This week the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA)—the obscure White House Office charged with reviewing and approving agencies’ regulations—took an important and much-appreciated step in the direction of greater transparency by updating and improving its electronic database of lobbying meetings records that the agency holds with outside groups concerning the rules undergoing review. As detailed in a 2011 CPR report, corporate interests have long used OIRA as a court of last resort for seeking relief from regulatory requirements they find inconvenient; these lobbying meetings provide them with a powerful and secretive forum in which to push for substantive changes to critical agency safeguards that would ensure the public continues to bear the cost of their polluting activities. With the improved database, the public, policymakers, and the media will be better able to track the efforts of corporate interests to exploit the OIRA review process to weaken or block regulatory protections.
Before the upgrade, OIRA docketed all its meetings in a barebones and often careless fashion on a separate section of its website. As the 2011 CPR report explained, the meetings dockets suffered several serious flaws. The meetings were not linked to the rule undergoing review that was the subject of the meeting, nor was there any standardized format for documenting what rule was the subject of the meeting. Often, interested members of the public would have to consult a number of different sources to verify what rule was at issue in a given meeting. To make matters worse, key meetings log data—including the attendees of the meeting and their affiliations—were often rife with typos and inaccurate or incomplete information. These log data were also supposed to provide links to all documents presented at the meeting, but in some cases the links do not work. Even when accurate, the meetings data were of limited utility because they were not presented in a searchable database. If, for example, a member of the public wanted to see how many meetings took place with regard to a particular rule, he or she would have to assemble these data manually. CPR sought to overcome this problem by creating its own searchable meeting database, which available here.
OIRA’s new meetings records database is designed to specifically address many of the complaints that were raised in the 2011 CPR Report regarding the old meetings docket. It permits users to search for meetings according to several different search criteria, including Regulatory Identification Number, Stage of Rulemaking, Date, Agency, and Sub-Agencies within Agencies. The database also has a calendar, which enables users to see how many lobbying meetings OIRA held on a particular date and the rule that was the subject of those meetings. Whenever a draft rule begins review at OIRA it is docketed and provided a unique entry page that provides basic information about the draft rule and its pending review at OIRA (for example, here is the page for the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) draft rule on “Petroleum Refinery Sector Risk and Technology Review and NSPS”). This page now includes a link to another page with all of the records for lobbying meetings regarding that draft. (See here for the lobby meetings records page for the EPA rule, which has been the subject of two meetings as of today). Each rule’s unique entry in the semiannual regulatory agenda also contains a link to the lobby meetings records page for that rule. (For example, see here for the EPA’s rule.)
It’s still too early to tell if the log data for individual lobbying meetings have improved. I’ve run some independent searches on the attendees of meetings to verify the accuracy of the spelling of their names and to confirm their listed affiliations, and so far have not found any problems. Given that the sample of meetings is still limited, it’s impossible to conclude whether OIRA has taken meaningful steps to improve the accuracy of these data (for example, by basing these data on data from the White House visitor logs, which are likely to be more accurate). There are a few red flags suggesting that we may see the same problems in this new database. For example, in one meeting on the EPA’s “Petroleum Refinery Sector Risk and Technology Review and NSPS” rule, one attendee—James Kim of the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB)—is listed twice. Another concern is that while the log for this meeting indicates that several attendees are affiliated with OMB, it does not specify whether these attendees are from OIRA or other offices within OMB. Finally, the meeting log includes a link to a document that was presented at the meeting, but the link does not work properly.
At this point, some obvious limitations of OIRA’s new meetings records database are apparent. First, it only includes meetings that take place after March 31, 2014. To allow for users to conduct historical analyses, OIRA should endeavor to incorporate all the meetings records data it has collected on its old meetings docket. Second, the database doesn’t permit users to conduct searches based on the affiliation of outside party attendees (e.g., the American Chemistry Council, the National Association of Home Builders, etc.), unlike with CPR’s database. These kinds of searches would enable the public to see what corporate interests are most active in seeking to influence agency rulemakings behind OIRA’s closed doors, and are essential for ensuring rigorous oversight and accountability of the rulemaking process. OIRA should also modify its database to permit such searches.
