Title: Geography and Public Policy
1Geography and Public Policy
- Deconstruct the landscape into the production of
a particular commodity or the provision of a
particular service that has a tangible, usually
visible. impact
- Deconstruct law into statutory, administrative
and case law
2The Regulatory and the Adjudicatory Process
- The Executive Branch of Government
3Public Policy - principles and programs
articulated in law
4- Legislation enacted by the legislative branch and
signed by the President establishes national
goals, delegates authority, and appropriates
funds - Regulations promulgated by the executive branch
defines the behavior modification needed to
achieve those goals - Judicial decisions can "force" legislators and
regulators to alter legislation and regulations
5The Problems
- A. Understanding the outcomes of the various
debates that lead to acts, rules, and judicial
opinions - Legislation (act, statute, laws), legislative
process, cumulation and codification - Regulations (rules), rule-making process,
cumulation and codification - Judicial Opinions, litigation process, court
rules, encyclopedias, digests - B. Understanding the databases (books) in which
these outcomes, even the debates, are published - Statutes at Large (Public Law), US Code
- Federal Register, Code of Federal Regulations
- United States Reports, other reporters
- There may not be a single database or book that
can answer all your questions - Not every database is useful each has good and
bad points
6General Electronic Resources
- The US Government Manual (GPO)
- Ben's Guide to the US Government (GPO)
-
- The U S Government Official Web Portal
- Legal Information Institute (Cornell University)
- Uncle Sam (Google)
7Executive Branch
- Official US Executive Branch Web Sites (Library
of Congress) - Federal Executive Branch (FirstGov)
- Executive Branch Resources on GPO Access (GPO)
- The White House
8Administrative Law
- Federal Register (GPO)
- Federal Register (National Archives)
- Code of Federal Regulations (GPO)
- Regulations.gov the public face of the Federal
E-Government eRulemaking Program, facilitates
public participation in the Federal regulatory
process by improving the public's ability to
find, view, and comment on Federal regulatory
actions - LexisNexis Congressional (Reed Elsevier)
9The President
- Role in Legislation. Article I Section 7
- Every bill which shall have passed the House of
Representatives and the Senate, shall, before it
become a law, be presented to the President of
the United States - If he approve he shall sign it, but if not he
shall return it, with his objections to that
House in which it shall have originated, who
shall enter the objections at large on their
journal, and proceed to reconsider it - Veto
- Presidential Vetoes, 1789-1996 A Summary
Overview (CRS1997) - Line Item Veto
- History of Line Item Veto
10Presidents Role in Legislation
- Title 3 United States Code The President
- Antiquities Act of 1906 (34 Stat. 225 16 USC
431-433)
11The President
- The White House
- Executive Office of the President
- Executive Orders
- Executive orders issued by President Bush
- Proclamations issued by President Bush
- The Cabinet
- Independent Agencies
12Presidential Reorganization Plans
- Congress first authorized the President to
propose plans to reorganize the executive
departments and agencies in 1939 (53 Stat. 561) - The objective was to achieve efficiency and
economy in administration - Plan, submitted to Congress, became effective
after 60 days unless both houses of Congress
adopted a concurrent resolution disapproving it - Such reorganization authority, renewed
periodically a dozen times between 1945 and 1984,
with slight variations remained available to the
President for nearly half a century - At times, qualifications were placed upon how the
President could exercise this authority - Reorganization plans could not abolish or create
an entire department, or deal with more than one
logically consistent subject matter
13- The President was prohibited from submitting more
than one plan within a 30-day period and was
required to include a clear statement on the
projected economic savings expected to result
from a reorganization - Reorganization plans not disapproved by Congress
are published in the Federal Register prior to
being implemented, and also in the Statutes at
Large and the CFR (Title 3) for the year in which
they become effective - In 1983 the Supreme Court effectively invalidated
continued congressional reliance upon a
concurrent resolution to disapprove a proposed
plan - Congress subsequently passed the Reorganization
Act Amendments of 1984 which expired at the end
of 1984 - Department of Homeland Security Reorganization
Plan - Reorganization Plan of 1953
- Reorganization Plan of 1970
14Presidential Papers
- Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents
published every Monday is the official
publication of presidential statements, messages,
remarks, and other materials released by the
White House Press Secretary - The Public Papers of the President (National
Archives) - The Papers of the President of the United States
(Yale Law School) - Inaugural Addresses of the President (Yale Law
School)
15The Proliferation of the Agencies
16The Federal Regulatory Process
17The Wilderness Act
- 1964 Legislation (The Wilderness Society)
- 16 USC 1131 et seq (GPO)
- 16 USC 1131 et seq (Legal Information Institute)
- 16 USC 1131 et seq (LexisNexis Congressional)
- Wilderness.net
18Who Manages Wilderness?
