Notice & Comment

Notice & Comment

Notice & Comment

Interim-Final or Temporary Regulations: Playing Fast and Loose with the Rules (Sometimes), by Kristin E. Hickman

In administrative law doctrine, much significance is placed not only on what agencies say but on the format they use to say it. Interpretations of statutes expressed in legislative rules carry the force of law—i.e., are legally binding on private parties—so must comply with Administrative Procedure Act (APA) notice and comment requirements and usually are […]

Notice & Comment

How Agencies Should Communicate During Notice-and-Comment Rulemaking

As Elizabeth Porter and Kathryn Watts noted in their contribution to this symposium on how agencies communicate (as well as Michael Herz in his contribution), federal agencies have begun to utilize social media and other channels to explain and promote their preferred regulatory outcomes. Sometimes such communications take place during the public comment period on […]

Notice & Comment

Are Medicaid work requirements legal?

That’s the title of a new piece of mine that came out in JAMA this morning. It’s pretty timely: a lawsuit was filed last week challenging CMS’s approval of Kentucky’s waiver, which includes work requirements. More waivers, and more litigation, are sure to come. I’m no fan of work requirements. They’re harsh, stigmatizing, and ineffective. And they will hurt people, […]

Notice & Comment

2/4 Submission Deadline: ACS’s Richard D. Cudahy Writing Competition on Regulatory and Administrative Law

Each year the American Constitution Society hosts the Richard D. Cudahy Writing Competition in Regulatory and Administrative Law. The list of prior winners is a who’s who in administrative law. Plus there’s a separate student category! The submission deadline of February 4th is quickly approaching. Here are the full details from the ACS website: The American […]

Notice & Comment

D.C. Circuit Review – Reviewed: The I-Don’t-Have-Time-To-Read-It-All Version of PHH Corp. v. CFPB

At long last, the en banc D.C. Circuit has decided PHH Corp. v. CFBP. This case — which, of course, we have discussed many times here at Notice & Comment — concerns the constitutionality of the restrictions on the President’s ability to remove the CFPB director (namely, only for “for inefficiency, neglect of duty, or […]

Notice & Comment

UCLA Law Review Symposium This Friday, 2/2: The Safeguards of Our Constitutional Republic

On Friday, the UCLA Law Review will be hosting a terrific symposium entitled The Safeguards of Our Constitutional Republic. So if you happen to be in Southern California, definitely join us! Here’s the description of the symposium from the law review’s website: We find ourselves today at a political, legal, and cultural crossroad. This past year […]

Notice & Comment

Involuntary Rulemaking?

As the various entries in this Symposium show, agencies enjoy considerable flexibility in determining whether, when, and how to publicly communicate their enforcement priorities and legal interpretations. But sometimes, through statutes like the Freedom of Information Act, an agency may be forced to reveal things that it would otherwise keep out of the public’s eye. For […]