Chapter 203 |
2016 -- S 3015 AS AMENDED Enacted 06/29/2016 |
A N A C T |
RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT |
Introduced By: Senator William J. Conley |
Date Introduced: May 19, 2016 |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
SECTION 1. Sections 42-35-3.1, 42-35-3.4 and 42-35-9.1 of the General Laws in |
Chapter 42-35 entitled "Administrative Procedures" are hereby repealed. |
42-35-3.1. Form for filing -- Failure to properly file. -- (a) All administrative rules and |
regulations are to be filed in duplicate (one copy to be returned to the adopting agency, after |
proper stamping of date filed), pursuant to a form prepared by the secretary of state; all agencies |
must adhere to the form when submitting rules and regulations to the secretary of state pursuant |
to § 42-35-4. |
(b) The secretary of state is authorized to determine a standardized format for documents |
to be filed. Should an agency fail to use the adopted format, the secretary of state shall reject the |
rule and/or regulation. The secretary of state shall reject the improper rule and/or regulation by |
returning the improperly drafted rule and/or regulation to the director of the agency which |
submitted the improper form within ten (10) days of receipt of the form. |
(c) The secretary of state may authorize the filing of rules and regulations by or through |
electronic data or machine readable equipment in such form and manner as may be determined by |
the secretary of state. |
42-35-3.4. Periodic review of rules. -- (a) Each agency shall review all agency rules |
existing at the time of enactment to determine whether such rules should be continued without |
change, or should be amended or rescinded, by examining whether the rules are consistent with |
the stated objectives of applicable statutes and are authorized by, and conform with, those |
statutes. The review must include, but need not be limited to, minimizing the economic impact of |
the rules on small businesses in a manner consistent with the objectives of applicable statutes and |
ensuring consistency with and conformance with those statutes. |
(b) In reviewing rules, the agency shall consider the following factors: |
(1) The continued need for the rules; |
(2) The nature of complaints or comments received concerning the rule from the public; |
(3) The complexity of the rule; |
(4) The extent to which the rule overlaps, duplicates, or conflicts with other federal, state, |
and local government rules; |
(5) The length of time since the rule has been evaluated or the degree to which |
technology, economic conditions, or other factors have changed in the area affected by the rule; |
(6) Whether the rules are consistent with current agency practices and procedures; and |
(7) Whether the rules are consistent with and authorized by applicable statutes. |
(c) All rules reviewed in accordance with this section shall be reviewed every five (5) |
years. |
(d) In addition to the review required in this section, within four (4) years of enactment of |
this act, each agency shall review all agency rules existing at the time of enactment to determine |
whether such rules should be continued without change, or should be amended or rescinded, to |
minimize economic impact of the rules on small businesses in a manner consistent with the state |
objective of applicable statutes pursuant to this section. Beginning on July 1, 2012, each agency |
shall review twenty-five percent (25%) of its regulations each year for four (4) years until all |
existing regulations have been evaluated for any adverse impacts on small businesses and |
economic impact statements have been prepared, with the exception of emergency regulations |
adopted in accordance with § 42-35-3(b). |
The office of regulatory reform shall assist and coordinate with all agencies during the |
periodic review of rules. |
(e) Beginning January 1, 2017, this periodic review timeline will align with the required |
refiling of rules and regulations process with the Rhode Island secretary of state's office pursuant |
to § 42-35-4.1. |
42-35-9.1. Administrative hearing assessment and study. -- (a) In order to assess, |
standardize and create efficiency and fairness in the administrative hearing process in state |
agencies, the department of administration, with the assistance from the state office of |
management and budget and the personnel administrator, shall conduct an assessment and study |
of the administrative hearing practices across state government performed by individuals |
employed by the state. The study shall not include administrative hearings conducted by boards, |
committees, or commissions which are unpaid by the state for their time. |
(b) All state agencies on or before September 30, 2013, shall each provide the following |
information and records to the director of the department of administration: |
(1) A complete list of the types of administrative hearings performed on behalf of the |
agency including a description of the type of hearing, expertise that may be required and statutory |
authority for conducting such a hearing; |
(2) The number of hearings listed by each type of hearing as described in subdivision (1) |
performed by each agency in each fiscal year for the past three (3) fiscal years ending June 30, |
2013, along with the average time-frame for each type of matter to be adjudicated; |
(3) The agency rules or regulations governing any such administrative hearings; |
(4) A complete list of personnel by name, title, grade, division of agency, and total rate of |
salary, who conduct agency administrative hearings including the type of hearing performed by |
each individual, along with the percentage of the person's time spent on administrative hearing |
duties as a full-time equivalent; |
(5) A complete list of all agency positions with name, title, division, and total rate of |
salary of each position, that include administrative hearing duties in either the job title or job |
description; |
(6) A complete list of vacancies that have administrative hearing duties in the job title job |
description; and |
(7) The total number, as a full-time equivalent, performing all administrative hearings for |
the agency. |
(c) On or before December 30, 2013, the department of administration, with assistance |
from the state office of management and budget and the personnel administrator, shall provide to |
the governor, speaker of the house of representatives, senate president, and chairpersons of the |
house and senate finance committees a report regarding the assessment and study of |
administrative hearing practices in the state agencies. The report shall include: |
(1) An executive summary of administrative hearing practices across state government; |
(2) A recommendation and/or a plan on how to standardize, consolidate and make more |
efficient the administrative hearing process across state agencies; |
(3) A recommendation regarding the potential need for certain hearing officers to be |
qualified subject matter experts; |
(4) Legislative or regulatory recommendations for a standardized administrative hearing |
process across state agencies; |
(5) Recommendations regarding the number of full-time equivalents needed to perform |
administrative hearing duties; |
(6) A copy of the information and records supplied by each of the agencies listed in |
subsection (b); and |
(7) Any other information deemed to be appropriate. |
(d) Each agency shall fully cooperate with the department of administration regarding the |
assessment and study and shall dedicate appropriate resources as needed to complete this |
assessment. Additionally, the state office of management and budget and the personnel |
administrator shall dedicate appropriate resources and assist the department of administration in |
compiling and analyzing the information and completing the report for the general assembly. |
SECTION 2. Sections 42-35-1, 42-35-1.1, 42-35-2, 42-35-2.1, 42-35-2.2, 42-35-2.3, 42- |
35-2.5, 42-35-3, 42-35-3.5, 42-35-4, 42-35-4.1, 42-35-5, 42-35-5.1, 42-35-6 and 42-35-8 of the |
General Laws in Chapter 42-35 entitled "Administrative Procedures" are hereby amended to read |
as follows: |
42-35-1. Definitions. -- As used in this chapter: |
(1) Except as otherwise provided herein, "agency" "Agency" includes each means a state |
board, commission, department, or officer, agency, authority, board, bureau, commission, |
department, district, division, institution, office, officer, quasi-public agency, or other political |
subdivisions created by the general assembly or the governor, other than the legislature or the |
courts judiciary, that is authorized by law of this state to make rules or to determine contested |
cases. , and all "authorities", as that term is defined below; |
(2) "Agency action" means: |
(i) The whole or part of an order or rule; |
(ii) The failure to issue an order or rule; or |
(iii) An agency's performing, or failing to perform, a duty, function, or activity or to make |
a determination required by law. |
(3) "Agency head" means the individual in whom, or one or more members of the body |
