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 305.88-9
s 305.88-9 Presidential
review of agency rulemaking (Recommendation
88-9).
Federal regulation has
grown in both scope and complexity in recent
decades. Among its wide variety of national goals
are: Ensuring competitive markets, spurring
economic growth, checking inflation, reducing
unemployment, protecting national security,
assuring equal opportunity, increasing social
security, protecting the environment, ensuring
safety, and improving energy sufficiency. Policies
implementing these goals compete for scarce
resources and sometimes conflict with one another.
Thus, a central task of modern democratic
government is to make wise choices among the
courses of action that pursue one or more of these
goals.
While Congress establishes
the goals, it seldom legislates the details of
every action taken in pursuit of these goals or
makes the balancing choices that these decisions
require. It has assigned this task to the
regulatory agencies. Each regulatory agency,
however, usually is given a set of primary goals,
without specific regard for whether proposed
actions in pursuit of those goals might conflict
with the pursuit of other goals by other agencies.
An effective mechanism is needed to coordinate
agency decisions with the judgments of officials
having a broader perspective, such as the President
and Congress. [FN1]
[FN1] The need for
greater coordination of federal regulation was
recognized in 1979 by the American Bar
Association's Commission on Law and the
Economy.
Some form of presidential
review of agency rulemaking has been the practice
since at least 1971. Like its predecessors, the
current program is established by presidential
executive order. [FN2] The responsible
officer (the Administrator, Office of Information
and Regulatory Affairs, in the Office of Management
and Budget) is appointed by the President, subject
to Senate confirmation.
[FN2] Exec. Orders
Nos. 11,821, 11,949 (President Ford), Exec. Order
12,044 (President Carter), Exec. Orders Nos.
12,291, 12,498 (President Reagan). For a thorough
analysis of the experience under the executive
orders, see National Academy of Public
Administration, Presidential Management of
Rulemaking in Regulatory Agencies (Jan. 1987).
The Conference believes
that there is sufficient experience under these
executive orders to warrant continuing such review
with certain guidelines as to its implementation.
The Recommendation below sets forth standards that
should be followed whether review is governed by
executive order or by a general statute. It also
assumes that the President has the authority to
enunciate principles to guide agency rulemaking,
even though the programmatic responsibilities are
by statute delegated to agencies. In addressing the
presidential review process, the Conference
recognizes that some of the issues are analogous to
congressional involvement in agency rulemaking, but
it does not address this latter subject at this
time.
Recommendation
The Conference recommends
that the following principles should guide any
program of presidential review [FN3] of
agency rulemaking.
[FN3] Presidential
review, as used in this Recommendation, refers to a
program of systematic executive oversight and
dialogue that involves coordinating agency actions
where conflicts exist, and in all cases probing the
agency's fact and policy judgments, with the
purpose of ensuring that the agency considers
factors of importance to the President's policies
to the extent permitted by law. Such review does
not displace responsibilities placed in the agency
by law nor authorize the use of factors not
otherwise permitted by law. Other review of an ad
hoc nature by the President (or the President's
delegates) of agency rulemaking pursuant to the
President's constitutional authority is not within
the scope of this Recommendation.
1. General
Applicability
Presidential review should
apply generally to federal rulemaking. Such review
can improve the coordination of agency actions and
resolve conflicts among agency rules and assist in
the implementation of national priorities. However,
not all agency rules or categories of rules may be
appropriate for such presidential review. Exempt
categories include formal rulemaking, ratemaking,
and rulemaking that resolves conflicting private
claims to a valuable privilege.
2. Applicability to
Independent Regulatory Agencies
As a matter of principle,
presidential review of rulemaking should apply to
independent regulatory agencies to the same extent
it applies to the rulemaking of Executive Branch
departments and other agencies.
3. Timeliness of
Review
The process of
presidential review of rulemaking, including agency
participation, should be completed in a timely
fashion by the reviewing office and, when so
required, by the agencies, with due regard to
applicable administrative, executive, judicial and
statutory deadlines.
