Notice & Comment

Notice & Comment

Notice & Comment

Biden’s Student Debt Cancellation: The Perils of Policy without Procedure, by William Yeatman and Michael Poon

Last week, Pacific Legal Foundation (where we work) filed an amended class action complaint challenging the Biden Administration’s plan to cancel up to $519 billion in federally held student debt. The short history of our suit sheds light on the program’s shambolic implementation.   After announcing the policy, the Education Department created a website to […]

Notice & Comment

United States v. Texas Could Resolve a Circuit Split on Whether Prosecutorial Discretion Applies to Generally Applicable Non-Enforcement Policies, by Levon Schlichter

The Administrative Procedure Act (APA) provides that judicial review applies to final agency action except to the extent that “agency action is committed to agency discretion by law.” 5 U.S.C. § 701(a). Courts have interpreted this provision to preclude judicial review of individual, ad hoc decisions by an agency to not enforce a statute.   […]

Notice & Comment

Administrative Fidelity – Between Deference and Doubt, by Tim Mullins

Administrative law does not have to be hard. Follow the required procedures. Implement the statutes you have. Have a reasonable basis for your decisions. This is, really, it. Sure, there will always be questions about interpretive issues, or whether an agency has adequately addressed all comments, or the sufficiency of the agency’s evidence. And in […]

Notice & Comment

Are Rules Effective Before Publication? Reflections on the D.C. Circuit’s Decision in Humane Society v. USDA, by Jack M. Beermann

Since at least 1980, there has been a documented increase in regulatory activity at the end of presidential terms, especially in the post-election period when the outgoing President’s successor is from the other party. This phenomenon has come to be known as “midnight regulation,” and the products of end-of-term legislative rulemaking are referred to as […]

Notice & Comment

Administrative Law SSRN Reading List, September 2022 Edition

Here is the September 2022 Edition of the most-downloaded recent papers (those announced in the last 60 days) from SSRN’s U.S. Administrative Law eJournal, which is edited by Bill Funk. Testing Textualism’s ‘Ordinary Meaning’ by Tara Leigh Grove (90 George Washington Law Review 101 (2022)) The National Security Consequences of the Major Questions Doctrine by Timothy Meyer & Ganesh Sitaraman (Michigan Law Review forthcoming) Is Criminal Law Unlawful? by Paul […]

Notice & Comment

D. C. Circuit Review – Reviewed: Civic Charity and Judge Silberman

It’s hard to imagine the D. C. Circuit without Judge Larry Silberman. As has been noted by many since his passing last week he was a commanding presence, an iconic judge.  https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/05/us/laurence-silberman-dead.html; https://www.washingtonpost.com/obituaries/2022/10/03/laurence-silberman-federal-appeals-judge/; https://www.yalejreg.com/nc/the-most-intimidating-judge-i-ever-met-reflections-on-judge-laurence-silberman/; https://www.wsj.com/articles/america-loses-a-judicial-giant-laurence-silberman-restraint-dc-circuit-constitution-judge-legacy-scalia-clerks-second-amendment-11664750990 I shall miss him. Before joining the D. C. Circuit I was in awe of Judge Silberman and his singular […]

Notice & Comment

Final Agency Action on Student Loan Forgiveness: Whether, When, and How Will (and Should) it Come?

In August, the Biden Administration announced its plan for student loan forgiveness outside of the recently expanded Public Service Loan Forgiveness program. In the debate over the this new program’s lawfulness, a common argument is that the program’s critics have been too hasty. They should wait, it is argued, for the Department of Education’s final […]