- Bureau of Land Management
- 43 CFR 6300 Management of designated wilderness
areas - Fish and Wildlife Service
- 50 CFR 35 Wilderness preservation and management
- Forest Service
- 36 CFR 293 Wilderness--primitive areas
- National Park Service
- 36 CFR 7 Special regulations, areas of the
National Park System
19Agencies posses a Legislative Mandate
20The Outcome of the Regulatory Process
- Federal Register (GPO)
- Code of Federal Regulations (Cornell University)
- Agency actions that implement the
rules/regulations publishedForest
ServiceFederal Energy Regulatory Commission
21Observable Outcomes
22The Regulatory Process
23Federal Register
- The Federal Register is a centralized means of
publishing regulations, presidential documents
and notices - Before it started in 1935 such materials were
published without any formal organization - As a consequence individuals, organizations and
even the federal agencies operated in ignorance
of applicable law
24- The Federal Register Act of 1935 (49 Stat. 501)
created the daily publication known as the
Federal Register - Today the Federal Register Act as amended
comprises 44 U.S.C. 1501 et seq
25Administrative Procedures Act
- Enacted June 11, 1946 (Public Law 79-404, 60
Stat. 237 5 U.S.C. 551 et seq) outlined the
administrative procedures that Federal agencies
must follow to - Identify information to be made public
- Publish material in the Federal Register
- Maintain records, including those involving
certain meetings and hearings - Fulfill attendance and notification requirements
for specific meetings and hearings - Issue licenses
- Review agency actions
- Governs the process of making regulations - to
allow greater accessibility and participation by
the public in the rulemaking process
26- In general, the APA requires most rules be
published in the Federal Register with a period
for public comment - Most agency rulemaking, governed by section 553
of the APA, requires - a notice of proposed rulemaking published in the
Federal Register - a reference to the legal authority under which
the rule is proposed - the terms or a description of the subjects and
issues to be addressed by the proposed rule - interested persons must be given an opportunity
to submit written data, views, or arguments on
the proposal, with or without opportunity for
oral presentation - a concise general statement of the basis and
purpose must accompany the final rule - publication of the final rule must take place not
less than 30 days before its effective date
27Adjudication
- The Administrative Procedure Act of 1946 also
created hearing examiners, now called
administrative law judges - The Act introduced fairness and due process in
Federal agency rule-making by providing parties
whose affairs are controlled or regulated by
agencies of the federal government, an
opportunity for a formal hearing on the record
before an impartial hearing officer who would
adjudicate the matter adjudication - Department of the Interior Land Appeals
- Interior Board of Indian Appeals Decisions
- Social Security Hearing and Appeals
-
28(No Transcript)
29- Rule-making Process (Federal Communications
Commission) - Rule-making Process (Nuclear Regulatory
Commission) - GAO Report on FAA Rulemaking
30Federal Register (FR)
- Published by the National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA) - The Federal Register What it is and How to Use
it (Food Drug Administration) - Since Saturday, March 14, 1936, each daily issue
of the Federal Register has contained similar
information
31Final Rules
- Final Rules and Regulations contains final rules,
regulatory documents having general applicability
and legal effect - Most rules are keyed to and codified in the Code
of Federal Regulations (CFR) - Interim rules, designed to respond to an
emergency situation, issued without prior notice
and are effective immediately. Such rules are
usually followed by a final rule document which
confirms that the interim rule is final,
addresses comments received, and includes any
further amendments - Section may include documents that have no
regulatory text and do not amend the CFR, for
example - general policy statements
- interpretations of agency regulations
32Proposed Rules
- Proposed Rules contains notices that an agency
intends to issue a rule - The purpose of these notices is to give
interested persons an opportunity to participate
in the rule making prior to the agency adopting
and publishing the final rule - Many such proposals involve changes to agency
regulations that have been already published in
the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) and request
public comment on those suggested changes - Documents relating to previously published
proposed rules, extending the comment period,
announcing a public hearing, making supplemental
information available, correcting a previously
published proposed rule, or even withdrawing a
proposed rule
33Proposed Rules
- Advanced notices of proposed rulemaking, which
describe a problem or situation and the
anticipated regulatory action of the agency,
seeking seek public response concerning the
necessity for regulation and the adequacy of the
agency's anticipated regulatory action - Many agencies voluntarily publish proposed
changes to procedural rules, interpretative
rules, and agency policies in order to gather
public comments to those changes
34Notices