of individuals in which, the ultimate legal authority of an agency is vested. |
(4) "Agency record" means the agency rulemaking record required by §42-35-2.3. |
(2) "Authorities" includes the following: the Rhode Island industrial building authority, |
the Rhode Island recreational building authority, the Rhode Island economic development |
corporation, the Rhode Island industrial facilities corporation, the Rhode Island refunding bond |
authority, the Rhode Island housing and mortgage finance corporation, the Rhode Island solid |
waste management corporation, the Rhode Island public transit authority, the Rhode Island |
student loan authority, the Howard development corporation, the water resources board, the |
Rhode Island health and educational building corporation, the Rhode Island turnpike and bridge |
authority, the Blackstone Valley district commission, the Narragansett Bay water quality |
management district commission, their successors and assigns, and any body corporate and politic |
with the power to issue bonds and notes, which are direct, guaranteed, contingent, or moral |
obligations of the state, which is hereinafter created or established in this state. |
(3)(5) "Contested case" means a proceeding, including but not restricted to, ratemaking, |
price fixing, and licensing, in which the legal rights, duties, or privileges of a specific party are |
required by law to be determined by an agency after an opportunity for hearing; |
(6) "Electronic" means relating to technology having electrical, digital, magnetic, |
wireless, optical, electromagnetic, or similar capabilities; |
(7) "Electronic record" means a record created, generated, sent, communicated, received, |
or stored by electronic means; |
(8) "Final rule" means a rule promulgated under §§42-35-2.6 through 42-35-2.9, an |
emergency rule promulgated under §42-35-2.10, or a direct, final rule promulgated under §42-35- |
2.11; |
(9) "Guidance document" means a record of general applicability developed by an agency |
which lacks the force of law but states the agency's current approach to, or interpretation of, law |
or describes how and when the agency will exercise discretionary functions. The term does not |
include records described in subdivisions (19)(i), (ii), (iii), or (iv); |
(10) "Index" means a searchable list in a record of subjects and titles with page numbers, |
hyperlinks, or other connectors that link each index entry to the text to which it refers; |
(4)(11) "License" includes the whole or part of any agency permit, certificate, approval, |
registration, charter, or similar form of permission required by law, but it does not include a |
license required solely for revenue purposes; |
(5)(12) "Licensing" includes the agency process respecting the grant, denial, renewal, |
revocation, suspension, annulment, withdrawal, or amendment of a license; |
(13) "Order" means the whole or a part of a final disposition, whether affirmative, |
negative, injunctive, or declaratory in form, of a contested case; |
(6)(14) "Party" means each person or agency named or admitted as a party, or properly |
seeking and entitled as of right to be admitted as a party; |
(7)(15) "Person" means any individual, partnership, corporation, association, the |
department of environmental management, governmental subdivision, or public or private |
organization of any character other than an agency; |
(16) "Promulgate," with respect to a rule, means the process of writing a new rule, or |
amending or repealing an existing rule. "Promulgation" has a corresponding meaning. The |
process of "promulgation" begins with the filing of the notice of proposed rulemaking under §42- |
35-2.7 and ends upon the effective date of the rule. "Promulgate" also includes the completion of |
the rulemaking process for emergency rules (§42-35-2.10) or direct final rules (§42-35-2.11), if |
applicable. |
(17) "Reasonable charge" means the lowest customary charge for a service. |
(18) "Record" means information that is inscribed on a tangible medium or that is stored |
in an electronic or other medium and is retrievable in perceivable form. |
(8) "Rule" means each agency statement of general applicability that implements, |
interprets, or prescribes law or policy or describes the organization, procedure, or practice |
requirements of any agency. The term includes the amendment or repeal of a prior rule, but does |
not include: (1) statements concerning only the internal management of an agency and not |
affecting private rights or procedures available to the public, or (2) declaratory rulings issued |
pursuant to § 42-35-8, (3) intra-agency memoranda, or (4) an order; |
(19) "Rule" means the whole or a part of an agency statement of general applicability that |
implements, interprets, or prescribes law or policy or the organization, procedure, or practice |
requirements of an agency and has the force of law. The term includes the amendment or repeal |
of an existing rule. The term is used interchangeably in this chapter with the term "regulation." |
The term does not include: |
(i) A statement that concerns only the internal management of an agency and which does |
not affect private rights or procedures available to the public; |
(ii) An intergovernmental or interagency memorandum, directive, or communication that |
does not affect private rights or procedures available to the public; |
(iii) An opinion of the attorney general or an opinion of the ethics commission pursuant |
to §36-14-11; |
(iv) A statement that establishes criteria or guidelines to be used by the staff of an agency |
in performing audits, investigations, or inspections, settling commercial disputes, negotiating |
commercial arrangements, or defending, prosecuting, or settling cases, if disclosure of the criteria |
or guidelines would enable persons violating the law to avoid detection, facilitate disregard of |
requirements imposed by law, or give an improper advantage to persons that are in an adverse |
position to the state; |
(v) A form developed by an agency to implement or interpret agency law or policy; or |
(vi) A guidance document. |
(20) "Sign" means, with present intent, to authenticate a record: |
(i) To execute a tangible symbol; or |
(ii) To attach to or logically associate with the record an electronic symbol, sound, or |
process. |
(9)(21) "Small business" shall have the same meanings that are provided for under title |
13, volume 1, part 121 of the Code of Federal Regulations (13 C.F.R., Pt. 121, as may be |
amended from time to time). ; |
(22) "State register" means the publication required under chapter 8.2 of title 42; |
(10) "Order" means the whole or a part of a final disposition, whether affirmative, |
negative, injunctive or declaratory in form, of a contested case; |
(11)(23) "Small business advocate" means the person appointed by the director of the |
economic development corporation as provided in § 42-64-34.; |
(24) "Website" means a website on the Iinternet or other similar technology or successor |
technology that permits the public to search a database that archives materials required to be |
published or exhibited by the secretary of state or an agency under this chapter; |
(25) "Writing" means a record inscribed on a tangible medium. "Written" has a |
corresponding meaning. |
42-35-1.1. Bodies subject to chapter Applicability. -- Notwithstanding any other |
provision of the general laws or any public law or special act to the contrary, all agencies as |
defined in § 42-35-1(a) and all agencies, boards, commissions, departments, and officers |
authorized by law to make rules or to determine contested cases, and all authorities as defined in |
§ 42-35-1(b) are subject to the provisions of this chapter. |
(a) This chapter applies to an agency unless the agency is exempted by Rhode Island |
general laws. |
(b) This chapter applies to all agency proceedings and all proceedings for judicial review |
or civil enforcement of agency action commenced after the effective date of this chapter. This |
chapter does not apply to any contested case for which notice was given before that date and |
rulemaking for which notice was given or a petition was filed before that date, for which all prior |
laws in effect at the time shall apply. |
42-35-2. Public information -- Adoption of rules -- Availability of rules and orders |
Required agency publication and recordkeeping. -- (a) In addition to other rule making |
requirements imposed by law, each agency shall An agency shall: |
(1) Adopt as a rule a description of its organization, stating the general course and |
method of its operations and the methods whereby the public may obtain information or make |
submissions or requests; |
(2) Adopt rules of practice, setting forth the nature and requirements of all formal and |
informal procedures available, and including a description of all forms and instructions used by |
the agency; |
(3) Make available for public inspection all rules and all other written statements of |
policy or interpretations formulated, adopted, or used by the agency in the discharge of its |
