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 305.86-6
s 305.86-6 Petitions for
Rulemaking (Recommendation No. 86-6).
The Administrative
Procedure Act (APA) requires each federal agency to
give interested persons the right to petition for
the issuance, amendment, or repeal of a rule, 5
U.S.C. s 553(e). The APA also requires that
agencies conclude matters presented to them within
a reasonable time, 5 U.S.C. s 555(b), and give
prompt notice of the denial of actions requested by
interested persons, 5 U.S.C. s 555(e). The APA does
not specify the procedures agencies must follow in
receiving, considering, or disposing of public
petitions for rulemaking. [FN1] However,
agencies are expected to establish and publish such
procedures in accordance with the public
information section of the APA. See Attorney
General's Manual on the Administrative Procedure
Act 38 (1947). An Administrative Conference study
of agency rulemaking petition procedures and
practices found that while most agencies with
rulemaking power have established some procedures
governing petitions for rulemaking, few agencies
have established sound practices in dealing with
petitions or responded promptly to such
petitions.
[FN1] But other
statutes expressly create the right to petition for
rulemaking, and some of these statutes specify
procedures to be followed in the petitioning
process.
This Recommendation sets
forth the basic procedures that the Conference
believes should be incorporated into agency
procedural rules governing petitions for
rulemaking. In addition, the Conference encourages
agencies to adopt certain other procedures and
policies where appropriate and feasible. The
Conference feels that, beyond this basic level,
uniform specification of agency petition procedures
would be undesirable because there are significant
differences in the number and nature of petitions
received by agencies and in the degree of
sophistication of each agency's community of
interested persons.
Agencies should review
their rulemaking petition procedures and practices
and, in accordance with this Recommendation, adopt
measures that will ensure that the right to
petition is a meaningful one. The existence of the
right to petition reflects the value Congress has
placed on public participation in the agency
rulemaking process. The Administrative Conference
has recognized, in past recommendations, the
benefits flowing from public participation in
agency rulemaking and from publication of the means
for such participation. [FN2] The absence
of published petition procedures, excessive or
rigidly-enforced format requirements, and the
failure to act promptly on petitions for rulemaking
may undermine the public's right to file petitions
for rulemaking.
[FN2] See
Recommendation 69-8, Elimination of Certain
Exemptions from the APA Rulemaking Requirements, 1
C.F.R. s 305.69-8; Recommendation 71-6, Public
Participation in Administrative Hearings, 1 C.F.R.
s 305.71-6; Recommendation 73-5, Elimination of the
"Military or Foreign Affairs Function" Exemption
from APA Rulemaking Requirements, 1 C.F.R. s
305.73-5; Recommendation 76-5, Interpretive Rules
of General Applicability and Statements of General
Policy. 1 C.F.R. s 305.76-5; and Recommendation
83-2, The "Good Cause" Exemption from APA
Rulemaking Requirements, 1 C.F.R. s 305.83-2.
Some agencies currently
have petition-for-rulemaking procedures that are
more elaborate than those recommended in this
Recommendation. This Recommendation is not intended
to express a judgment that such procedures are
inappropriate or that the statutes mandating
particular procedures should be amended. Nor is the
Recommendation intended to alter the prior position
of the Conference recommending elimination of the
categorical exemptions of certain types of
rulemaking from the APA's rulemaking requirements.
See Recommendations 69-8 and 73-5. To the extent
Congress or agencies adopt those recommendations,
they should also expressly apply the right to
petition to those types of rulemaking.
Recommendation
1. Agencies should
establish by rule basic procedures for the receipt,
consideration, and prompt disposition of petitions
for rulemaking. These basic procedures should
include: (a) Specification of the address(es) for
the filing of petitions and an outline of the
recommended contents of the petition, such as the
name, address, and telephone number of the
petitioner, the statutory authority for the action
requested, and a description of the rule to be
issued, amended, or repealed; (b) maintenance of a
publicly available petition file; and (c) provision
for prompt notification to the petitioner of the
action taken on the petition, with a summary
explanatory statement.
2. In addition, agencies
should, where appropriate and feasible:
a. Make their petition
procedures expressly applicable to all types of
rules the agency has authority to adopt;
b. Provide guidance on the
type of data, argumentation, or other information
the agency needs to consider petitions;
c. Develop effective
methods for providing notice to interested persons
that a petition has been filed and identify the
agency office or official to whom inquiries and
comments should be made; and,
d. Establish internal
management controls to assure the timely processing
of petitions for rulemaking, including deadlines
for completing interim actions and reaching
conclusions on petitions and systems to monitor
compliance with those deadlines.
[51 FR 46988, Dec. 30,
1986]
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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