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 305.83-2
s 305.83-2 The "Good
Cause" Exemption from APA Rulemaking Requirements
(Recommendation No. 83-2).
The Administrative
Procedure Act (APA) provides for public
participation in agency rulemaking. The Act's
minimum requirements for informal rulemaking are
notice and an opportunity to comment on proposed
rules. The advantages of public participation in
agency rulemaking are widely recognized: the agency
benefits because interested persons are encouraged
to submit information the agency needs to make its
decision; the public benefits for an opportunity to
participate in shaping the final agency action.
Congress recognized, however, that in some
situations the normal public participation
procedures should not be required. Consequently,
the APA contains a number of exemptions, including
a "good cause" exemption which allows agencies to
dispense with notice and comment if those
procedures are "impracticable, unnecessary, or
contrary to the public interest." [FN2]
[FN2] 5 U.S.C.
553(b)(3)(B). The Administrative Conference has
already addressed other exemptions from
notice-and-comment rulemaking procedure:
Recommendation 69-8 (proprietary matters);
Recommendation 73-5 (military and foreign affairs
functions), and Recommendation 76-5 (interpretive
rules and statements of general policy).
Experience has confirmed
the need for a "good cause" exemption from the
APA's notice and comment requirements. The
situations in which the exemption is invoked are
diverse, and it is not feasible to identify them
all in advance. Some recurring examples of the
types of situations requiring use of the exemption
are those in which (1) advance notice of rulemaking
will defeat the regulatory objective, (2) immediate
action is necessary to reduce or avoid health
hazards or imminent harm to persons or property,
(3) immediate action is required to prevent serious
dislocation in the marketplace, and (4) delay in
promulgation will cause an injurious inconsistency
between an agency rule and a newly enacted statute
or judicial decision. A survey of court opinions in
cases involving challenges to agency invocation of
the good cause exemption shows that agencies
generally have used the exemption with due regard
to Congress' admonition that exemptions from
section 553 requirements be construed narrowly.
However, experience with
good cause exemption also underscores the value of
public participation in rulemaking. The risk of
error is heightened when an agency acts summarily,
and some rules promulgated under the good cause
exemption have been based on faulty or inadequate
information and have produced unanticipated and
undesirable effects. Public participation probably
would have led to better decisions in these cases,
and it might also have increased interested
persons' perceptions of the fairness of the
rulemaking process as well as their acceptance of
the rule.
The Administrative
Conference's study of the good cause exemption
coincides with a reexamination of the exemption by
the Congress. In the 97th Congress, the Senate
passed a regulatory reform bill (S. 1080) that,
among other things, would have amended the good
cause exemption as follows: except for rules having
an insignificant impact, an agency invoking the
good cause exemption would be required to comply
with public participation requirements to the
maximum extent feasible prior to promulgation and
to fully comply after promulgation. A bill
introduced in the House of Representatives in the
98th Congress (H.R. 1776) would make rules adopted
under the good cause exemption interim rules that
cease to be effective unless replaced by permanent
rules within a prescribed period of time.
The Administrative
Conference recommends that agencies provide a post-
promulgation comment opportunity for rules they
adopt under the good cause exemption. This
opportunity should be provided whether the agency
invokes the exemption on its own initiative or in
response to a statutory or judicial requirement.
The post-promulgation comment opportunity will give
interested persons a chance to expose any errors or
oversights that occurred in the formulation of the
rule and to present policy arguments for changing
the rule. The agency should publish a response to
any relevant and significant comments, as well as
its reasons for changing or not changing the rule
in light of the comments. The responsive statement
should be published within a reasonable time after
receipt of public comments, taking into account the
nature and number of comments and the agency's
other responsibilities. Of course, the agency's
decision to amend or repeal the rule, or its
decision to deny commenters' requests for changes,
will be judicially reviewable under the APA.
The Conference recommends,
however, that the post-promulgation comment
opportunity not extend to rules for which the
agency determines public procedure to be
"unnecessary," as that term has been interpreted by
courts. Generally, courts have applied the
"unnecessary" ground to rules that are minor or
merely technical amendments in which the public has
little interest; they generally have not upheld its
application to rulemaking involving agency
discretion on matters having a substantial impact
on the public. Finally, in Paragraph 3, the
Conference advises agencies to consider other
measures that might appropriately be employed in
particular rulemakings under the good cause
exemption.
In making this
recommendation, the Conference cautions agencies
against more readily invoking the good cause
exemption on the belief that the post- promulgation
comment opportunity will be an adequate substitute
for the opportunity to comment prior to adoption of
a rule. Comment after promulgation is less likely
to cause an agency to reconsider the basic policy
choices it made in formulating the rule. And even
if the agency does reconsider the basis of the
rule, it may be impossible to reverse the effects
of a rule that is already in place.
Recommendation
1. Agencies adopting rules
under the good cause exemption in the
Administrative Procedure Act should provide
interested persons an opportunity for
post-promulgation comment when the agencies
determine notice and comment prior to adoption is
"impracticable" or "contrary to the public
interest." However, a post-promulgation comment
opportunity should not be required when the agency
determines public procedures are "unnecessary" as
that term has been interpreted by courts reviewing
agency use of the good cause exemption.
2. To implement paragraph
1, agencies should:
a. Publish a notice of the
post-promulgation comment opportunity in the
Federal Register along with the rule and the
agency's statement of reasons for its finding of
good cause;
b. Give interested persons
an appropriate period of time to submit comments on
the rule; and
c. Within a reasonable
time after close of the comment period, publish a
statement in the Federal Register indicating the
agency's adherence to, or plans to change, the rule
and include in the statement a response to
significant and relevant issues raised by the
public comments.
3. In addition to the
post-promulgation comment procedures specified in
paragraph 2, agencies adopting rules under the good
cause exemption should consider:
a. Framing the rule as
narrowly as possible while still accomplishing the
regulatory objective;
b. Using notice and
comment procedure to develop general criteria to be
applied by the agency in foreseeable, recurring
situations that require emergency action;
c. Promulgating the rule
as an interim rule, to be followed by an amended
rule promulgated after complying with notice and
comment requirements; and
d. Taking appropriate
alternative steps to obtain the views of interested
persons before adopting the rule.
4. If Congress amends the
good cause exemption in 5 U.S.C. 553(b), it should
impose requirements no more stringent than are here
recommended.
[48 FR 31181 July 7,
1983]
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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