S 1080 · 97th Congress · Government Operations and Politics

Regulatory Reform Act

Introduced 1981-04-30· Sponsored by Sen. Laxalt, Paul D. [R-NV]· Senate

Bill Progress

1
Introduced
Committee
Senate Vote
4
House
5
Enacted
Latest: Passed Senate with amendments by Yea-Nay Vote. 94-0. Record Vote No: 62.(1982-03-24)

Recorded Votes

PassedSenate · 1982-03-24
Yea 94Nay 0
PassedSenate · 1982-03-24
Yea 94Nay 0

Plain Language Summary

[AI summary unavailable — showing source text] Regulatory Reform Act - Amends the Administrative Procedure Act to require the notice of proposed agency rulemaking to include: (1) a statement of the Congressional intent behind the rule; (2) a solicitation for public proposals for alternative methods; (3) a description of the data used in the rulemaking; and (4) a determination of whether the rule is a "major rule," as defined in this Act. Directs each agency to publish with such notice: (1) a description of the costs and benefits of and alternatives to the proposed rule; and (2) a justification for proposing the rule and selecting it over the alternatives. Requires agencies to give interested persons at least 60 days to submit written comments on any proposed rule and to make oral comments on major rules. Provides for a 30-day extension of such period. Directs each agency to publish with each final rule a statement of its basis and purpose, including an assessment of the public comments and a comparison of the costs, benefits, and adverse effects of the rule. Requires an agency officer or employee to prepare the rulemaking notice and the statement of the basis and purpose. Directs each agency to maintain, for judicial review, a …

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

Cosponsors (20)

6 Democrats14 Republicans