Regulatory Reform


Book Description




Regulatory Reform


Book Description

On March 29, 1996, Congress passed the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA) to strengthen the Regulatory Flexibility Act's (RFA) protections for small entities. Among other things, SBREFA requires that, before publishing a notice of proposed rulemaking that may have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities, the EPA & OSHA are to convene a small business advocacy review panel for the draft rule. This report examines EPA's & OSHA's implementation of SBREFA's advocacy review panel requirements.










Regulatory reform compliance guide requirement has had little effect on agency practices.


Book Description

Section 212 does not appear to have had much of an impact in the agencies and years that we examined, and its implementation has varied across and sometimes within the agencies. The statute gives agencies broad discretion to decide which of their rules require compliance guides, what has to be in the guides, how they are developed, when they have to be published, and how they are distributed to affected small entities. Using that discretion, an agency could legally exclude all of its rules from coverage by the statute, designate a previously published document as its small entity compliance guide, or develop and publish a guide with no input from small entities years after the covered rule takes effect. Some of the ineffectiveness and inconsistency in the implementation of section 212 are traceable to the broad discretion provided to agencies in the RFA regarding the term significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. Although a single, rigid definition of this term may not be feasible, we believe that some additional clarity can be provided. Other problems with the compliance guide requirement are traceable to section 212 itself. We offer suggestions on how Congress may wish to amend the statute to make clear when agencies must prepare a compliance guide under section 212 and the meaning of key terms in the statute.




Regulatory Flexibility Improvements Act


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Regulatory Reform from Nixon to Biden


Book Description

This book examines the development of regulatory policy since the 1960s, focusing on how each president, from Nixon to Biden, stimulated reform. Highlighting the increasingly dominant role of the president in the modern administrative state, John D. Graham presents a regulatory reform agenda for Congress, the executive branch, and the judiciary.