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CPR Member Scholars to Congress: Judicial Review Provisions of CFTC Reauthorization Bill Need Another Look

Yesterday, CPR Member Scholars sent a letter to House Representatives about their concerns with Section 212 of H.R. 4413, the Consumer Protection and End-User Relief Act.  This provision would add a new Section 24 to the Commodity Exchange Act, establishing specific requirements for judicial review of rules adopted by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).  H.R. 4413 is on the short list for a floor vote in House.

As the letter explains, several aspects of Section 212 “raise significant problems.”  One provision would authorize courts reviewing CFTC rules to modify and enforce as modified those rules.  This is a huge departure from how judicial review of rules normally takes place, including judicial review carried out under the Administrative Procedure Act, which essentially authorizes a court to only affirm or set aside a rule in whole or in part. In other words, the Courts interpret laws, they do not write them.  Of this provision, the Scholars write, “Our system of government simply does not contemplate granting a court the regulatory power both to reject an agency’s rule and then force adoption of a different rule preferred by the court itself.”

Another provision of Section 212 would allow any parties involved in a judicial challenge to a CFTC rulemaking to apply to the court “for leave to adduce additional evidence,” provided that the party can show “that the additional evidence is material and that there was reasonable ground for failure to adduce it before the Commission.”  This change would be unprecedented and generally applies, if ever, to court challenges to agency orders. This change would open the door to special interests inserting themselves even further along in the regulatory process, slowing down implementation of needed rules even further. Given that those interested parties would be free to submit to CFTC any and all evidence they wish on a particular CFTC rule, there should be no “reasonable ground” for those parties to fail to submit such information during the rule-making process, rather than later during litigation.

So how did a bill with such peculiar judicial review provisions come to pass?  The CPR Member Scholars explain that the drafters of the bill appear to have borrowed the wrong language from an existing law governing judicial review provisions for the Securities and Exchange Commission.  Specifically, the problematic language in H.R. 4413 language appears to come from 5 U.S.C. § 78y(a), which governs judicial review of orders adopted by the SEC, rather than 15 U.S.C. § 78y(b), which governs judicial review of rules promulgated by the SEC.  As the CPR Member Scholars explain, the problematic judicial review provisions in H.R. 4413 make a great deal more sense in the context of agency orders rather than agency rules.

Whatever the origins of the judicial review provisions of H.R. 4413, one thing is clear:  If enacted, these provisions could inhibit the work of the CFTC and waste scarce judicial resources.  As the CPR Member Scholars put it:

The upshot is that the judicial review provisions would introduce elements of judicial review that, while arguably sensible in the context of administrative adjudications (i.e., agency actions that produce orders), would, in the context of administrative rulemakings, likely result in needless confusion, wasteful and time-consuming litigation, erroneous decisions, and, most importantly, a massive transfer of regulatory power to Article III courts.

The letter concludes by requesting the Members of the House postpone consideration of H.R. 4413 until the drafters of the bill have had a chance to take good, long second look at the judicial review provisions to address the concerns they raised.   Given the many unnecessary and avoidable problems these provisions are sure to invite, the House Members would do well to heed this advice.

 

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James Goodwin | May 20, 2014

CPR Member Scholars to Congress: Judicial Review Provisions of CFTC Reauthorization Bill Need Another Look

Yesterday, CPR Member Scholars sent a letter to House Representatives about their concerns with Section 212 of H.R. 4413, the Consumer Protection and End-User Relief Act.  This provision would add a new Section 24 to the Commodity Exchange Act, establishing specific requirements for judicial review of rules adopted by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).  […]

Erin Kesler | May 19, 2014

CPR’s Catherine O’Neill in Seattle Times: Protect water and health by updating state’s fish-consumption rate

Today, the Seattle Times published an op-ed by CPR scholar and University of Seattle law professor Catherine O’Neill with University of Washington professor and public health officer Frank James entitled, “Protect water and health by updating state’s fish-consumption rate.” According to the piece: GOV. Jay Inslee is currently considering how much fish Washingtonians may safely consume […]

Erin Kesler | May 16, 2014

Mint Press News: Americans Deserve Real Toxic Chemical Reform

Center for Progressive Reform Scholar Sidney Shapiro and Asbestos Disease Awareness Association President Linda Reinstein published a piece in Mint Press News on toxic chemical reform legislation. They note: Imagine a chemical that every public health organization in the United States and around the world knows to cause cancer and a host of other illnesses. You might […]

Matt Shudtz | May 8, 2014

New NAS report breathes life into EPA’s IRIS program

The National Academies’ National Research Council released its long-awaited report on IRIS this week, and the results are good for EPA.  The report praises the IRIS program and its leadership, including Drs. Olden and Cogliano, for making great strides to improve how IRIS assessments are developed. To get a real appreciation for how positive this […]

Anne Havemann | May 8, 2014

Supreme Court’s Revival of the Transport Rule Means a Cleaner Chesapeake Bay

Air pollution is a complex problem. For one, it does not adhere to state boundaries; a smokestack in one state can contribute to pollution problems in another, even a downwind state hundreds of miles away. What’s more, air pollution’s impacts are not confined to just the air. What goes up must come down, and air pollutants […]

Frank Ackerman | May 6, 2014

Dynamic modeling and the climate

Frank Ackerman is the coauthor, with Joseph Daniel, of (Mis)understanding Climate Policy: The role of economic modeling, prepared for Friends of the Earth (England, Wales & Northern Ireland) and WWF-UK. Under the Climate Change Act 2008, the UK government sets “legally binding” carbon budgets, which cap the country’s total emissions for five-year periods. The size of […]

William Andreen | May 1, 2014

“Waters of the United States” – Myths and Facts Surrounding the New Proposed Rule from EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers

On April 21, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers published a proposed rulemaking to clarify the jurisdictional reach of the protections afforded by the Clean Water Act of 1972.  The Clean Water Act is the foundation of our nation’s effort to restore and maintain the biological, chemical, and physical […]

Erin Kesler | April 29, 2014

CPR Scholars Respond to Supreme Court Ruling in Favor of EPA’s Cross-State Pollution Rule

The Supreme Court today upheld, by a 6-2 vote, the EPA’s cross-state air pollution rule. Below are reactions from Center for Progressive Reform scholars Thomas O. McGarity and Victor Flatt. According to McGarity: After two decade’s worth of litigation, the Supreme Court has finally held that EPA may require polluters in one state to protect […]

Joel A. Mintz | April 24, 2014

EPA’s Final Enforcement Strategic Plan: A Small Silver Lining in a Very Dark Cloud

In a very thoughtful CPRBlog piece, dated April 14, 2014, Rena Steinzor presents a powerful critique of the enforcement aspects of EPA’s 2014-2018 Strategic Plan. As Professor Steinzor rightly points out, EPA’s projected cutbacks in source inspections, civil judicial enforcement, administrative enforcement actions, and other enforcement work will likely encourage air and water pollution by […]