Testimony of C. Boyden Gray
Before the Subcommittee on
Commercial and Administrative Law
Of the Committee of the
Judiciary
On the Reauthorization of
the Administrative Conference of the
I am pleased to be asked to
testify here on behalf of the Administrative Law and Regulatory Practice
Section of the American Bar Association, and the
As you know, the
Administrative Conference was established in 1964 as a permanent body to serve
as the federal government's in-house advisor on, and coordinator of,
administrative procedural reform. It
enjoyed bipartisan support for over 25 years and advised all three branches of
government before being terminated in 1996.
Through the years, the Conference was a valuable resource
providing information on the efficiency, adequacy and fairness of the
administrative procedures used by administrative agencies in carrying out their
programs. This was a continuing
responsibility and a continuing need, a need that has not ceased to exist.
The Conference’s work in some cases resulted in
bipartisan legislation to improve the administrative process. For example, both the Negotiated Rulemaking
Act of 1990 and the Administrative Dispute Resolution Act were the product of
the Conference’s work, both in terms of the studies and reports that underlay
the justification for these two laws and also in terms of the interested
persons and agencies brought together to support the law.
In
other cases, the Conference’s work made legislation unnecessary. For example, early studies indicated that the
exemption from notice and comment in the original Administrative Procedure Act
for rulemakings involving public property, grants, contracts, loans, and
benefits was no longer necessary or desirable.
As a result of the Conference’s work, virtually every agency voluntarily
subjected itself to notice-and-comment rulemaking when dealing with these
subjects, improving the transparency and acceptability of government rules
without the need for legislative amendment.
The hallmark of the Conference’s work was its ability to
provide expert and non-partisan advice to the three branches of
government. Drawing on the large number
of volunteer public members of the Conference, as well as representatives from
a wide spectrum of agencies, the Conference fostered a conversation among all
interested persons and agencies.
Utilizing academics for empirical research, which was reviewed first by
subject matter committees staffed by members of the Conference and then by the
full Conference, the Conference was able to provide a factual predicate for
improvements in the administrative process that were not identified as
ideologically or partisan-based proposals.
I stress the fact that over a quarter century the
Administrative Conference of the
Not only was the Conference a source of expert and
nonpartisan advice, the Conference played an important facilitative role for
agencies in implementing changes or carrying out recommendations. Thus, a number of statutes, including the
Government in the Sunshine Act and the Equal Access to Justice Act, specified
that the Conference work with agencies in adopting the agencies’ initial
regulations. More recently, the Conference
worked tirelessly to help agencies understand and utilize the Negotiated
Rulemaking Act and the Administrative Dispute Resolution Act. Today, adapting administrative processes to
make best use of the Internet is a hot topic, but one for which there is no
central organization to study different techniques, assess them, and then
facilitate the implementation of those that are best.
It is a testament to the Conference’s unique position
that today persons of such differing judicial philosophies as Justices Scalia
and Breyer can rally behind the re-creation of the Conference. Nor is it hard to find many others from
across the political spectrum who will similarly commend the re-creation of the
Conference to your subcommittee. Past
chairs of the Conference, such as Professors Marshall Breger and Robert Anthony
and Judge Loren Smith from one side of the aisle, can join hands with lawyer
Sally Katzen and administrative judge Thomasina Rogers on the other side.
The Conference proved
itself effective at promoting efficiency in government for over 25 years. The American Bar Association has long
supported the Conference and the role it played in advancing administrative
procedural reform. We urge you to
support legislation that would reauthorize the Conference and provide it with
funds that are sufficient to permit it to continue its important mission.
You have asked for comments
on the form in which the reauthorization should take place, and for the
regulatory reform priorities a reauthorized Conference should examine. I see nothing obvious to change in the way
the Conference worked before; sometimes it behaved like a town meeting, but
that was, and hopefully will again be, part of its success as a non-partisan venue. As for items to study, we would suggest some
empirical research on the innovation of the OMB “prompt” letter, matters
relating to data quality and peer review issues.