STATEMENT
OF
JOHN D. GRAHAM, PH.D.
ADMINISTRATOR,
OFFICE OF INFORMATION AND REGULATORY AFFAIRS
BEFORE THE
SUBCOMMITTEE ON ENERGY POLICY, NATURAL RESOURCES
AND REGULATORY AFFAIRS
UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
March 11, 2003
Mr. Chairman,
and Members of this Subcommittee, thank you for inviting me to this hearing.
I am John D. Graham, Ph.D., Administrator, Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and Budget. Prior to joining the Bush Administration,
I served as a faculty member at the Harvard School of Public Health, where
I founded and directed the Harvard Center for Risk Analysis.
Since I
testified last year before this subcommittee, our office has been working
to improve the regulatory review process and to produce the reports to
Congress required under the Regulatory Right to Know Act, which is the
focus of this hearing.
As you know
the Regulatory Right-to-Know Act1/, also known
as the Regulatory Accounting Act, requires that:
(a) For
calendar year 2002 and each year thereafter, the Director of the Office
of Management and Budget shall prepare and submit to Congress, with the
budget, an accounting statement and associated report containing
(1) an
estimate of the total annual costs and benefits (including quantifiable
and nonquantifiable effects) of Federal rules and paperwork, to the
extent feasible
(A)
in the aggregate;
(B) by agency and agency program; and
(C) by major rule;
(2) an
analysis of impacts of Federal regulation on State, local, and tribal
government,
small business, wages, and economic growth; and
(3) recommendations
for reform.
(b)The Director
of the Office of Management and Budget shall provide public notice and
an opportunity to comment on the statement and report under subsection
(a) before the statement and report are submitted to Congress.
(c)To implement
this section, the Director of the Office of Management and Budget shall
issue guidelines to agencies to standardize
(1) measures
of costs and benefits; and
(2) the format of accounting statements.
(d) The Director
of the Office of Management and Budget shall provide for independent and
external peer review of the guidelines and each accounting statement and
associated report under this section.
Today I would
like to report on the progress we have made in providing the Congress
and the public with the regulatory information and accounting statements
required by the Act. As promised last year in my March 12th
testimony before this committee, we published on March 28, 2002, a draft
report for comment and peer review. After digesting the comments from
the public, agencies and peers, we issued last December, Stimulating
Smarter Regulation: 2002 Report to Congress on the Costs and Benefits
of Regulations and Unfunded Mandates on State, Local, and Tribal Entities.
On February 3, 2003, we released this year’s draft sixth report
to Congress. These two reports, which devote significant attention to
regulatory accounting, are the focus of my testimony.
OMB’s
2002 Final Report to Congress
The 2002
report, which was our fifth annual report to Congress on this subject,
includes information on all major rules issued between April 1, 1999,
and September 30, 2001, including details on how the agencies and OMB
estimated their costs, benefits, and impacts. The report also contained
an analysis of impacts of Federal regulation on State, local, and tribal
government, small business, wages, and economic growth. The four earlier
reports contain detailed information on the costs and benefits of major
regulations issued between April 1, 1995, and March 31, 1999, as well
as on aggregate costs and benefits of regulation and paperwork in total,
by type of regulation, and by agency.
Because the
Regulatory Right to Know Act requires more than regulatory accounting,
the 2002 report devoted considerable attention to recommendations for
regulatory reform received from the public. The report provides an overview
of how the Administration is pursuing regulatory reforms and discusses
comments from the public suggesting ways to improve that pursuit along
with 316 specific recommendations for reform.
These public
recommendations were forwarded to the federal agencies to which they applied
and the agencies are currently working on determining the appropriate
responses to the suggestions. We expect that in our sixth annual report
we will report on the results of these efforts.
Appendix
A of my written testimony summarizes the report in greater detail. The
report together with an appendix discussing the nominations from the public
and the comments from the public is on our website at /omb/inforeg/regpol-reports_congress.html.
