Affirmatively Disclosing Agency Legal Materials
By Bernard W. Bell et al., Regulatory Review, Sept. 11, 2023
Administrative agencies’ law-generating powers have long been recognized, as has the importance of making agency-generated law available to the public. In 1971, the Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS) recommended that “agency policies which affect the public should be articulated and made known to the public to the greatest extent feasible.” Over the years, ACUS has adopted numerous recommendations to that end.
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ACUS commissioned the five of us as a consultant team to craft potential statutory revisions that would ensure greater online accessibility of agency legal materials. As part of our work, we solicited formal input through a series of meetings with a 60-member group of ACUS members and affiliates, including representatives from 50 federal agencies. We also conducted our own research, reviewed more than 30 written comments submitted to us, and deliberated at length among ourselves in more than 20 team meetings held over an 11-month period. The resulting 157-page report thus reflects a well-deliberated consensus that is based on extensive analysis and broad input.
One simple principle animates our entire report: All legal material that agencies must disclose upon request by a member of the public should be affirmatively made available on agency websites.
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