functions; |
(4) Make available for public inspection all final orders, decisions, and opinions. |
(b) No agency rule, order, or decision is valid or effective against any person or party, nor |
may it be invoked by the agency for any purpose, until it has been made available for public |
inspection as herein required, except that this provision is not applicable in favor of any person or |
party who has actual knowledge thereof. |
(1) Publish and make available for public inspection a description of its organization, |
stating the general course and method of its operations and the methods by which the public may |
obtain information or make submissions or requests; |
(2) Publish and make available for public inspection a description of all procedures, |
including a description of all forms and instructions used by the agency; |
(3) Publish and make available for public inspection a description of the process for |
application for a license, available benefits, or other matters for which an application is |
appropriate on its agency website, unless the process is prescribed by law other than this chapter; |
(4) Publish rules for the conduct of public hearings, and make available these rules for |
public inspection; |
(5) Maintain and make available for public inspection the agency's current rulemaking |
agenda required by §42-35-5.1; and |
(6) Maintain and publish a separate, current, and dated index and compilation of all final |
rules filed with the secretary of state, make the index and compilation available for public |
inspection and, for a reasonable charge, copying at the principal office of the agency; update the |
index and compilation at least monthly; and file the index and the compilation and all changes to |
both with the secretary of state. |
(b) All documents required by this section must be published on the agency's website by |
December 31, 2018 and maintained on the website thereafter. |
42-35-2.1. Rules coordinator. -- Each agency shall, by January 2, 2002, designate a |
rules coordinator, who shall have knowledge of the subjects of rules being proposed, maintain the |
records of any rules action including the rule-making file required by § 42-35-2.2 §42-35-2.3, and |
respond to public inquiries about proposed rules and the identity of agency personnel working, |
reviewing, or commenting on them. The office and mailing address of the rules coordinator shall |
be published in the state register at the time of designation and in the first issue of each calendar |
year thereafter for the duration of the designation. The rules coordinator may be an employee of |
another agency. Nothing in this section shall be construed to explicitly or implicitly permit the |
hiring of any additional personnel to perform the duties and responsibilities of the rules |
coordinator designated in this section. |
42-35-2.2. Rule-making file Publication; Agency duties. -- (a) Each agency shall |
maintain an official rule-making file for each rule proposed or adopted after January 2, 2002. The |
file and materials incorporated by reference shall be available for public inspection. |
(b) The agency rule-making file shall contain all of the following: |
(1) Copies of all publications in the state register with respect to the rule or the |
proceeding upon which the rule is based; |
(2) Copies of any portions of the agency's regulatory agenda containing entries relating to |
the rule or the proceeding on which the rule is based; |
(3) All written petitions, requests, submissions, and comments received by the agency |
and all other written material regarded by the agency as important to adoption of the rule or the |
proceeding on which the rule is based; |
(4) Any official transcript of oral presentations made in the proceeding on which the rule |
is based or, if not transcribed, any tape recording or stenographic record of them and any |
memorandum prepared by a presiding official summarizing the contents of those presentations; |
(5) The concise explanatory statement required by § 42-35-2.3; |
(6) All petitions for exceptions to, amendment of, or repeal or suspension of the rule; |
(7) Citations to data, factual information, studies, or reports in which the agency relies in |
the adoption of the rule, indicating where such data, factual information, studies, or reports are |
available for review by the public; |
(8) Any other material placed in the file by the agency. |
(c) Internal agency documents are exempt from inclusion in the rule-making file to the |
extent they constitute preliminary drafts, notes, recommendations, and intra-agency memoranda |
in which opinions are expressed or policies formulated or recommended, except that a specific |
document is not exempt from inclusion when it is publicly cited by an agency in connection with |
its decision. |
(d) Upon judicial review, the file required by this section constitutes the official agency |
rule-making file with respect to that rule. Unless otherwise required by law, the official agency |
rule-making file need not be the exclusive basis for agency action on that rule. |
(a) Unless the record is exempt from disclosure under law of this state other than this |
chapter, an agency shall publish and make available for public inspection, and on request and for |
a reasonable charge, make available through regular or electronic mail: |
(1) Each notice of a proposed rulemaking under §42-35-2.7; |
(2) Each rule filed under this chapter; |
(3) Each summary of regulatory analysis required by §42-35-2.9; |
(4) Each declaratory order issued under §42-35-8; |
(5) The index of declaratory orders prepared under §42-35-8; |
(6) Each guidance document issued under §42-35-2.12; |
(7) The index of currently effective guidance documents prepared under §42-35-2.12; |
(8) Each final order in a contested case issued under §42-35-12. |
(b) All documents in this section must be published on the agency website by December |
31, 2018, and maintained on the website thereafter. |
(c) An agency shall file with the secretary of state, in a format acceptable to the secretary |
of state: |
(1) Notice of a proposed rulemaking; |
(2) A summary of the regulatory analysis required by §42-35-2.9 for each proposed rule; |
(3) Each final rule; |
(4) An index of currently effective guidance documents under §42-35-2.12; and |
(5) Any other notice or matter that an agency is required to publish under this chapter. |
42-35-2.3. Concise explanatory statement Rulemaking record. -- At the time it files an |
adopted rule with the secretary of state, or within thirty (30) days thereafter, an agency shall place |
into the rule-making file maintained under § 42-35-2.2 and shall submit to the secretary of state a |
concise explanatory statement about the rule, identifying: |
(1) The agency's reasons for adopting the rule; and |
(2) A description of any difference between the text of the proposed rule as published in |
the register and the text of the rule as adopted, other than editing changes, stating the reasons for |
change. |
(a) An agency shall maintain the rulemaking record for each proposed rule, which will be |
the official rulemaking record. Unless the record, and any materials incorporated by reference, are |
privileged or exempt from disclosure under law of this state other than this chapter, the record |
and materials must be readily available for public inspection in the principal office of the agency. |
(1) Beginning on January 1, 2019, and thereafter, the agency shall publish on its agency |
website the rulemaking record for a rule upon commencement of the public-comment period; the |
agency may remove the rulemaking record upon the effective date of the rule. |
(2) Beginning on January 1, 2019, agencies shall submit rulemaking records to the |
secretary of state, in a format and process determined by the secretary of state. Thereafter, |
rulemaking records shall be available for public display on the website maintained by the |
secretary of state, in a manner prescribed by the secretary of state. |
(3) If an agency or the secretary of state determines that the rulemaking record or any part |
of the rulemaking record cannot be displayed practicably or is inappropriate for public display on |
the website, the agency or the secretary of state shall describe the part and note that the record or |
part is not displayed and state the reason why the record or part is not displayed. |
(b) A rulemaking record must contain: |
(1) A copy of all publications in the state register relating to the rule and the proceeding |
on which the rule is based; |
(2) A copy of any part of the rulemaking docket containing entries relating to the rule and |
the proceeding on which the rule is based; |
(3) A copy and, if prepared, an index, of all factual material, studies, and reports agency |
personnel submitted as part of formulating the proposed or final rule; |
(4) Any notice of proposed rulemaking under §42-35-2.7(b); |
(5) Any official transcript of oral presentations made in the proceeding on which the rule |
is based or, if not transcribed, any audio recording or verbatim transcript of the presentations, and |