- Documents, other than rules or proposed rules,
that are generally applicable - Notices of hearings and investigations
- Committee meetings
- Agency decisions and rulings
- Delegations of authority
- Issuances or revocation of licenses
- Grant application deadlines
- Availability of environmental impact
statements - Filing of petitions and applications
- Agency statements of organization and
functions
35Presidential Documents
- Documents signed by the President and submitted
to the Office of the Federal Register for
publication - Include Proclamations and Executive Orders as
well as other documents such as determinations,
letters, memoranda, and reorganization plans - All compiled annually in title 3 of the Code of
Federal Regulations
36Sunshine Act Meetings
- Notices of meetings published under the
"Government in the Sunshine Act" (Pub. L. 94-409
5 U.S.C. 552b(e)(3)) that requires meetings of
Government agencies be open to the public, with
certain specified exceptions - Includes the time, place, and subject matter of
the meeting, the name and telephone number of the
agency official to contact for more information,
and whether the meeting is open or closed to the
public
37Code of Federal Regulations (CFR)
- A compilation and codification of the general and
permanent rules published in the Federal Register
by the federal executive departments and agencies
with power to make rules - Divided into 50 titles representing broad areas
of behavior subject to federal regulation - Each title divided into chapters usually bearing
the name of the issuing agency - Each chapter is further subdivided into parts
covering specific regulatory areas - parts thus
become the rule - Large parts may be subdivided into subparts and
all parts are organized in sections - Each part or section is keyed to
- the legislative authority under which the agency
promulgated the rule - the issue of the Federal Register in which the
final rule was published - 36 CFR (2006) part 293 Wilderness - Primitive
Areas Forest Service Department of Agriculture
38- Each volume of the CFR is revised once each
calendar year - A CFR Index and Finding Aids volume indexes
regulations by departments, agencies and topics - The volume also contains a Parallel Table of
Authority and Rules listing the sources of
federal statutory law under which current
regulations have been issued - EPA regulations
39 Other Resources
- EPA Federal Register Site
- Arsenic in Drinking Water (EPA)
- Recent Regulatory History of Air Bags
(Motorvista.com) - Mercury Emissions and Utilities (EPA)
- Regulatory Reform in the Power Industry (Cato
Institute) - Regulation Magazine (Cato Institute)
- Federal Regulatory Reform An Overview
(Congressional Research Service) - Regulatory History of Mixed Waste (EPA)
40Consumer Product Safety Regulations
- U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
- Rules Promulgated by the Commission
- Requirements for Full Size Baby Cribs
(Explanatory Notice) - 16 CFR 1508
- 16 CFR 1632 (Standards for the Flammability of
Mattresses and Mattress Pads)
41To find regulations on a particular subject
- Start with
- Parallel Table of Authority and Rules part of the
CFR Index and Finding Aids - Index to the Code of Federal Regulations
- Look for your regulation by subject (e.g.,
campaign funds) or by agency (e.g., Federal
Election Commission) - A keyword search in the CFR in GPO Access
- NB You really need to find the earliest
regulation promulgated after your act was passed
42To find the authority for a regulation
- At the beginning of the CFR part you are using
(after the table of contents), look for an
authority note citing the United States Code
section(s), or Statute, or Public Law, which
authorized the regulations - In the Federal Register an authority note for a
proposed or final rule appears at the beginning
of the text of the rule (not the preamble)
43To find out whether a CFR part or section has
been amended
- In GPO Access after 1996
- Retrieve CFR sections by citation
- Search or browse your choice of CFR titles and/or
volumes - LSA (List of CFR Sections Affected)
- Search the Federal Register for related documents
-
- There are various Federal Register Indexes
- LexisNexis after 1981
- Hein Online after 1935
44To trace a current CFR section back to its
origins
- Look for a source note in the CFR at the
beginning of the part (after the table of
contents), or at the end of a particular section - Look in the appropriate Federal Register
describing the Final Rule for a reference to the
Proposed Rule published earlier - Or
- Look at the List of CFR Sections Affected at the
end of the current CFR volume you are using,
which reports amendments year by year back to
1986 - For earlier coverage, see the separate volumes
entitled List of CFR Sections Affected covering
1973-1985, 1964-1972 and 1949-1963
45To find regulations issued under particular
federal authority
- Look at the "Parallel Table of Authorities and
Rules" in the current CFR Index and Finding Aids.
- The left-hand column lists sources of federal law
(U.S. Code, U.S. Statutes at Large, Public Laws
and several kinds of Presidential documents). - On the right are the CFR citations to regulations
promulgated under the authority of the listed
sources - Or
- Look for the citation to federal statutes (e.g.,
a title and section of the U.S. Code) in the CFR
or Federal Register in GPO Access