Join us.

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

Donate

New York Governor Channels Ronald Reagan: Governor Paterson’s Flawed Plan to Review Regulations

This is one of two posts today by CPR member scholars evaluating NY Gov. David Paterson's recent executive order on regulations; see also Rebecca Bratspies' post, "Paterson's Executive Order: Win for Industry, Loss for Public Health and Safety."

Who knew? With his newly announced plan to require New York departments and agencies to look back at proposed and existing regulations, Governor Paterson placed himself squarely in the anti-regulatory tradition of Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, and George W. Bush. Like Governor Paterson, these presidents created a look-back process to identify regulations that they said needed to be reformed. The history of White House look-backs suggest the New York is at a minimum misguided and could well be harmful to New York residents.

Shortly after being elected, President Reagan created the Task Force for Regulatory Relief, headed by then Vice-President George Bush, to create a list of regulations that were the most burdensome on business. As the name implies, the goal was not to strengthen regulatory protections. Facing reelection, the first President Bush announced a 90-day moratorium on new regulations and required regulatory agencies to undertake a look back. Given the timing, the plan appeared to be an effort to curry favor with conservatives and the business community, which is Governor Paterson’s motive, according to his critics. The second President Bush invited the public to send requests to the White House for regulatory revisions, which it passed on to the agencies, a process that was heavily dominated by requests from business interests.

Governor Paterson defended his plan as a way to reduce “red tape,” a typical ploy of regulation opponents. Because government needs information to adopt regulations and then to enforce them, it requires regulated entities to fill out forms. To those filling out the paperwork, this can appear to be government run amok, and sometimes it is. But most of the time it is not. Regulated entities have ample opportunity to point out to departments and agencies that reporting requirements are unnecessary before they are put in place, and there is no proof that government usually adopts them anyway. Still, if the Governor’s plan had been limited to reducing paperwork requirements, it would not be so alarming. But the plan isn't just about reducing paperwork, it's about changing -- weakening -- regulations.

The history of White House look-back on regulations presents four lessons. First, requiring agencies and departments suddenly to do a look back is extremely disruptive of on-going programs of regulatory protection. Even if the look-back does not result in the repeal or revision of appropriate regulations, it has the potential to disrupt departments and agencies for months, as staffers have to drop what they were previously working on. Second, although there is public participation, the process favors business interests because they usually have greater resources than consumer groups and unions to gear up immediately to carry the fight to the agencies undertaking the reviews. Third, the time frame of a month or two is simply too short to undertake a rational review process, producing a patch-work of look-backs that often picks which rules to reform based on which business groups have the most political influence. Finally, because of the short time frame of look-backs, costly regulations can become candidates for reform just because they are expensive, when in fact a less hurried effort would recognize that the regulations are appropriate in light of regulatory legislation and goals.

Look-backs should be an element of regulatory government, but they should be undertaken as part of an on-going regulatory process. This usually does not happen because legislators underfund agencies, presenting them with the dilemma of meeting new regulatory challenges or going back over old regulations. Governor Paterson would do a lot better for the people of New York if he supported new funding for agencies to adopt permanent programs of look-back reviews.

Showing 2,834 results

Sidney A. Shapiro | August 13, 2009

New York Governor Channels Ronald Reagan: Governor Paterson’s Flawed Plan to Review Regulations

This is one of two posts today by CPR member scholars evaluating NY Gov. David Paterson’s recent executive order on regulations; see also Rebecca Bratspies’ post, “Paterson’s Executive Order: Win for Industry, Loss for Public Health and Safety.” Who knew? With his newly announced plan to require New York departments and agencies to look back […]

Rebecca Bratspies | August 13, 2009

Paterson’s Executive Order: Win for Industry, Loss for Public Health and Safety

This is one of two posts today by CPR member scholars evaluating NY Gov. David Paterson's recent executive order on regulations; see also Sid Shapiro's post, "New York Governor Channels Ronald Reagan: Governor Paterson’s Flawed Plan to Review Regulations." It is open season on environmental, health, and safety regulations in New York. Last Friday, August […]

Shana Campbell Jones | August 11, 2009

CPR Scholarship Roundup: Resilience and Adaptive Management — Protecting Natural Resources in a Changing World

One of the ongoing tensions in environmental law is the conflict between uniformity and flexibility, constancy and change. Many of the environmental successes over the past thirty years derive from uniform standards that are straightforward to administer and enforce. The Clean Water Act’s requirement, for example, that all industrial polluters are obligated to utilize the […]

Holly Doremus | August 11, 2009

The Need for, and Challenges of, Climate Adaptation

This item cross-posted by permission from Legal Planet. When it comes to climate change, lawyers and policymakers (and scientists too) have been guilty of emphasizing greenhouse gas emission reduction, almost to the exclusion of everything else. Adapting to climate change has taken a distant back seat, even as it has become increasingly clear that the […]

Wendy Wagner | August 10, 2009

A New Look at Science in Regulatory Policy

On Wednesday, the Bipartisan Policy Center’s Science for Policy Project released its report (press release, full report) on the use of science in regulation-making. I was on the panel and thus am a bit biased, but I think the report makes a terrific contribution. It significantly narrows the range of positions that can be credibly […]

Matthew Freeman | August 10, 2009

Sid Shapiro Interview on Michaels Nomination to OSHA

CPR's Sid Shapiro is interviewed in this week's edition of Living On Earth, the environment-focused public radio show heard in 300 markets around the nation.  The subject is David Michaels's nomination to head the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.   Says Shapiro:  "David Michaels has his job cut out for him. I think it's fair […]

Alexandra Klass | August 6, 2009

Carbon Capture and Sequestration: An Assessment of the Facts (Below) the Ground Today

One of many approaches to combating climate change is “Carbon Capture and Geologic Sequestration” (CCS). It’s a pretty straightforward idea: capture climate-change-causing carbon emissions and lock them up underground, rather than letting them float up into the atmosphere where they would contribute to global warming. The concept may be simple, but the actual engineering of […]

Matt Shudtz | August 5, 2009

Thoughts on Tuesday’s Senate Hearing on Preemption

Following up on Ben’s post about Tuesday’s Senate HELP Committee hearing on medical device preemption, I’d like to respond to three issues that came up during the question-and-answer session. Innovation: Senators Harkin and Hatch had a bit of a disagreement about whether the possibility of tort liability stifles innovation by medical device firms. Peter Barton […]

Ben Somberg | August 4, 2009

McGarity Testifies on Medical Device Safety

CPR Member Scholar Thomas McGarity testified this afternoon at a hearing of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions on the issue of medical device safety (written testimony, press release). Currently, individuals injured by a faulty medical device generally cannot sue the device manufacturer in state courts if that device was fully approved […]