OIRA is frequently faulted for its lack of transparency, and these kinds of improvements are long overdue. In addition, to the 2011 CPR report, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) has criticized OIRA’s lack of transparency in a series of reports dating back to 1996. Last month, Michelle Sager, the Director of Strategic Issues at the GAO testified before a subcommittee of the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee that the GAO set out a series of 12 recommendations for how OIRA could improve the transparency of its regulatory review process in reports that it published in 2003 and 2009, respectively. (Director Sager’s testimony is available for download here.) According to Director Sager’s testimony, OIRA has only implemented one of those recommendations so far. That one recommendation, which was raised in the 2003 GAO report, was for OIRA to improve the transparency of its meeting dockets. In other words, OIRA’s new meetings record database—while welcome—builds on a recommendation that OIRA had already implemented as far as the GAO is concerned.
While overdue, OIRA’s improved meetings records database is still welcome and appreciated. OIRA should treat this development as just the first step of many toward improving the transparency of its regulatory review process. At a minimum, OIRA should commit to implementing the other transparency recommendations in the 2011 CPR Report, including the following: making the results OIRA’s completed reviews more transparent (i.e., summarizing the changes that were made during the review and indication of which changes were made at the direction of OIRA); including in the rulemaking docket for a rule that has undergone review all written communications between OIRA staff and those of the rulemaking agency during the review; and ending the practice of “informal reviews.” OIRA should also commit to implementing the other 11 recommendations from GAO.
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James Goodwin | April 9, 2014
This week the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA)—the obscure White House Office charged with reviewing and approving agencies’ regulations—took an important and much-appreciated step in the direction of greater transparency by updating and improving its electronic database of lobbying meetings records that the agency holds with outside groups concerning the rules undergoing review. […]
Erin Kesler | April 3, 2014
Today, CPR Senior Policy Analyst Matthew Shudtz will be testifying at OSHA’s hearing on the proposed silica rule. According to Shudtz: The testimony raises some concerns about how OSHA arrived at its proposal to provide limited medical surveillance for silica-exposed workers. It also covers issues related to enforcement and small business impacts. But most importantly, […]
James Goodwin | April 2, 2014
Yesterday, 13 Member Scholars of the Center for Progressive Reform (CPR) sent a letter to the U.S. Senate expressing their concern about S.J. Res. 30, a Congressional Review Act (CRA) “resolution of disapproval” introduced by Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) that seeks to block the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) proposed Clean Air Act New […]
Rena Steinzor | April 1, 2014
Maryland faces an important deadline in its long-running effort to clean up the Chesapeake Bay. By 2017, the state is required to implement specific measures to reduce the massive quantities of nutrient pollution that now flow into the Bay from agriculture, sewage treatment plants, power plants, factories, golf courses, and lawns. Gov. Martin O’Malley and […]
Frank Ackerman | March 26, 2014
Rhode Island has recently learned that its renewable energy standards could be ruinously expensive. But they’re in good company: more than a dozen states have “learned” the same thing, from reports from the same economists at the Beacon Hill Institute (BHI). Housed at Boston’s Suffolk University, BHI turns out study after study for right-wing, anti-government […]
| March 26, 2014
I’ve been in Bangalore, India for about two months on a Fulbright fellowship to study Indian environmental law. While I knew India has major problems with air pollution and sanitation, I didn’t expect that one of the major environmental controversies here would be about greening the idol industry. Apparently, the gods in India can wreak […]
James Goodwin | March 19, 2014
For years, Duke Energy has enjoyed virtual free rein to contaminate North Carolina’s surface and ground waters with arsenic, lead, selenium, and all of the other toxic ingredients in its coal ash waste in clear violation of the Clean Water Act and other federal environmental laws. And it seems that both North Carolina’s regulators and […]
Wendy Wagner | March 18, 2014
Basic disclosures of conflicts of interest have been required by the top science journals for decades. Yet most regulatory agencies – despite strong urging from a variety of bipartisan sources – have failed to require these disclosures for private research submitted to inform regulatory decisions. This omission is particularly alarming since, unlike journals, agencies used this […]
Anne Havemann | March 17, 2014
Maryland faces an important deadline in its long-running effort to clean up the Chesapeake Bay. By 2017, the state will be legally required to have put in place a number of specific measures to reduce the massive quantities of pollution that now flow into the Bay from a range of pollution sources in the state. […]