any memorandum summarizing the contents of the presentations prepared by the agency official |
who presided over the hearing; |
(6) A copy of all comments received by the agency under §42-35-2.8 in response to the |
notice of proposed rulemaking; |
(7) A copy of the rule and explanatory statement filed with the secretary of state; and |
(8) Any petition for agency action on the rule, except a petition governed by §42-35-8. |
(9) Internal agency documents are exempt from inclusion in the rulemaking record to the |
extent they constitute preliminary drafts, notes, recommendations, and intra-agency memoranda |
in which opinions are expressed or policies formulated or recommended, except that a specific |
document is not exempt from inclusion when it is publicly cited by an agency in connection with |
its decision. Unless otherwise exempt from disclosure by law, inter-agency memoranda |
pertaining to regulatory enforcement will be published as part of the agency rulemaking record. |
(10) Upon judicial review, the file required by this section constitutes the official agency |
rulemaking record with respect to that rule. Unless otherwise required by law, the official agency |
rulemaking record need not be the exclusive basis for agency action on that rule. |
42-35-2.5. Electronic posting of advance notice of proposed rulemaking Advance |
notice of proposed rulemaking. -- (a) In order to afford all interested persons reasonable |
opportunity to submit data, views or arguments, any website maintained by the office of the |
secretary of state in accordance with subdivision 42-35-3(a)(1) shall be formatted so as to allow |
members of the public to view advanced notices of proposed rulemaking by the date of posting |
and by the agency that posted them. In addition, such website shall contain an up-to-date list of |
all agencies using the website as their primary source for proposed rulemaking notices. |
(b) Any agency submitting advance notice of proposed rulemaking via electronic media |
on the website maintained by the secretary of state shall do so in accordance with procedures |
established by the secretary of state. The agency shall also post such notice on the agency's own |
website. Unless and until an agency formally withdraws from submitting proposed rulemaking |
via electronic media, the agency shall submit all advance notices of proposed rulemaking in this |
fashion; provided, however, nothing contained herein shall prohibit the agency from also posting |
notices in a newspaper publication. |
(c) If an agency utilizing electronic posting as its primary source for advanced proposed |
rulemaking notices is required to make available a summary of all non-technical differences |
between the existing and proposed rules pursuant to subdivisions 42-35-3(a)(1) and 42-35- |
3(a)(5), that summary shall also be available on the website maintained by the secretary of state. |
(d) The office of the secretary of state shall establish a process to provide timely |
notification via electronic mail, to any person so requesting, any agency advance notices of |
proposed rulemaking submitted via electronic media pursuant to subdivision 42-35-3(a)(1). |
(a) An agency may gather information relevant to the subject matter of a potential |
rulemaking proceeding and may solicit comments and recommendations from the public by |
publishing an advance notice of proposed rulemaking in the state register and on its agency |
website, and indicating where, when, and how persons may comment before the rulemaking |
process begins. |
(b) An agency may create a committee or workshop to comment or make |
recommendations on the subject matter of a proposed rulemaking under active consideration |
within the agency. In making appointments to the committee, the agency shall make reasonable |
efforts to establish a balance in representation among members of the public known to have an |
interest in the subject matter of the proposed rulemaking. At least annually, the agency shall |
publish in the state register a list of all committees with their membership. Notice of a meeting of |
the committee must be published in the state register and on its agency website at least fifteen |
(15) calendar days before the meeting. Any meeting, as defined in §42-46-2, held under this |
subsection is open to the public and subject to the open meetings chapter pursuant to chapter 46 |
of title 42. |
(c) If a committee is appointed under subsection (b) of this section, it shall attempt to |
reach a consensus on the terms or substance of a proposed rule in consultation with one or more |
agency representatives. The committee shall present the consensus recommendation, if any, to the |
agency. The agency shall consider whether to use it as the basis for a proposed rule under this |
chapter, but the agency is not required to use the recommendation. |
(d) This section does not prohibit an agency from obtaining information and opinions |
from members of the public on the subject of a proposed rule by any other method or procedure. |
42-35-3. Procedures for adoption of rules Electronic filing Electronic filing of annual |
reports. -- (a) Prior to the adoption, amendment, or repeal of any rule the agency shall: |
(1) Give at least thirty (30) days notice of its intended action. The notice shall include a |
statement of either the terms or substance of the intended action or a description of the subjects |
and issues involved, and of the time when, the place where, and the manner in which interested |
persons may present their views thereon. The notice shall be mailed to all persons who have made |
timely request of the agency for advance notice of its rule-making proceedings, and published in a |
newspaper or newspapers having aggregate general circulation throughout the state; provided, |
however, that if the action is limited in its applicability to a particular area, then the publication |
may be in a newspaper having general circulation in the area. In lieu of newspaper publication, |
advance notice of proposed rulemaking by the department of health may be provided via |
electronic media on a website maintained by the office of the secretary of state. Authorization for |
such electronic notice shall commence on July 1, 2005. In lieu of newspaper publication, advance |
notice of proposed rulemaking by all other state departments, agencies and authorities may also |
be provided via electronic media on a website maintained by the office of secretary of state, and |
authorization for such electronic notice shall commence on May 1, 2008. Copies of proposed |
rules shall be available at the agency at the time of the notice required by this subsection, and by |
mail to any member of the public upon request. The agency shall also prepare a concise summary |
of all non-technical amendments being proposed that shall be made available with copies of the |
proposed rules themselves. |
(2) Afford all interested persons reasonable opportunity to submit data, views, or |
arguments, orally or in writing. In the case of rules, opportunity for oral hearing must be granted |
if requested by twenty-five (25) persons, or by a governmental subdivision or agency, or by an |
association having not less than twenty-five (25) members. The agency shall consider fully all |
written and oral submissions respecting the proposed rule. Upon adoption of a rule, the agency, if |
requested to do so by an interested person, either prior to adoption or within thirty (30) days |
thereafter, shall issue a concise statement of the principal reasons for and against its adoption, |
incorporating therein its reasons for overruling the considerations urged against its adoption. |
(3) Demonstrate the need for the adoption, amendment, or repeal of any rule in the record |
of the rulemaking proceeding. The agency shall demonstrate that there is no alternative approach |
among the alternatives considered during the rulemaking proceeding which would be as effective |
and less burdensome to affected private persons as another regulation. This standard requires that |
an agency proposing to adopt any new regulation must identify any other state regulation which is |
overlapped or duplicated by the proposed regulation and justify any overlap or duplication. |
(4) Comply with § 42-35-3.3. |
(5) Ensure that any proposed additions, deletions or other amendments to the rules and |
regulations be clearly marked. If an agency proposes adoption of a new rule to supersede an |
existing rule, the agency shall make available a summary of all non-technical differences between |
the existing and proposed rules. An agency's lawful promulgation of amendments to an existing |
rule shall be deemed to supersede and repeal the previous enactments of that rule, provided that |
the public notice required under subdivision (a)(1) of this section indicated such an intent. |
(b) If an agency finds that an imminent peril to the public health, safety, or welfare |
requires adoption of a rule upon less than thirty (30) days' notice, and states in writing its reasons |
