Join us.

We’re working to create a just society and preserve a healthy environment for future generations. Donate today to help.

Donate

Shelanski Said What During the House Small Business Committee?

Earlier this week, Regulatory Czar Howard Shelanski testified before the House Small Business committee to update committee members on the progress the Obama Administration has made with the regulatory look-back process established by Executive Orders 13563 and 13610. In one interesting exchange with Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer (R-Mo.), Shelanski offered the following perspective on the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs’ (OIRA) approach to regulatory review:

The interpretation of an agency’s statute and the choice of policy—to the extent there is discretion under that statute—is in the first instance in the province of the department or agency that is issuing the regulations. OIRA doesn’t set policy priorities or do the initial legal interpretations for the agencies. They do that.

(Skip ahead the 20:00-minute mark of the hearing.)

If true, this statement from Shelanski would represent a dramatic shift in how OIRA sees its role in the rulemaking process. For the past 30 years or so, OIRA has never been shy about trumping agencies on their policy priorities or their choices of policy. Indeed, just a few months before Shelanski took the helm there, OIRA blatantly interfered with the EPA’s rulemaking to update the effluent limitation guidelines (ELG) for power plants, as documented in a damning new report by several national environmental groups. The draft proposal that the EPA submitted to OIRA review contained several regulatory “options” for updating the ELG, and among those the EPA identified two of the stronger options—Option 3 and Option 4—as “preferred.” When the proposal emerged from OIRA more than three months later (following several meetings between OIRA and outside groups, including a number with corporate interests opposed to a strong standard), it had been drastically altered. (See the “redline” version showing all the changes that had been made here.)  Among the changes, OIRA forced the EPA to include three new weaker options (Options 4a, 3a, and 3b). OIRA also forced the EPA drop Option 4 as a “preferred” option (this was the stronger of the two options that the EPA had initially preferred) and to instead designate all three of the new weaker options it added as “preferred.”

Contrary to Shelanski’s testimony, this episode clearly demonstrates that OIRA does in fact set “policy priorities.” Not only did OIRA force the EPA to add new policy options, it also forced the EPA to identify those options as “preferred” instead of one of the options that the agency had originally identified as “preferred.” It also shows that while OIRA may recognize that an agency has “province” over “choice of policy” “in the first instance,” OIRA reserves for itself the province of choice of policy in the final, determinative instance.

OIRA’s trumping of agencies’ choice of policy raises serious legal questions, however. Under the law, the agency’s “province” over the “choice of policy” isn’t just limited to “the first instance.” Its province holds in every instance—first, last, and every instance in between. After all, the laws are written to say “the EPA Administrator shall . . .”—not “the OIRA Administrator shall . . .” or even “the President or a duly delegated representative shall . . . .” Nevertheless, OIRA routinely grants itself the final, determinative word over policy choices, as the power plant ELG rule episode demonstrates.

Also as the power plant ELG rule episode illustrates, whenever OIRA trumps the policy priorities and choice of policy of an agency, almost invariably it is done with the effect of watering down regulatory safeguards, often at the behest of the stream of lobbyists that use OIRA as a court of last resort on pending rules.

I hope Shelanski’s statement does in fact represent a change in how OIRA will approach regulatory review under his leadership. Nevertheless, I remain skeptical, because OIRA has operated as a strong antiregulatory force in the government for so long. I will continue to monitor OIRA’s regulatory review activities to see if its actions actually match Shelanski’s words.

 

Showing 2,818 results

James Goodwin | July 26, 2013

Shelanski Said What During the House Small Business Committee?

Earlier this week, Regulatory Czar Howard Shelanski testified before the House Small Business committee to update committee members on the progress the Obama Administration has made with the regulatory look-back process established by Executive Orders 13563 and 13610. In one interesting exchange with Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer (R-Mo.), Shelanski offered the following perspective on the Office of […]

Matt Shudtz | July 25, 2013

Chemical Safety Board Introduces a Most Wanted List of Reforms to Protect Workers

The U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board, better known as CSB, is held a meeting today to discuss several recommendations and a newly created “Most Wanted Program.” CSB has invited public input, so CPR President Rena Steinzor and I submitted comments to CSB yesterday, urging the agency to target the White House in its advocacy […]

Michael Patoka | July 24, 2013

Ash Time Goes By: Administration Continues Foot-Dragging on Coal Ash Rule as Toxic Landfills and Ash Ponds Grow by 94 Million Tons Each Year

Three years after the EPA proposed a rule to protect communities from coal ash—a byproduct of coal-power generation that’s filled with toxic chemicals like arsenic, lead, and mercury—a final rule is still nowhere in sight. Meanwhile, power plants are dumping an additional 94 million tons of it every year into wet-ash ponds and dry landfills […]

Matt Shudtz | July 23, 2013

Shelanski to Testify on Regulatory Look-Back, Hopefully with an Update on the Poultry Slaughter Rule

Tomorrow, the new OIRA Administrator, Howard Shelanski, will testify before the House Small Business Committee on the results of the government-wide “look-back” at existing regulations. It will be an opportunity for the Committee’s Republicans to continue their assault on government programs that keep our food safe, air and water clean, and highways fit for travel. Shelanski could follow in […]

Rena Steinzor | July 22, 2013

The Obama Worker Safety and Health Legacy: The Fifth Inning and the Possibility of a Shutout; A Big Challenge for Tom Perez

The Senate’s grudging confirmation of Tom Perez as Secretary of Labor was the first piece of good news working people have had out of the federal government for quite some time. I know Perez–as a neighbor, a law school colleague, Maryland’s labor secretary, and a civil rights prosecutor. He’s a fearless, smart, and hard-driving public servant—exactly the […]

Victor Flatt | July 22, 2013

Downwind States Deserve Protection: Supreme Court’s Review of Decision Gutting Cross-State Pollution Protections Right on Point

Last month, the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari, or review of  EME Homer City Generation v. EPA, 696 F.3d 7 (D.C. Cir. 2012), reh’g en banc denied, 2013 WL 656247 (D.C. Cir. Jan. 24, 2013). This is a welcome development, as the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals got many things wrong in its tossing out of […]

Daniel Farber | July 19, 2013

The Strange World of the Small Business Administration

When you say “small business,” most people probably imagine a mom-and-pop corner grocery.  Actually, the federal Small Business Administration’s concept of small goes well beyond that.  For instance, it includes a computer business that does up to $25 million per year in business. A convenience store can do $27 million and still be considered “small,” […]

Robert Verchick | July 18, 2013

Senate’s Confirmation of Gina McCarthy as Head of EPA a Welcome Development

The Senate’s confirmation of Gina McCarthy as head of the Environmental Protection Agency is a welcome development and a signal that Congress and the President are willing to get serious about the Agency’s role in protecting the health of all Americans and the affects of climate change on the environment. It won’t be easy. Lawmakers […]

William Funk | July 17, 2013

Government Seeks Certiorari on Clean Water Act’s Direct Review Provision in EPA v. Friends of the Everglades

Environmentalists know about the Environmental Protection Agency’s Water Transfer Rule. See 40 CFR § 122.3(i). It states in essence that discharging polluted water from one body of water to another unpolluted body of water is not a discharge of a pollutant under the Clean Water Act. According to the EPA, this action would not be regulated […]