OMB’s
2003 Draft Report to Congress
We released
the draft version of our sixth report to Congress with the President’s
budget on February 3, 2003. The draft report expands considerably upon
earlier reports, particularly in the area of regulatory accounting. The
report presents estimates for the first time of the costs and benefits
of major regulations reviewed by OMB between October 1, 1992, and March
31, 1995. With the addition of costs and benefits from rules issued during
fiscal year 2002, the report now contains estimates for all major
rules issued in the past ten years. The report estimates that
the annual quantifiable benefits of major rules issued during this period
range between $135 billion and $218 billion with their quantifiable costs
ranging between $38 billion and $44 billion. Nonquantifiable benefits
and costs for all major regulations issued during this ten year period
are found for the individual regulations in the appropriate annual report.
It is our intention to continue to report costs and benefits of major
rules on a ten-year rolling basis.
For the first
time, the report also describes the costs and benefits over a ten-year
period for eight cabinet departments and several agencies and programs.
Most notably, the report indicates that the Clean Air Program in the Environmental
Protection Agency’s Office of Air and Radiation accounts for the
majority of regulatory benefits over the past decade (between $106 billion
and $163 billion). The President’s Clear Skies Initiative calls
for expanded authority for this program to reduce power plant pollution
by 70% over 15 years.
The report
also contains our Draft Guidelines for the Conduct of Regulatory Analysis
and the Format of Accounting Statements. These draft guidelines were prepared
by my staff in collaboration with the President’s Council of Economic
Advisors. The guidelines are designed to help analysts in the regulatory
agencies by encouraging good regulatory impact analysis and standardizing
the way that benefits and costs of Federal regulations are measured and
reported.
We will be
accepting comments from the public on the entire report and the draft
guidelines through April 3, 2003. I have also asked expert peer reviewers
to give us comments on these guidelines. We are also convening a group
of agency experts and practitioners to review and offer suggestions to
improve the guidelines. In February, the agencies sponsored a two-day
conference of the world’s leading experts on benefit-cost analysis
and cost-effectiveness analysis at Resources for the Future. The conference
was very well attended and much interest was expressed in improving the
analysis of regulatory and public health outcomes.
The draft
report also asks for public comment on how federal agencies are currently
assessing and managing emerging risks to human health, safety, and the
environment, particularly those risks that are subject to substantial
scientific uncertainty. We are specifically interested in the role of
precaution in health, safety, and environmental regulation. For future
homeland security regulations, the draft report requests comment on improving
the analysis of the benefits and costs of these proposals.
Appendix
B of my written testimony summarizes the 2003 draft report and is on our
website at /omb/inforeg/regpol-reports_congress.html.
Thank you
very much for the opportunity to appear today. I am willing to answer
any questions you may have.
Appendix
A: OMB's 2002 Final Report to Congress
Appendix B: OMB's 2003 Draft Report to Congress
Appendix A: OMB’s 2002 Final Report to Congress
The major features and findings of the 2002 Final Report, which was issued
on December 19, 2002 include:
- Since
September 11th, OIRA cleared 58 significant Federal regulations aimed
at responding to the terrorist attacks. These rules addressed urgent
matters such as homeland security, immigration control, airline safety,
and the need for assistance to businesses harmed by the resulting economic
disaster.
- OIRA’s
goals in regulatory oversight include openness, promptness, and analytic
rigor. OIRA’s website regular updates rules under review, meetings
with outside parties, and key letters and memoranda to agencies. The
number of OIRA reviews consuming more than the allotted 90 days declined
from what had regularly been 15-20 rules at any given time to near zero
in the fall. From July 1, 2001, to March 1, 2002, OIRA returned more
than 20 rules to agencies for reconsideration, more than the total number
of rules returned to agencies during the entire Clinton Administration.
- OIRA
developed the “prompt letter” for suggesting promising regulatory
and informational priorities for agency consideration. OIRA’s
initial six prompt letters addressed a range of issues at five different
agencies, including the use of lifesaving defibrillators in the workplace,
food labeling requirements for trans-fatty acids, and better information
regarding the environmental performance of industrial facilities. Agencies
performed independent assessments of each of these suggestions and adopted
reasonable responses.
- Pursuant
to statutory mandate, OIRA issued government-wide guidelines to enhance
the quality of information that Federal agencies disseminate to the
public. OIRA worked with agencies to finalize their guidelines prior
to the October 1, 2002, statutory deadline. These guidelines offer a
new opportunity for affected members of the public to request corrections
when poor quality information is disseminated or used to justify new
regulations or other policies. OMB has directed each agency to develop
an administrative mechanism to resolve these requests, including an
independent appeals mechanism.