for that finding, it may proceed without prior notice or hearing or upon any abbreviated notice |
and hearing that it finds practicable, to adopt an emergency rule. The rule so adopted may be |
effective for a period of not longer than one hundred twenty (120) days renewable once for a |
period not exceeding ninety (90) days, but the adoption of an identical rule under subdivisions |
(a)(1) and (a)(2) is not precluded. |
(c) No rule hereafter adopted is valid unless adopted in substantial compliance with this |
section, but no contest of any rule on its face on the ground of noncompliance with the procedural |
requirements of this section may be commenced after two (2) years from its effective date, but a |
contest of any rule as applied to the complainant may proceed if the complainant can demonstrate |
prejudice as a result of the agency's noncompliance with this section. |
In addition to all other requirements imposed by law, all agencies shall be required to |
electronically submit their annual reports to the general assembly for posting on the general |
assembly website in lieu of a printed copy. However, an agency shall produce a printed copy on |
demand. |
42-35-3.5. Simultaneous regulatory, licensing, and permitting processes. -- Any state |
agency with regulatory or permitting authority over a business shall establish a process whereby, |
at the option of the business and, if applicable, upon the presentation by the business of a |
preliminary determination by the municipality that the subject proposal is consistent with the |
applicable municipal zoning ordinances, the agency will conduct a simultaneous review and |
approval process with one or more other state or municipal agencies, and will not require prior |
approval of one or more state or municipal agency before beginning the review and approval |
process. |
(a) Any state agency with regulatory or permitting authority over a business shall not |
require prior approval of one or more state or municipal agencies before beginning its review and |
approval process. Such state agencies shall establish a process whereby the agency will conduct a |
simultaneous review and approval process with the one or more state or municipal agencies. State |
agencies may require, if applicable, evidence by the business of a preliminary determination by |
the municipality that the subject proposal is consistent with the applicable municipal zoning |
ordinances. |
(b) Nothing in this section shall entitle a business to recoup or recover any costs or fees |
associated with the simultaneous regulatory or permitting process. If one or more state or |
municipal agencies fail to approve a permit, license, or regulatory application, thereby |
influencing the granting of a contingent approval from another municipal or state entity, the |
business may not recover any associated costs from the agencies involved in the simultaneous |
review process; provided, that this section shall not effect affect the ability of a business to |
recoup or recover costs associated with the licensing, permitting, or application processes allowed |
under any other chapter. |
(c) All state agencies shall inform businesses of the possibility that one or more other |
state agencies may fail to approve a contingent permit, license, or regulatory application, and that |
the business may not recoup or recover costs associated with one application due to the denial or |
disapproval of another. |
42-35-4. Filing and taking effect of rules. -- (a) No later than thirty (30) days following |
the adoption of a rule each agency shall file forthwith in the office of the secretary of state a |
certified copy of each such rule, and shall certify its compliance with the procedural requirements |
of § 42-35-3. The secretary of state shall keep a permanent register of the rules open to public |
inspection. |
(b) Each rule hereafter adopted is effective twenty (20) days after filing with the secretary |
of state, except that: |
(1) If a later date is required by statute or specified in the rule, the later date is the |
effective date; |
(2) Subject to applicable constitutional or statutory provisions, an emergency rule may |
become effective immediately upon filing with the secretary of state, or at a stated date less than |
twenty (20) days thereafter, if the agency finds that this effective date is necessary because of |
imminent perils to the public health, safety, or welfare. The agency's finding and a brief statement |
of the reasons therefor shall be filed with the rule in the office of the secretary of state. The |
agency shall take appropriate measures to make emergency rules known to the persons who may |
be affected by them. |
(3) Any rules, regulations or policy adopted by state departments, agencies or quasi-state |
departments or agencies which require any new expenditure of money or increased expenditure of |
money by a city or town shall take effect on July 1 of the calendar year following the year of |
adoption; provided, however when the rule, regulation or policy does not exceed what may be |
required by federal statute or regulation or court order, it shall take effect upon its effective date |
of adoption. |
(4) Whenever it shall be determined by the governor that the postponement of the |
effective date of rules, regulations or policies of state departments, agencies or quasi-state |
departments or agencies, shall cause an emergency situation which imperils the public's safety or |
public health, the governor may by executive order suspend the operation of, in whole or in part, |
§ 42-35-4(3) and such order shall remain in effect until it is rescinded by a subsequent executive |
order. |
(c) The secretary of state shall remove from the files of rules, regulations or policies any |
rules, regulations or policies that are no longer in effect according to the criteria in §§ 42-35- |
4.1(g) and 42-35-4.2 and place them in another file or remove them to the state archives or other |
document storage facility. The secretary of state may also maintain these files on their original |
media or convert them to any other media of his or her choice. |
(a) An agency shall file each final rule with the secretary of state. An agency may not file |
a final rule until the public comment period has ended. In filing a final rule, an agency shall use a |
standardized form and process for submission determined by the secretary of state. The secretary |
of state shall affix to each final rule a certification of the time and date of filing. The secretary of |
state may reject the final rule if an agency fails to use the standardized format or fails to adhere to |
the codification requirements or any other publication requirements or rules promulgated by the |
secretary of state’s office pursuant to §42-35-5 of this chapter. The secretary of state shall reject |
the improper final rule by returning it to the director of the agency which submitted the improper |
form within fifteen (15) days of receipt. |
(b) The secretary of state, with notification to the agency, may make minor non- |
substantive corrections in spelling, grammar, and format in a proposed or final rule. The secretary |
of state shall make a record of the corrections. |
(c) The agency shall file the rule not later than one hundred eighty (180) days after close |
of the public-comment period. If that rule is not filed within one hundred eighty (180) days, the |
agency must restart the rulemaking process pursuant to this chapter. |
(d) A final rule filed by an agency with the secretary of state under this section must |
contain the text of the rule and be accompanied by a record that contains: |
(1) The date the final rule was signed by the relevant agency head; |
(2) A reference to the specific statutory or other authority authorizing the rule; |
(3) Any finding required by law as a prerequisite to the proposed rule or effectiveness of |
the rule; |
(4) The effective date of the rule; and |
(5) A concise explanatory statement as defined by §42-35-2.6. |
(e) Each rule hereafter shall be effective twenty (20) days after filing with the secretary of |
state, except: |
(1) If a later date is required by statute or specified in the rule, the later date is the |
effective date; |
(2) An emergency rule under §42-35-2.10 becomes effective upon signature by the |
agency head and the governor, or the governor’s designee. |
(3) A direct final rule under §42-35-2.11, to which no objection is made, becomes |
effective thirty (30) days after publication, unless the agency specifies a later effective date. |
(4) A final rule shall not be effective or enforceable until properly submitted and accepted |
by the secretary of state. |
(f) The secretary of state shall maintain a permanent register of all filed rules and concise |
explanatory statements for the rules. The secretary of state shall provide a copy of each certified |
final rule to an agency upon request. The secretary of state shall publish the notice of each final |
rule in the state register. |
42-35-4.1. Refiling of rules and regulations. -- (a) Each agency shall, on or before |
