation Noted at the end of each section Refer back to the State Register
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Administrative Decisions Apply law to specific parties –Professional & occupational licensing –Workers’ compensation Have the force of law Subject to further administrative and/or judicial review
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Availability Internet LexisNexis or Westlaw Print
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Commercial Services
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Tips & Shortcuts Agency websites Practice materials CLEs
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Gallagher Law Library University of Washington School of Law Box 353025 Seattle WA 98195-3025 http://lib.law.washington.edu We are happy to have our guides used by other libraries, librarians, and legal researchers. Before copying or adapting one of our guides, please contact Cheryl Nyberg (cnyberg at u.washington.edu) to obtain permission. Then give appropriate attribution, such as: "Adapted from a guide by Mary Whisner at the Gallagher Law Library website."
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