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1 bill on this topic
“Federal agencies should have to send OIRA monthly information about rules they expect to propose or finish, including what each rule would do, its legal basis, key tracking numbers, planned cost studies, possible skipped public comment, current status, small-entity review, and estimated timing.”
1 bill on this topic
“The FAA should have to brief House and Senate transportation committees within 30 days after submitting the ACAS-X plan, including what the plan says and what actions the FAA may take next.”
1 bill on this topic
“For proposed rules expected to be finished within a year, federal agencies should have to share broad cost ranges, economic information they used, unfunded mandate costs, and expected U.S. job gains or losses, or say when they did not use that information.”
1 bill on this topic
“FAA leadership jobs, ethics limits, rule reviews, major rule approvals, and outside advisory councils should be updated, including limits on leaders' aviation business interests and new review roles for rulemaking.”
1 bill on this topic
“The FAA would review ways to make rulemaking and environmental-review processes faster, while aviation laws would change how some reports, briefings, studies, and technical corrections are handled.”
1 bill on this topic
“OIRA should have to post online any cost-benefit study done for each proposed or final rule from the past year, along with docket and regulation identifier numbers, and the first posting should include cost-benefit studies from the previous 10 years.”
1 bill on this topic
“OIRA should have to post agencies' monthly rulemaking reports online within 30 days and publish the previous year's submitted information in the Federal Register by October 1 each year.”
1 bill on this topic
“The FAA should have to make the ACAS-X plan public within 10 days after sending it to Congress, so pilots, operators, manufacturers, passengers, and other interested people can read it.”
1 bill on this topic
“Federal agencies should have to identify important scientific information connected to proposed rules expected to be finished soon, explain peer review plans, give key disclosure dates, and link to where the science or peer review can be found.”
1 bill on this topic
“Most federal rules should not take effect until required information about the rule has been public online for at least six months, with faster starts allowed for good-cause rules and for presidential decisions involving emergencies, health or safety threats, criminal law enforcement, national security, or trade-agreement laws.”
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