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 305.82-4
s 305.82-4 Procedures for
Negotiating Proposed Regulations (Recommendation
No. 82-4).
The complexity of
government regulation has increased greatly
compared to that which existed when the
Administrative procedure Act was enacted, and this
complexity has been accompanied by a formalization
of the rulemaking process beyond the brief,
expeditious notice and comment procedures
envisioned by section 553 of the APA. Procedures in
addition to notice and comment may, in some
instances, provide important safeguards against
arbitrary or capricious decisions by agencies and
help ensure that agencies develop sound factual
bases for the exercise of the discretion entrusted
them by Congress, but the increased formalization
of the rulemaking process has also had adverse
consequences. The participants, including the
agency, tend to develop adversarial relationships
with each other causing them to take extreme
positions, to withhold information from one
another, and to attack the legitimacy of opposing
positions. Because of the adversarial
relationships, participants often do not focus on
creative solutions to problems, ranking of the
issues involved in a rulemaking, or the important
details involved in a rule. Extensive factual
records are often developed beyond what is
necessary. Long periods of delay result and
participation in rulemaking proceedings can become
needlessly expensive. Moreover, many participants
perceive their roles in the rulemaking proceeding
more as positioning themselves for the subsequent
judicial review than as contributing to a solution
on the merits at the administrative level. Finally,
many participants remain dissatisfied with the
policy judgments made at the outcome of rulemaking
proceedings.
Participants in rulemaking
rarely meet as a group with each other and with the
agency to communicate their respective views so
that each can react directly to the concerns and
positions of the others in an effort to resolve
conflicts. Experience indicates that if the parties
in interest were to work together to negotiate the
text of a proposed rule, they might be able in some
circumstances to identify the major issues, gauge
their importance to the respective parties,
identify the information and data necessary to
resolve the issues, and develop a rule that is
acceptable to the respective interests, all within
the contours of the substantive statute. For
example, highly technical standards are negotiated
that have extensive health, safety, and economic
effects; lawsuits challenging rules are regularly
settled by agreement on a negotiated rule; public
law litigation involves sensitive negotiation over
rule-like issues; and many environmental disputes
and policies have been successfully negotiated.
These experiences can be drawn upon in certain
rulemaking contexts to provide procedures by which
affected interests and the agency might participate
directly in the development of the text of a
proposed rule through negotiation and
mediation.
The Federal Advisory
Committee Act (FACA) has, however, dampened
administrative enthusiasm for attempts to build on
experience with successful negotiations. Without
proposing a general revision of FACA, the
Administrative Conference urges that Congress amend
the Act to facilitate the use of the negotiating
procedures contemplated in this recommendation.
The suggested procedures
provide a mechanism by which the benefits of
negotiation could be achieved while providing
appropriate safeguards to ensure that affected
interests have the opportunity to participate, that
the resulting rule is within the discretion
delegated by Congress, and that it is not arbitrary
or capricious. The premise of the recommendation is
that provision of opportunities and incentives to
resolve issues during rulemaking, through
negotiations, will result in an improved process
and better rules. Such rules would likely be more
acceptable to affected interests because of their
participation in the negotiations. The purpose of
this recommendation is to establish a supplemental
rulemaking procedure that can be used in
appropriate circumstances to permit the direct
participation of affected interests in the
development of proposed rules. This procedure
should be viewed as experimental, and should be
reviewed after it has been used a reasonable number
of times.
RECOMMENDATION
1. Agencies should
consider using regulatory negotiation, as described
in this recommendation, as a means of drafting for
agency consideration the text of a proposed
regulation. A proposal to establish a regulatory
negotiating group could be made either by the
agency (for example, in an advance notice of
proposed rulemaking) or by the suggestion of any
interested person.
2. Congress should
facilitate the regulatory negotiation process by
passing legislation explicitly authorizing agencies
to conduct rulemaking proceedings in the manner
described in this recommendation. This authority,
to the extent that it enlarges existing agency
rulemaking authority, should be viewed as an
experiment in improving rulemaking procedures.
