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Comments in Response to the Direct Final Rule Proposed by the Consumer Product Safety Commission: Revisions to Safety Standard for Infant Bath Seats
In the News
Re: Revisions to Safety Standard for Infant Bath Seats, Docket Number CPSC-2009-0064In NCLA’s view, the Proposed Rule continues an odious trend of incorporating private standards into the law only by reference, thereby hiding the binding law behind a paywall. The Proposed Rule is therefore unconstitutional and must not be enacted as written. This comment is…
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Comments in Response to the Environmental Protection Agency's Proposed Rule: Updating Regulations on Water Quality Certification
In the News
Re: Updating Regulations on Water Quality CertificationDocket ID No.: EPA-HQ-OW-2019-0405 NCLA commends EPA’s efforts to provide more certainty and stability in relation to implementing Section 401 of the Clean Water Act. While NCLA appreciates the importance of state sovereignty and the purpose underlying Section 401, it is also important to ensure that one state’s exercise…
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White House Executive Orders Cracking Down On Agency Guidance Could Provide Constitutional Protections in Title IX Cases
Caleb Kruckenberg
The Trump Administration has taken an important step in overhauling the administrative state by tackling the rampant abuse of agency “guidance.” Instead of issuing formal rules, agencies have come to rely on informal interpretations, advice, statements of policy and other forms of regulatory “guidance” that declares agency views on what the public should or…
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Time to Clear the Fog of Agency Secrecy from the Swamp
Adi Dynar
The two executive orders issued by the White House—“Bringing Guidance out of the Darkness,” and “Transparency and Fairness”—promise to start clearing the fog of faulty guidance documents issued by federal administrative agencies in the so-called Washington D.C. “swamp.” The administration should be applauded on taking a decisive step to reduce agency overreach. Among other mechanisms…
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The Games Bureaucrats Play: AFPF v. Becerra—Civil Rights Jenga by Michael DeGrandis
In the News
Ah, the games bureaucrats play. They most often resemble Twister, of course: How well can you contort yourself to follow an agency’s myriad of guidance and regulations? But many of their games are more insidious, implicating fundamental rights including freedoms of speech and association. Case in point: the California Attorney General’s game of Civil Rights…
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The Next Level of Rulemaking Madness
Harriet Hageman
Despite the fact that both the Constitution and Administrative Procedure Act prohibit the practice, federal agencies often engage in the common-place tactic of issuing informal interpretations, fact sheets, and other forms of “guidance,” the practical outcome of which is to surreptitiously force the regulated community to comply with a variety of “policy positions” that are…
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