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D.C. Circuit Rejects Developers’ Claim that EPA Must Form Small Business Panel

In a case that could have far reaching implications for agencies subject to the Regulatory Flexibility Act, the D.C. Circuit Court last month held that an EPA decision not to convene a small business advocacy review panel before issuing a rule was not judicially reviewable.  The decision by Judge Merrick Garland, for a unanimous 3-judge panel, was in National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) v. EPA.

NAHB challenged the EPA’s change of course on an “opt-out” provision of a rule established under the Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act.  With the goal of protecting thousands of children from lead poisoning associated with older homes, the rule mandated that renovators of housing built before 1978 take certain steps to mitigate the dangers from lead paint.  The opt-out provision would allow an owner-occupant of housing without children under the age of six or pregnant women to waive protections afforded by the rule.  Two years after first creating the opt-out provision, the EPA, hearing criticism from environmental health advocates, reconsidered the harm the opt-out could cause to children and pregnant women, and chose to rescind it.  The agency did so relying solely on the evidence that was available when the opt-out provision was enacted, but now applying that evidence to better fulfill the governing statute’s directives.  As Judge Garland put it, the EPA simply “changed its mind.”

Among other things, the NAHB argued that the EPA’s change of course violated the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) because the agency did not convene a small business advocacy review panel.  The RFA § 609(b) stipulates that an agency must convene such a panel in connection with the initial flexibility analysis that is mandated each time a new rule is promulgated. 

However, the Court maintained that this issue is not judicially reviewable.

The first point made by Judge Garland was that § 609(b) was conspicuously left absent from a list of provisions the RFA enumerates as reviewable.  The RFA clearly states that only certain agency’s actions or inactions performed under the act are judicially reviewable.  Seating a small business panel under § 609(b) is not one of these mandates.  Therefore, review of § 609(b) is not within the discretion of the Court.

Second, Judge Garland addressed the NAHB’s assertion that the Court could review the EPA’s failure to comply with § 609(b) as evidence that it acted arbitrarily and capriciously, violating the APA, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A).  Judge Garland counters this claim by saying the APA’s arbitrary and capricious section was not meant to address a “purely procedural device” not actually mandated by the APA itself.  He went on to point out that under the Supreme Court’s Vermont Yankee decision, “courts may not, under the guise of the APA’s arbitrary-and-capricious review standard, impose procedural requirements such as convening of a small business panel under the RFA that the APA’s procedural provisions … do not themselves impose.” 

So where does this leave us?  Small business review panels may sound pleasant, but in reality they are often a tool used by larger industries to slow or stop public protections.  And before they existed, all parties, small business or otherwise, already were given the opportunity to publicly comment on proposed rules.  The input process and transparency was already there; the small business panels often serve as more of a separate roadblock.

With this decision, in the least, industry has one less tool at its disposal with which to potentially attack agency rulemaking.  While this ruling does not eliminate the RFA mandate requiring agencies to convene small business panels in some situations, agencies certainly now have increased discretion as to when such a practice is necessary.  This could have significant implications for other agencies whose rulemaking agendas are slowed by the work of small business panels, such as OSHA’s issuance of new workplace health and safety standards.  Given their increased freedom, it is now up to the agencies not to hesitate to exercise it when appropriate and when the public stands to benefit.  If agencies react accordingly, the D.C. Circuit Court decision ought to help reduce regulatory delays – and therefore save lives.

 

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Lee Ewing | July 12, 2012

D.C. Circuit Rejects Developers’ Claim that EPA Must Form Small Business Panel

In a case that could have far reaching implications for agencies subject to the Regulatory Flexibility Act, the D.C. Circuit Court last month held that an EPA decision not to convene a small business advocacy review panel before issuing a rule was not judicially reviewable.  The decision by Judge Merrick Garland, for a unanimous 3-judge […]

Catherine O'Neill | July 11, 2012

Fish for the Future: Our Health and Livelihoods Depend on It

When environmental agencies set standards limiting toxic pollution in our waters, they theoretically aim to protect people who are exposed to these toxics by eating fish.  Currently, Washington state’s water quality standards protect only those who consume no more than one fish meal per month.  That means that those of us who eat more fish […]

Daniel Farber | July 9, 2012

The Romney Website’s Circular Blame Game

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Nicholas Vidargas | July 5, 2012

Environmental Justice and Chemical Security: Why EPA Should Use the General Duty Clause to Protect Vulnerable Communities

Around the nation, a huge number of facilities produce, store, handle, and process a toxic mix of hazardous chemicals every day.  According to EPA data, 483 of those facilities put 100,000 people or more at risk of a chemical disaster.  Worse, because facility siting decisions have historically been, and continue to be, deaf to impacts […]

Daniel Farber | July 3, 2012

Does Any Pollutant Mean ANY Pollutant?

Cross-posted from Legal Planet. It got less attention than it should because it was upstaged by the Supreme Court’s healthcare decision, but last week’s D.C. Circuit ruling on climate change was almost as important in its own way.  By upholding EPA’s regulations, the court validated the federal government’s main effort to control greenhouse gases.  To […]

Matthew Freeman | July 3, 2012

Columbia Journalism Review Calls Out Bloomberg Story on Regulation

Last week, The Washington Post ran a story about regulation, headlined, “Regulators surge in numbers while overseers shrink.” The story came from Bloomberg and was written by reporter Andrew Zajac. The headline captures the thrust of the piece. Zajac writes: As the U.S. government’s regulatory bureaucracy has ballooned, one agency has been left behind: the […]

David Driesen | June 29, 2012

Health Care’s New Commerce Clause: Implications for Environmental Law

Although the Supreme Court upheld the Affordable Care Act’s requirement that most individuals purchase health insurance (called the individual mandate) as within Congress’ power to levy taxes, it stated that Congress lacked the power to enact it under the Commerce Clause.  Under prior case law, Congress could regulate activities substantially affecting interstate commerce by any […]

Robert Verchick | June 28, 2012

Secretary Salazar’s Unfortunate Prediction

Good news for the Arctic! “I believe there will not be an oil spill”—this according to Ken Salazar, the nation’s Secretary of Interior and, now, environmental crystal-gazer. As someone still fretting about BP’s mess in the Gulf, I want to believe; but it’s hard. So let me back up. Earlier this week, Secretary Salazar said […]

Ben Somberg | June 27, 2012

Safe Drinking Water Act Provides EPA Key Opportunity to Regulate BPA

Member Scholar Noah Sachs and Policy Analyst Aimee Simpson have sent a letter to the EPA nominating the chemical Bisphenol A (BPA) to be included on the “Fourth Contaminant Candidate List” for possible regulation. They write: Pursuant to the Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments of 1996 (SDWA), the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) must compile […]