CODE OF
FEDERAL REGULATIONS
TITLE 1--GENERAL
PROVISIONS
CHAPTER
III--ADMINISTRATIVE CONFERENCE OF THE UNITED
STATES
PART
305--RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE
CONFERENCE OF THE UNITED STATES
1 C.F.R. s 305.77-3
s 305.77-3 Ex parte
Communications in Informal Rulemaking Proceedings
(Recommendation No. 77-3).
In Recommendation 72-5 the
Conference expressed the view that, generally,
agency rulemaking is preferably carried out through
the simple, flexible and efficient procedures of 5
U.S.C. 553. That statute requires publication of
notice of proposed rulemaking and provision of
opportunity for submission of written comments;
additional procedures may be utilized by the
agencies as they deem necessary or appropriate.
Recommendation 72-5 counseled that Congress
ordinarily should not impose mandatory procedural
requirements going beyond those of section 553 in
the absence of special reasons for doing so. In
Recommendation 76-3 the Conference amplified its
1972 recommendation by suggesting ways in which
agencies might usefully supplement the minimum
procedures required by section 553 in appropriate
circumstances.
The primary purposes of
rulemaking procedures under section 553 are to
enhance the agency's knowledge of the subject
matter of the proposed rule and to afford all
interested persons an adequate opportunity to
provide data, views, and arguments with respect to
the agency's proposals and any alternative
proposals of other interested persons. Section 553
procedures, in some instances, also serve to
provide the basis for judicial review. To the
extent consistent with all of these purposes, the
agencies should have broad discretion to fashion
procedures appropriate to the nature and importance
of the issues in the proceeding, in order to make
rules without undue delay or expense. Informal
rulemaking should not be subject to the constraints
of the adversary process. Ease of access to
information and opinions, whether by recourse to
published material, by field research and empirical
studies, by consultation with informed persons, or
by other means, should not be impaired.
While the foregoing
considerations militate against a general
prohibition upon ex parte communications in
rulemaking subject only to section 553, certain
restraints upon such communications may be
desirable. Ex parte communications during the
rulemaking process can give rise to three principal
types of concerns. First, decision makers may be
influenced by communications made privately, thus
creating a situation seemingly at odds with the
widespread demand for open government; second,
significant information may be unavailable to
reviewing courts; and third, interested persons may
be unable to reply effectively to information,
proposals or arguments presented in an ex parte
communication. In the context of section 553
rulemaking, the first two problems can be
alleviated by placing written communications
addressed to a rule proposal in a public file, and
by disclosure of significant oral communications by
means of summaries or other appropriate techniques.
The very nature of such rulemaking, however,
precludes any simple solution to the third
difficulty. The opportunity of interested persons
to reply could be fully secured only by converting
rulemaking proceedings into a species of
adjudication in which such persons were identified,
as parties, and entitled to be, at least
constructively, present when all information and
arguments are assembled in a record. In general
rulemaking, where there may be thousands of
interested persons and where the issues tend to be
broad questions of policy with respect to which
illumination may come from a vast variety of
sources not specifically identifiable, the
constraints appropriate for adjudication are
neither practicable nor desirable.
Recommendation
In rulemaking proceedings
subject only to the procedural requirements of
section 553 of the APA:
1. A general prohibition
applicable to all agencies against the receipt of
private oral or written communications is
undesirable, because it would deprive agencies of
the flexibility needed to fashion rulemaking
procedures appropriate to the issues involved, and
would introduce a degree of formality that would,
at least in most instances, result in procedures
that are unduly complicated, slow and expensive,
and, at the same time, perhaps not conducive to
developing all relevant information.
2. All written
communications addressed to the merits, received
after notice of proposed rulemaking and in its
course, from outside the agency by an agency or its
personnel participating in the decision should be
placed promptly in a file available for public
inspection.
3. Agencies should
experiment in appropriate situations with
procedures designed to disclose oral communications
from outside the agency of significant information
or argument respecting the merits of proposed
rules, made to agency personnel participating in
the decision on the proposed rule, by means of
summaries promptly placed in the public file,
meetings which the public may attend, or other
techniques appropriate to their circumstances. To
the extent that summaries are utilized they
ordinarily should identify the source of the
communications, but need not do so when the
information or argument is cumulative. Except to
the extent the agencies expressly provide, the
provisions of this paragraph and the preceding
paragraph should not be construed to create new
rights to oral proceedings or to extensions of the
periods for comment on proposed rules.
4. An agency may properly
withhold from the public file, and exempt from
requirements for making summaries, information
exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of
Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552.
5. Agencies or the
Congress or the courts might conclude of course
that restrictions on ex parte communications in
particular proceedings or in limited rulemaking
categories are necessitated by considerations of
fairness or the needs of judicial review arising
from special circumstances.
[42 FR 54253, Oct. 5,
1977]
Authority: 5 U.S.C.
591-596.
SOURCE: 38 FR 19782, July
23, 1973; 57 FR 61760, 61768, Dec. 29, 1992, unless
otherwise noted.
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