- The report
summarizes regulatory reform activities now underway in developed countries
throughout the world, with special focus on the European Union. The
European Commission has recently issued an Action Plan for Better Regulation
that includes expanded transparency, consultation with stakeholders,
and more rigorous regulatory impact analysis.
- In response
to an open, invitational process of regulatory reform proposals, OIRA
received public suggestions on 316 regulations and guidance documents
covering 26 Federal agencies. This number of public nominations is over
four times larger than the 71 nominations received in 2001 and covers
a broader range of topics. The 2002 commenters are also more diverse
in organizational affiliation. The 2002 public reform nominations include
suggestions to review existing paperwork requirements and guidance documents,
as well as to add, modify, or rescind regulations. The 2002 final report
provides a summary of these nominations and describes a review process
in which agencies should consider the nominations and identify those
that are worthy reforms. This year’s review process is different
from last year’s process, when OIRA identified high priority reform
candidates. Rather than suggest any specific agency priorities, OIRA
forwarded all of the public’s suggestions, with the expectation
that agencies will make decisions about which, if any, reforms to pursue
based on their assessment of the prospects and practicality of achieving
regulatory improvements.
- The Bush
Administration is concerned about unfunded mandates that impact State
and local governments. The scope of consultation activities undertaken
by Federal agencies such as Agriculture and Justice demonstrate the
Bush Administration's commitment to building strong relationships with
our governmental partners. Federal agencies are now actively consulting
with States, localities, and tribal governments.
- Small
businesses play a vital role in creating jobs and stimulating growth
despite their disproportionate share of regulatory costs and burdens.
The 2002 final report contains numerous constructive suggestions on
how agencies can reduce unnecessary regulations and paperwork requirements
that impose especially large burdens on small business.
Appendix B: OMB’s 2003 Draft Report to Congress
The major features and findings of the 2003 Draft Report, which was published
in the Federal Register on February 3, 2003 include:
- The report
will be published in its final form after revisions to draft report
are made based on public comment, external peer review, and interagency
review.
- Major
federal regulations cleared by OMB from October 1, 1992 to September
30, 2002 were examined to determine their quantifiable benefits and
costs. The estimated annual benefits range from $135 billion to $218
billion while the estimated annual costs range from $38 billion to $44
billion.
- The draft
report also describes the costs and benefits over a ten year period
for eight cabinet departments and several agencies. For the first time,
the report includes programmatic information on costs and benefits.
The seven programs with three or more major regulations are listed separately.
The report indicates that the Clean Air Program in the Environmental
Protection Agency’s Office of Air and Radiation accounts for the
majority of regulatory benefits over the past decade (between $106 billion
and $163 billion) as well as costs (between $18 billion and $ 21 billion.
OMB is seeking
public comment on all aspects of the draft report. Comments are due no
later than April 3, 2003. OMB is specifically interested in public comment
in the following three areas:
- Guidelines
for Regulatory Analysis. In order to make continued improvements
in the quality of the regulatory analyses prepared by agencies, OIRA
initiated in 2002 a process to refine the OMB guidelines for regulatory
analysis. The OIRA Administrator and a member of the Council of Economic
Advisors (CEA) are serving as co-chairs of this effort.
• Analysis and management of emerging risks. An Interagency
Work Group on Risk Management, co-chaired by the OIRA Administrator
and the Chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality
has been formed to foster Administration-wide dialogue and coordination
on the management of emerging risks to public health, safety and the
environment. The Group will summarize the role of precaution in US regulatory
decision making. OMB requests comments on current US approaches to analysis
and management of emerging risks.
• Improving analysis of regulations related to homeland security.
In light of the significant interest in regulations related to homeland
security, OMB is seeking public comment on how to more effectively evaluate
the benefits and costs of these proposals, including how agencies might
better forecast the anti-terrorism benefits and the direct and indirect
costs of such rules, including time, convenience, privacy, and economic
productivity
____________
1/ Section 624 of the Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act, 2001, 31 U.S.C. ' 1105 note, Pub. L. 106-554,
'1(a)(3) [Title VI, ' 624], Dec. 21, 2000, 114 Stat. 2763, 2763A-161.