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Electronic Rulemaking in the Federal Government; Rept. to Congress

机译:联邦政府的电子规则制定;国会的电子规则制定

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Electronic rulemaking, or e-rulemaking, began in the federal government within individual agencies in the mid-to-late 1990s, but current government-wide initiatives can be traced to both congressional and presidential sources. For example, the E-Government Act of 2002 requires federal agencies, to the extent practicable, to accept public comments on their rules electronically and to ensure that one or more federal websites contains those comments and other materials normally maintained in rulemaking dockets. E-rulemaking is also one of about two dozen e-government initiatives launched as part of the George W. Bush Administrations President's Management Agenda. In the first phase of the initiative, the Administration established a website through which the public can identify all federal rules that are open for comment and provide comments on those rules. The second phase involves the creation of a government-wide docket system that can allow the public to review rulemaking materials (e.g., agencies legal and cost-benefit analyses for their rules) and the comments of others.

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