Accordingly, the legislation should contain a
sunset provision. The legislation should provide
substantial flexibility for agencies to adapt
negotiation techniques to the circumstances of
individual proceedings, as contemplated in this
recommendation, free of the restrictions of the
Federal Advisory Committee Act and any ex parte
limitations. Legislation should provide that
information tendered to such groups, operating in
the manner proposed, should not be considered an
agency record under the Freedom of Information
Act.
3. In legislation
authorizing regulatory negotiation, Congress should
authorize agencies to designate a "convenor" to
organize the negotiations in a particular
proceeding. The convenor should be an individual,
government agency, or private organization, neutral
with respect to the regulatory policy issues under
consideration. If the agency chooses an individual
who is an employee of the agency itself, that
person should not be associated with either the
rulemaking or enforcement staff. The convenor would
be responsible for (i) advising the agency as to
whether, in a given proceeding, regulatory
negotiation is feasible and is likely to be
conducive to the fairer and more efficient conduct
of the agency's regulatory program, and (ii)
determining, in consultation with the agency, who
should participate in the negotiations.
4. An agency considering
use of regulatory negotiation should select and
consult with a convenor at the earliest practicable
time about the feasibility of its use. The convenor
should conduct a preliminary inquiry to determine
whether a regulatory negotiating group should be
empanelled to develop a proposed rule relating to
the particular topic. The convenor should consider
the risks that negotiation procedures would
increase the likelihood of a consensus proposal
that would limit output, raise prices, restrict
entry, or otherwise establish or support
unreasonable restraints on competition. Other
factors bearing on this decision include the
following:
(a) The issues to be
raised in the proceeding should be mature and ripe
for decision. Ideally, there should be some
deadline for issuing the rule, so that a decision
on a rule is inevitable within a relatively fixed
time frame. The agency may also impose a deadline
on the negotiations.
(b) The resolution of
issues should not be such as to require
participants in negotiations to compromise their
fundamental tenets, since it is unlikely that
agreement will be reached in such circumstances.
Rather, issues involving such fundamental tenets
should already have been determined, or not be
crucial to the resolution of the issues involved in
writing the proposed regulation.
(c) The interests
significantly affected should be such that
individuals can be selected who will adequately
represent those interests. Since negotiations
cannot generally be conducted with a large number
of participants, there should be a limited number
of interests that will be significantly affected by
the rule and therefore represented in the
negotiations. A rule of thumb might be that
negotiations should ordinarily involve no more than
15 participants.
(d) There should be a
number of diverse issues that the participants can
rank according to their own priorities and on which
they might reach agreement by attempting to
optimize the return to all the participants.
(e) No single interest
should be able to dominate the negotiations. The
agency's representative in the negotiations will
not be deemed to possess this power solely by
virtue of the agency's ultimate power to promulgate
the final rule.
(f) The participants in
the negotiations should be willing to negotiate in
good faith to draft a proposed rule.
(g) The agency should be
willing to designate an appropriate staff member to
participate as the agency's representative, but the
representative should make clear to the other
participants that he or she cannot bind the
agency.
5. If the convenor
determines that regulatory negotiation would be
appropriate, it would recommend this procedure to
the agency. If the agency and the convenor agree
that regulatory negotiation is appropriate, the
convenor should be responsible for determining
preliminarily the interests that will likely be
substantially affected by a proposed rule, the
individuals that will represent those interests in
negotiations, the scope of issues to be addressed,
and a schedule for completing the work. It will be
important for potential participants to agree among
themselves as to these matters, and their agreement
can be facilitated by either the convenor or a
possible participant conducting a preliminary
inquiry among identified interests. Reasonable
efforts should be made to secure a balanced group
in which no interest has more than a third of the
members and each representative is technically
qualified to address the issues presented, or has
access to qualified individuals.