4. Public Disclosure
of Documents
(a) Proposed or Final
Rules. Where an agency submits a draft proposed or
final rule for presidential review, the agency
submission and any additional formal analyses
[FN4] submitted for presidential review
should be made available to the public when the
proposed or final rule to which they pertain is
published. If a decision is made to terminate a
rulemaking after a notice of proposed rulemaking
has been published, agency submissions to the
office responsible for presidential review and any
additional formal analyses submitted for review
should be made available to the public when the
decision to terminate is announced.
[FN4] See ACUS
Recommendation 85-2, Agency Procedures for
Performing Regulatory Analysis of Rules, 1 CFR
305.85-2.
(b) Review of Agendas or
Other Summaries or Schedules of Agency Rulemaking
Actions. Where an agency submits agendas or other
summaries or schedules of pending or planned
rulemakings for presidential review, the agency
submission and any supporting documents submitted
for presidential review should be made available to
the public once the agenda or other summary or
schedule is made known to the public in an official
publication.
5. Executive Branch
Communications Relating to Presidential Review
of
Rulemaking
(a) Policy Guidance. An
agency engaged in informal rulemaking should be
free to receive guidance concerning that rulemaking
at any time from the President, members of the
Executive Office of the President, and other
members of the Executive Branch, without having a
duty to place these communications in the public
file of the rulemaking unless otherwise required by
law. However, official written policy guidance from
the officer responsible for presidential review of
rulemaking should be included in the public file of
the rulemaking once a notice of proposed rulemaking
or final rule to which it pertains is issued or
when the rulemaking is terminated without issuance
of a final rule. [FN5]
[FN5] The
Conference's position on the public availability of
official written policy guidance stated in this
Recommendation modifies its earlier position in
Recommendation 80-6, Intragovernmental
Communications in Informal Rulemaking Proceedings,
1 CFR 305.80-6, ¶ 1.
(b) Factual Information.
When an agency engaged in rulemaking receives a
communication from the office responsible for
presidential review which contains factual
information relating to the substance of the
rulemaking that is not already in the public file,
the agency should promptly place the communication
(or if oral, a summary) in the public file of the
rulemaking. [FN6]
[FN6] Agencies
also should place factual information received from
other sources in the public file of the rulemaking,
see Recommendation 80-6, ¶ 2.
(c) Communications
Transmitting Outside Comments. When an agency
receives a communication from the office
responsible for presidential review which transmits
any factual submissions or the views or positions
of persons outside the government, the agency
should promptly place the communication (or if
oral, a summary) in the public file of the
rulemaking. [FN7]
[FN7] This
reaffirms the Conference's position on the handling
of comments by persons outside the government
stated in Recommendation 80-6, ¶ 2.
6. Responsibility of
the Reviewing Office Regarding Outside Comments
The officer responsible
for presidential review of rulemaking should not
allow the process of review to serve as a conduit
to the rulemaking agency for unrecorded
communications from persons outside the government.
To guard against such occurrence, the responsible
officer should take appropriate steps--and the
following should be considered:
(a) Identifying any
communications to the rulemaking agency that
transmit the views or positions of persons outside
the government;
(b) Promptly transmitting
written communications received by the office
responsible for presidential review from persons
outside the government relating to the substance of
a proposed agency rule to the rulemaking agency for
inclusion in the public file of the rulemaking;
(c) Maintaining a list
identifying the time and general topic of oral
communications that pertain to the substance of an
agency rule under review with persons outside the
government and making such list available to the
rulemaking agency for inclusion in the public file;
and
(d) Inviting a
representative of the rulemaking agency to attend
any meetings between the reviewing office and
persons outside the government which pertain to any
agency rulemaking under review by that office. The
agency representative attending any such meeting
should prepare an appropriate summary of the
discussion and promptly place it in the public file
of the rulemaking.
7. Not Judicially
Reviewable
The presidential review
process should be designed to improve the internal
management of the federal government and should not
create any substantive or procedural rights
enforceable by judicial review.
[54 FR 5207, Feb. 2,
1989]
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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