January 2, 2002, according to a schedule specified by the secretary of state, file with the secretary |
of state a certified copy an electronic list of all its lawfully adopted rules which are in force on the |
date of the filing. |
(b) All filed rules shall be submitted in a format specified by the secretary of state as |
directed by § 42-35-3.1. |
(c)(b) Each agency shall give notice thirty (30) days prior to refiling any rule or |
regulation in order to comply with this section. Each agency shall also give notice, thirty (30) |
days prior to that agency's due date for refiling, of which rules and regulations it shall not be |
refiling. The notices shall include a statement of the intended action and a description of the |
subjects and issues involved. The public notice of the refile shall be mailed provided to all |
persons who have made timely request of the agency for advance notice of its rule-making |
proceedings, and published in a newspaper, or newspapers, having aggregate general circulation |
throughout the state. Copies of rules which are not to be refiled shall be available at the agency |
and by mail to any member of the public upon request. In addition, notice of that action shall be |
submitted to the governor. |
(d) The rules and regulations listed for non-refiling under subsection (c) of this section |
shall be repealed pursuant to this section only in accordance with the provisions of § 42-35-3(a). |
(e)(c) Agency compliance with this section shall be coordinated in accordance with a |
schedule established by the secretary of state for agency refiling of rules. |
(f) When refiling rules and regulations, agencies may change the format of existing rules |
without any rule-making action by the agency in order to comply with the format for filing |
specified by the secretary of state so long as there is no substantive change to the rule. |
(g) Any rule lawfully promulgated prior to July 3, 2001 shall remain in full force and |
effect until: |
(1) The rule should expire before July 3, 2001 pursuant to its own terms and provisions; |
or |
(2) The rule is repealed by the lawful act of the agency, in conformity with this chapter; |
or |
(3) The rule is invalidated by an act of the legislature or the force and effect of another |
law. |
(h) Commencing in September 2002, and every five (5) years in September thereafter, the |
secretary of state shall prepare a public list of all adopted rules and regulations which have not |
been refiled or repealed in accordance with this section or § 42-35-4.2. The secretary of state shall |
forward copies of the list to the various state departments and agencies responsible for the rules |
and regulations. Each agency or department shall review the list and repeal, in accordance with § |
42-35-3(a), all rules and regulations that are no longer operative. If the agency takes no action on |
a rule contained in the secretary of state's list, the rule shall remain lawfully promulgated. |
42-35-5. Compilation and publication of rules Public access to agency law and policy |
publication, compilation, indexing, and public inspection of rulemaking documents. -- (a) |
The secretary of state may promulgate rules or guidance documents governing the filing, |
codification, and publication of the rules and other rulemaking documents of state agencies |
submitted to the secretary of state under this chapter. The secretary of state shall be the codifier of |
the rules of state agencies. The secretary of state may assign numbers to any rule in order to |
develop and maintain a comprehensive system of codification. The number shall be the official |
administrative code number of the rule. Any number so assigned shall be published in any |
publication of the Rhode Island administrative code. Rules of the Rhode Island administrative |
code shall be cited and referred to by their official numbers. The office of the secretary of state |
shall publish on its website, in a searchable format, the full text of all rules promulgated by |
agencies pursuant to this chapter. |
(b) The secretary of state, on or before July 1, 1994, shall publish the full text of all rules |
promulgated by agencies pursuant to this chapter. The secretary of state shall publish by reference |
all orders of state agencies pursuant to this chapter except orders of the human rights commission, |
including in the publication by reference the address and phone number where the orders may be |
obtained by the public. |
(c) In accordance with the provisions of this chapter, the secretary of state will publish |
the Rhode Island administrative code which code shall: |
(1) Contain a compilation of the full text of each rule and a reference to each order; |
(2) Be divided into volumes to permit the sale of separate volume; |
(3) Contain the full text of each rule adopted after its initial publication and a citation by |
reference to each order adopted after its publication in supplements to the code published not less |
than monthly and compiled for insertion in the code not less than annually; |
(4) Contain an index of the rules and references to rules that are included in the code and |
each supplement using terms easily understood by the general public; |
(5) Be published in loose-leaf form and in any other form the secretary of state deems |
appropriate following, to the extent possible, the subject matter arrangement of the Rhode Island |
general laws; |
(6) Be renumbered according to the numbering system devised by the secretary of state. |
(7) The secretary of state is not obligated to publish any rule or regulation which has |
become void. |
(b) The secretary of state shall oversee the publication of an updated code of state |
regulations. The code of state regulations shall be compiled and published in a format and |
medium prescribed by the secretary of state. Upon completion of the updated code, it shall be |
made available on the secretary of state’s website. The rules of an agency shall be published and |
indexed in the code of state regulations. Agencies must resubmit all existing rules with the |
secretary of state for publication into the code of state regulations by December 31, 2018. All |
rules shall be written in plain language. To promote the efficient development of a code of state |
regulations, the office of regulatory reform is authorized to coordinate and direct agencies in the |
effort to develop a regulatory code. The office of regulatory reform shall establish a phased |
approach which requires agencies to submit portions of regulatory content prior to December 31, |
2018. Any rule that is not resubmitted by December 31, 2018, and is not published in the code of |
state regulations, shall not be enforceable until the rule appears in the code of state regulations. |
The secretary of state shall make the code of state regulations available for public inspection and, |
for a reasonable charge, copying. |
(c) The secretary of state may display on its website the state register. The secretary of |
state shall provide the following to the publisher of the state register: |
(1) Notices of proposed rulemaking prepared so that the text of the proposed rule shows |
the text of any existing rule proposed to be changed and the change proposed; |
(2) Newly filed final rules prepared so that the text of a newly filed amended rule shows |
the text of the existing rule and the change that is made; |
(d) (1) The secretary of state may approve as acceptable a commercial publication of the |
code which conforms to all of the provisions of this section. If the secretary of state does not |
approve of a commercial publication of the code, the secretary of state shall prepare and publish |
the code, or contract with any person under this section to prepare and publish the code. Any code |
published by the secretary of state, or by any person under a contract let under this section, shall |
include all of the requirements of this section. In addition, the secretary of state shall furnish any |
volume or issue of the code or supplement to any person who requests the material upon payment |
of a charge established by the secretary of state, not to exceed the cost of publication and |
handling. |
(2) Upon the request of the secretary of state, the director of administration shall |
advertise and accept competitive bids and let a contract for the compilation and printing of the |
Rhode Island administrative code the code of state regulations and supplements between the |
secretary of state and the person able to perform the contract at the lowest cost. |
42-35-5.1. Regulatory agenda Rulemaking agenda. -- (a) On January 15 and June 15 of |
each year, each agency shall prepare and file with the governor, the secretary of state, the |
president of the senate, and the speaker of the house a regulatory agenda which shall contain: |
(1) A listing of all rules and orders promulgated since the preceding regulatory agenda, |
except orders of the human rights commission; |
(2) A brief description of the subject area of any rule which the agency expects to prepare |
or promulgate prior to the filing of the next regulatory agenda including the objectives and legal |
