HR 4561 · 107th Congress · Government Operations and Politics

Federal Agency Protection of Privacy Act

Introduced 2002-04-24· Sponsored by Rep. Barr, Bob [R-GA-7]· House

Bill Progress

Introduced
Committee
House Vote
4
Senate
5
Enacted
Latest: Received in the Senate.(2002-10-08)

Plain Language Summary

[AI summary unavailable — showing source text] Federal Agency Protection of Privacy Act - Requires Federal agencies: (1) when publishing a general notice of proposed rulemaking for any proposed rule or for an interpretative rule involving the internal revenue laws, to prepare, make available for public comment, and publish an initial analysis describing the rule's impact on the privacy of individuals; and (2) when promulgating the final rule, to prepare, make publicly available, and publish a final privacy impact analysis that includes a summary of the significant issues raised by and changes made pursuant to public comments on the initial analysis. Requires the head of an agency promulgating a rule that may have a significant privacy impact on individuals or on a substantial number of individuals to use specified techniques to assure that individuals have been given an opportunity to participate in the rulemaking. Requires each agency to: (1) carry out a periodic review of promulgated rules that have such impact to determine whether each such rule can be amended or rescinded in a manner that minimizes such impact while remaining in accordance with applicable statutes; (2) carry out such review in accordance with a plan that pr…

Summarized by Claude AI · Non-partisan · For informational purposes only

CBO Cost Estimate

Congressional Budget Office

H.R. 4561, Federal Agency Protection of Privacy Act

Sep 27, 2002

<p>Cost estimate for the bill as ordered reported by the House Committee on the Judiciary on September 10, 2002</p>

Full CBO report ↗

H.R. 4561, Federal Agency Protection of Privacy Act

Sep 27, 2002

Cost estimate for the bill as ordered reported by the House Committee on the Judiciary on September 10, 2002

Full CBO report ↗

Official non-partisan budget analysis by the Congressional Budget Office

Cosponsors (20)

10 Democrats10 Republicans