Obama administration delivers delayed regulatory agenda, could cost billions
By law, each April and October, federal agencies are required to release an accounting of proposed regulations that will have an economically significant impact. That didn't happen in 2012.
Instead, the Obama administration didn't release its 2012 regulatory agenda until on the Friday before Christmas.
"The fact that this snuck in after the election, during the holiday season when people were otherwise occupied with their families, is not surprising," said John Malcolm, senior legal fellow at the Heritage Foundation's Center for Legal and Judicial Studies.
Since the Dec. 21 release, legal experts and analysts have been pouring through the tens of thousands of pages in order to determine their impact. According to an initial estimate by the American Action Forum, which notes that some entries are missing key fiscal data, the cost of implementing the agenda would top $123 billion. Completing the paperwork could require more than 13 million man-hours.
In just the last 90 days, according to its own website, the federal government has issued more than 5,500 new regulatory proposals. However, it continues to miss deadlines related to the health care law and the Dodd-Frank law regulating Wall Street. Roughly half of those regulatory deadlines have been missed."
Old Pudfark sez: " Although, it's been 4 plus years...It has to be a "Bush Fault".. "
"No Fault" Administration
- callmeslick
- Posts: 16473
- Joined: Wed Jul 29, 2009 9:02 pm
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Re: "No Fault" Administration
when the Senate doesn't allow for hiring of 1/2 of your administrative staff, it's hard to meet deadlines. No different than a short handed executive team at a major corporation. Note also, that there has been virtually no appointee of the departments dealing with healthcare or Dodd-Frank that hasn't been blocked, so no shock that those two are the foremost laggers.
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Pudfark
Re: "No Fault" Administration
While I may not agree, so much, with your point...
That there lack of folks didn't slow this part down.
"In just the last 90 days, according to its own website, the federal government has issued more than 5,500 new regulatory proposals."
Not to be a "stick in the mud"...you folks seem to "own" the Senate...according to Reid.
Just pointing out a couple of things....
That there lack of folks didn't slow this part down.
"In just the last 90 days, according to its own website, the federal government has issued more than 5,500 new regulatory proposals."
Not to be a "stick in the mud"...you folks seem to "own" the Senate...according to Reid.
Just pointing out a couple of things....
- callmeslick
- Posts: 16473
- Joined: Wed Jul 29, 2009 9:02 pm
- Location: Fearing and loathing in Delaware and Virginia.
Re: "No Fault" Administration
no one owns the Senate without 60 votes in hand.
'proposed' regulations' are not actually enacted regulations and given the vast scope of the Federal agencies, the number seems huge, but really isn't, when most of the numbers consist of minor regs around foods, safety and the like.
'proposed' regulations' are not actually enacted regulations and given the vast scope of the Federal agencies, the number seems huge, but really isn't, when most of the numbers consist of minor regs around foods, safety and the like.
Re: "No Fault" Administration
Or people could actually do a full days work in a day rather than a weekcallmeslick wrote:when the Senate doesn't allow for hiring of 1/2 of your administrative staff, it's hard to meet deadlines.