basis for such rules and approximate schedule for completing action on the rules. |
(3) The name and telephone number of an agency official knowledgeable concerning the |
items identified in subdivision (2). |
(b) The secretary of state shall compile the regulatory agendas and provide copies to the |
public upon request at a cost not to exceed the actual cost of publication. |
(c) Each agency shall endeavor to provide copies of its regulatory agenda to parties likely |
to be affected by proposed rules. |
(d) Nothing in this section precludes an agency from considering or acting upon any |
matter not included in the regulatory agenda nor does it require an agency to consider or act upon |
any matter listed in the agenda. |
(a) An agency shall maintain a current rulemaking agenda for all pending rulemaking |
proceedings that are indexed. The agency shall publish on its agency website the current and |
updated rulemaking agenda. The agency shall provide the secretary of state a copy of each current |
and updated rulemaking agenda for publication on the secretary of state's website. |
(b) The agency shall maintain a rulemaking agenda under subsection (a) of this section |
that must for each pending rulemaking proceeding state or contain: |
(1) The subject matter of the proposed rule; |
(2) Notices related to the proposed rule; |
(3) How comments on the proposed rule may be submitted; |
(4) The time within which comments may be submitted; |
(5) Where comments may be inspected; |
(6) Requests for a public hearing; |
(7) Appropriate information concerning a public hearing, if any; and |
(8) The timetable for action on the proposed rule. |
(c) On request, the agency shall provide, for a reasonable charge, a written, rulemaking |
docket maintained under subsection (b) of this section. |
42-35-6. Petition for adoption of rules Petition for promulgation of rules. -- Any |
interested person may petition an agency requesting the promulgation, amendment, or repeal of |
any rule. Each agency shall prescribe by rule the form for petitions and the procedure for their |
submission, consideration, and disposition. Upon submission of a petition, the agency within |
thirty (30) days shall either deny the petition in writing (stating its reasons for the denials) or |
initiate rule-making proceedings in accordance with § 42-35-3. |
Any person may petition an agency to promulgate a rule. An agency shall prescribe, by |
rule the form of the petition and the procedure for its submission, consideration, and disposition. |
Not later than thirty (30) days after submission of a petition, the agency shall: |
(1) Deny the petition in a record and state its reasons for the denial; or |
(2) Initiate rulemaking. |
42-35-8. Declaratory rulings by agencies Declaratory order. -- Each agency shall |
provide by rule for the filing and prompt disposition of petitions for declaratory rulings as to the |
applicability of any statutory provision or of any rule or order of the agency. Rulings disposing of |
petitions have the same status as agency orders in contested cases. |
(a) A person may petition an agency for a declaratory order that interprets or applies a |
statute administered by the agency or states whether, or in what manner, a rule, guidance |
document, or order issued by the agency applies to the petitioner. |
(b) An agency shall promulgate rules prescribing the form of a petition under subsection |
(a) of this section and the procedure for its submission, consideration, and prompt disposition. |
The provisions of this chapter concerning formal, informal, or other applicable hearing procedure |
do not apply to an agency proceeding for a declaratory order, except to the extent provided in this |
section or to the extent the agency provides by rule or order. |
(c) Not later than sixty (60) days after receipt of a petition under subsection (a) of this |
section, an agency shall issue a declaratory order in response to the petition, decline to issue the |
order, or schedule the matter for further consideration. |
(d) If an agency declines to issue a declaratory order requested under subsection (a) of |
this section, it shall notify, promptly, the petitioner of its decision. The decision must be in a |
record and must include a brief statement of the reasons for declining. An agency decision to |
decline to issue a declaratory order is subject to judicial review for abuse of discretion. An agency |
failure to act within the applicable time under subsection (c) of this section is subject to judicial |
action under §42-35-15. |
(e) If an agency issues a declaratory order, the order must contain the names of all parties |
to the proceeding, the facts on which it is based, and the reasons for the agency's conclusion. If an |
agency is authorized not to disclose certain information in its records to protect confidentiality, |
the agency may redact confidential information in the order. The order has the same status and |
binding effect as an order issued in a contested case and is subject to judicial review under §42- |
35-15. |
(f) An agency shall publish each currently effective declaratory order on its agency |
website. |
(g) An agency shall maintain a current and publicly accessible index of all of its currently |
effective declaratory orders on its website; file the index with the secretary of state; make the |
index readily available for public inspection; and make available for public inspection and, for a |
reasonable charge, copying the full text of all declaratory orders to the extent inspection is |
permitted by law of this state other than this chapter. Declaratory orders are effective only if filed |
with the secretary of state. |
SECTION 3. Chapter 42-35 of the General Laws entitled "Administrative Procedures" is |
hereby amended by adding thereto the following sections: |
42-35-2.6. Concise explanatory statement. -- At the time an agency files the final rule |
with the secretary of state, the agency shall issue a concise, explanatory statement, in a form |
prescribed by the secretary of state, which contains: |
(1) The agency's reasons for creation of the rule, including the agency's reasons for not |
accepting arguments made in testimony and comments; |
(2) Subject to §42-35-6.1, the reasons for any change between the text of the proposed |
rule contained in the notice of proposed rulemaking and the text of the final rule; and |
(3) Any regulatory analysis prepared under §42-35-2.9. |
42-35-2.7. Notice of proposed rulemaking. -- (a) At least thirty (30) days before the |
filing of a final rule with the secretary of state, an agency shall publish the notice of the proposed |
rulemaking on the agency's website. The agency shall file notice of the proposed rulemaking with |
the secretary of state, in accordance with procedures established by the secretary of state, for |
publication in the state register and for electronic notification to interested parties pursuant to |
subsection (c) of this section. The notice shall be mailed by the agency to all persons who have |
made timely request of the agency for notice of its rulemaking proceedings, and published in a |
newspaper or newspapers having aggregate general circulation throughout the state; provided, |
however, that if the action is limited in its applicability to a particular area, then the publication |
may be in a newspaper having general circulation in the area. In lieu of newspaper publication, |
advance notice of proposed rulemaking by all agencies may be posted via electronic media on a |
website maintained by the office of secretary of state. Copies of proposed rules shall be available |
at the agency at the time of the notice required by this subsection, and by mail to any member of |
the public upon request. |
(b) The notice shall include: |
(1) A short explanation of the purpose of the proposed rule; |
(2) A citation or reference to the specific, legal authority authorizing the proposed rule; |
(3) The text of the proposed rule; |
(4) How a copy of the full text of any regulatory analysis of the proposed rule may be |
obtained; |
(5) Where, when, and how a person may comment on the proposed rule and request a |
hearing, including the beginning and end dates of the public-comment period; |
(6) The date of the filing of the notice of the proposed rulemaking with the secretary of |
state; |
(7) A citation to each scientific or statistical study, report, or analysis that served as a |
basis for the proposed rule, together with an indication of how the full text of the study, report, or |
analysis may be obtained; |
(8) Any proposed additions, deletions, or other amendments to the rules and regulations. |
New proposed language must be clearly marked using underline formatting for proposed |
insertions, and strikethrough formatting for proposed deletions. If an agency proposes a new rule |
which will supersede an existing rule, the agency shall make available a summary of all non- |
technical differences between the existing and proposed rules. An agency's lawful promulgation |
of amendments to an existing rule shall be deemed to supersede and repeal the previous |