6. The subject matter of
the proposed regulation may be within the
jurisdiction of an existing committee of a
non-governmental standards writing organization
that has procedures to ensure the fair
representation of the respective interests and a
process for determining whether the decision
actually reflects a consensus among them. If such a
committee exists and appears to enjoy the support
and confidence of the affected interests, the
convenor should consider recommending that
negotiations be conducted under that committee's
auspices instead of establishing an entirely new
framework for negotiations. In such a case, the
existing committee could be regarded as a
regulatory negotiation group for purposes of this
recommendation. (Alternatively, the product of the
committee could be used as the basis of a proposed
regulation pursuant to Administrative Conference
Recommendation 78-4. [FN3])
[FN3] Federal
Agency Interaction with Private Standard-Setting
Organizations in Health and Safety Regulation, 1978
ACUS Recommendations and Reports 13, 1 CFR
305.78-4.
7. To ensure that the
appropriate interest have been identified and have
had the opportunity to be represented in the
negotiating group, the agency should publish in the
FEDERAL REGISTER a notice that it is contemplating
developing a rule by negotiation and indicate in
the notice the issues involved and the participants
and interests already identified. If an additional
person or interest petitions for membership or
representation in the negotiating group, the
convenor, in consultation with the agency, should
determine (i) whether that interest would be
substantially affected by the rule, (ii) if so,
whether it would be represented by an individual
already in the negotiating group, and (iii)
whether, in any event, the petitioner should be
added to the negotiating group, or whether
interests can be consolidated and still provide
adequate representation.
8. The agency should
designate a senior official to represent it in the
negotiations and should identify that official in
the FEDERAL REGISTER notice.
9. It may be that, in
particular proceedings, certain affected interests
will require reimbursement for direct expenses to
be able to participate at a level that will foster
broadly-based, successful negotiations. Unlike
intervenors, the negotiating group will be
performing a function normally performed within the
agency, and the agency should consider reimbursing
the direct expenses of such participants. The
agency should also provide financial or other
support for the convenor and the negotiating group.
Congress should clarify the authority of agencies
to provide such financial resources.
10. The convenor and the
agency might consider whether selection of a
mediator is likely to facilitate the negotiation
process. Where participants lack relevant
negotiating experience, a mediator may be of
significant help in making them comfortable with
the process and in resolving impasses.
11. The goal of the
negotiating group should be to arrive at a
consensus on a proposed rule. Consensus in this
context means that each interest represented in the
negotiating group concurs in the result, unless all
members of the group agree at the outset on another
definition. Following consensus, the negotiating
group should prepare a report to the agency
containing its proposed rule and a concise general
statement of its basis and purpose. The report
should also describe the factual material on which
the group relied in preparing its proposed
regulation, for inclusion in the agency's record of
the proceeding. The participants may, of course, be
unable to reach a consensus on a proposed rule,
and, in that event, they should identify in the
report both the areas in which they are agreed and
the areas in which consensus could not be achieved.
This could serve to narrow the issues in dispute,
identify information necessary to resolve issues,
rank priorities, and identify potentially
acceptable solutions.
12. The negotiating group
should be authorized to close its meeting to the
public only when necessary to protect confidential
data or when, in the judgment of the participants,
the likelihood of achieving consensus would be
significantly enhanced.
13. The agency should
publish the negotiated text of the proposed rule in
its notice of proposed rulemaking. If the agency
does not publish the negotiated text as a proposed
rule, it should explain its reasons. The agency may
wish to propose amendments or modifications to the
negotiated proposed rule, but it should do so in
such a manner that the public at large can identify
the work of the agency and of the negotiating
group.
14. The negotiating group
should be afforded an opportunity to review any
comments that are received in response to the
notice of proposed rulemaking so that the
participants can determine whether their
recommendations should be modified. The final
responsibility for issuing the rule would remain
with the agency.
[47 FR 30708, July 15,
1982]
Authority: 5 U.S.C.
591-596.
SOURCE: 38 FR 19782, July
23, 1973; 57 FR 61760, 61768, Dec. 29, 1992, unless
otherwise noted.
[Previous
Part] [Next
Part]
|