enactments of that rule, provided that the public notice required under subdivision (a)(1) of this |
section indicated such an intent; and |
(9) Any regulatory analysis prepared under § 42-35-2.9. |
(c) The secretary of state shall establish a process to provide timely notification via |
electronic mail to any person that requests information concerning agency notices of proposed |
rulemaking. Requests under this section may be submitted to the secretary of state's office |
through its website. |
42-35-2.8. Public participation. -- (a) An agency proposing a rule shall specify a public- |
comment period of at least thirty (30) days after publication of notice of the proposed rulemaking, |
during which a person may submit information and comment on the proposed rule. The |
information or comment may be submitted in an electronic or written format. The agency shall |
consider all information and comments on a proposed rule which is submitted pursuant to this |
subsection within the comment period. |
(b) An agency may consider any other information it receives concerning a proposed rule |
during the public-comment period. Any information considered by the agency must be |
incorporated into the record under §42-35-2.3. The information need not be submitted in an |
electronic or written format. Nothing in this section prohibits an agency from discussing with any |
person at any time the subject of a proposed rule. |
(c) Unless a hearing is required by law of this state other than this chapter, an agency is |
not required to hold a hearing on a proposed rule but may do so. Opportunity for a hearing must |
be granted if a request is received by twenty-five (25) persons, or by a governmental agency, or |
by an association having not less than twenty-five (25) members, within ten (10) days of a notice |
posted in accordance with subsection (a) of this section. A hearing must be open to the public, |
recorded, and held at least five (5) days before the end of the public-comment period. |
(d) A hearing on a proposed rule may not be held earlier than ten (10) days after notice of |
its location, date, and time is published on the secretary of state's website. |
(e) An agency representative shall preside over a hearing on a proposed rule. If the |
representative is not the agency head, the representative shall prepare a memorandum |
summarizing the contents of the presentations made at the hearing for consideration by the |
agency head. |
42-35-2.9. Regulatory analysis. -- (a) An agency shall prepare a regulatory analysis for a |
proposed rule. The analysis must be completed before notice of the proposed rulemaking is |
published. The summary of the analysis prepared under subsection (c) of this section must be |
published with the notice of proposed rulemaking. |
(b) A regulatory analysis must contain: |
(1) An analysis of the benefits and costs of a reasonable range of regulatory alternatives |
reflecting the scope of discretion provided by the statute authorizing the proposed rule; |
(2) Demonstration that there is no alternative approach among the alternatives considered |
during the rulemaking proceeding which would be as effective and less burdensome to affected |
private persons as another regulation. This standard requires that an agency proposing to write |
any new regulation must identify any other state regulation which is overlapped or duplicated by |
the proposed regulation and justify any overlap or duplication; and |
(3) A determination whether: |
(i) The benefits of the proposed rule justify the costs of the proposed rule; and |
(ii) The proposed rule will achieve the objectives of the authorizing statute in a more |
cost-effective manner, or with greater net benefits, than other regulatory alternatives. |
(iii) An agency preparing a regulatory analysis under this section shall prepare a concise |
summary of the analysis. |
(iv) If an agency has made a good-faith effort to comply with this section, a rule is not |
invalid solely if there are errors or paucity of data in the regulatory analysis for the proposed rule. |
42-35-2.10. Emergency rule. -- If an agency finds that an imminent peril to the public |
health, safety, or welfare or the loss of federal funding for an agency program requires the |
immediate promulgation of an emergency rule and publishes in a record with the secretary of |
state and on its agency website reasons for that finding, the agency, without prior notice or |
hearing or on any abbreviated notice and hearing that it finds practicable, may promulgate an |
emergency rule without complying with §§42-35-2.7 through 42-35-2.9. The agency head and the |
governor, or the governor's designee, must sign the emergency rule to become effective. The |
emergency rule may be effective for not longer than one hundred twenty (120) days, renewable |
once for a period not exceeding sixty (60) days. The promulgation of an emergency rule does not |
preclude the promulgation of a rule under §§42-35-2.6 through 42-35-2.9. The agency shall file |
with the secretary of state a rule created under this section as soon as practicable given the nature |
of the emergency and publish the rule on its agency website. The secretary of state shall notify |
persons that have requested notice of rules related to that subject matter. |
42-35-2.11. Direct final rule. -- If an agency proposes to promulgate a rule which is |
expected to be noncontroversial, it may use direct, final rulemaking authorized by this section and |
must comply with §§ 42-35-2.6 and 42-35-2.7. The proposed rule must be published in the state |
register and on the agency's website with a statement by the agency that it does not expect the |
proposed rule to be controversial and that the proposed rule takes effect thirty (30) days after |
publication if no objection is received. If no objection is received, the rule becomes final. If an |
objection to the rule is received from any person not later than thirty (30) days after publication of |
the notice of the proposed rule, the proposed rule does not become final. The agency shall publish |
on its agency website and file notice of the objection with the secretary of state for publication in |
the state register and may proceed with rulemaking. |
42-35-2.12. Guidance document. -- (a) An agency may issue a guidance document |
without following the procedures set forth in §§42-35-2.6 through 42-35-2.9. |
(b) An agency that proposes to rely on a guidance document to the detriment of a person |
in any administrative proceeding shall afford the person an adequate opportunity to contest the |
legality or wisdom of a position taken in the document. The agency may not use a guidance |
document to foreclose consideration of issues raised in the document. |
(c) A guidance document may contain binding instructions to agency staff members if, at |
an appropriate stage in the administrative process, the agency's procedures provide an affected |
person an adequate opportunity to contest the legality or wisdom of a position taken in the |
document. |
(d) If an agency proposes to act in a contested case at variance with a position expressed |
in a guidance document, it shall provide a reasonable explanation for the variance. If an affected |
person in a contested case may have relied reasonably on the agency's position, the explanation |
must include a reasonable justification for the agency's conclusion that the need for the variance |
outweighs the affected person's reliance interest. |
(e) An agency shall maintain an index of all of its effective guidance documents; publish |
the index on its website; make all guidance documents available to the public; and file the index |
annually with the secretary of state. The agency may not rely on a guidance document, or cite it |
as precedent against any party to a proceeding, unless the guidance document is published on its |
agency website. |
(f) A guidance document may be considered by a presiding officer or final decision |
maker in an agency contested case, but it does not bind the presiding officer or the final decision |
maker in the exercise of discretion. |
(g) A person may petition an agency under §42-35-6 to promulgate a rule in place of a |
guidance document. |
(h) A person may petition an agency to revise or repeal a guidance document. Not later |
than sixty (60) days after submission of the petition, the agency shall: |
(1) Revise or repeal the guidance document; |
(2) Initiate a proceeding to consider a revision or repeal; or |
(3) Deny the petition in a record and state its reasons for the denial. |
42-35-6.1. Variance between proposed and final rule. -- An agency may not file a rule |
that differs from the rule proposed in the notice of proposed rulemaking unless the final rule is |
consistent with, and a logical outgrowth of, the rule proposed in the notice. |
42-35-6.2. Compliance. -- An action taken under this chapter is not valid unless taken in |
substantial compliance with this chapter. |
SECTION 4. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC005969 |
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