SMITH: Reduce Red Tape on Job Creators

Bipartisan Bicameral Measure is Biggest Reform to Regulatory Process in Decade /Texas Insider Report: WASHINGTON D.C. A bipartisan bicameral group in Congress today unveiled a plan to significantly reform the federal regulatory process and reduce unnecessary burdens on job creators.  House Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith (R-Texas) Courts Commercial & Administrative Law Subcommittee Chairman Howard Coble (R-N.C.) and Representative Collin Peterson (D-Minn.) were joined by Senators Rob Portman (R-Ohio) and Mark Pryor (D-Ark.) in introducing the Regulatory Accountability Act of 2011.  The bill reforms the current rulemaking process to lower the costs and improve the quality of new regulations This bipartisan bicameral effort is the first of its kind in more than a decade to reform and minimize regulations that stifle economic growth. Chairman Smith:
The current regulatory system has become a barrier to economic growth and job creation.  Federal regulations cost our economy $1.75 trillion each width=89year. Employers are rightly concerned about the costs these regulations will impose on their businesses. So they stop hiring stop spending and start saving for a bill from Big Brother.  But rather than burdening businesses with more regulations we need to free up employers so they can create jobs for American workers. The Regulatory Accountability Act does just that.
It places permanent restrictions on regulatory agencies and restores accountability by requiring openness and transparency in the regulatory process. This is a bipartisan bicameral bill that both parties both houses of Congress and the President should support" said Smith. Representative Peterson: While it is difficult to enact a new law its even harder to get a regulation written correctly. In many cases interest groups try to use regulation to interpret the law in their best interest instead of following the intent of the law. By bringing transparency and accountability to the regulatory process the American people will be allowed to have a voice in these policy decisions." Representative Coble: This bill will help ensure that future regulations are based on the best available scientific information and that they are efficient.  Many of the regulations being issued are founded on questionable width=193basis and they disregard less costly alternatives.  This legislation does not affect the what-is it addresses the what-will-be and should be embraced by everyone." Senator Portman:  One of the most frequent concerns I hear from employers throughout Ohio is that mounting regulatory burdens impede growth and increase the costs of doing business. This common-sense bipartisan legislation will cut back on unnecessary red tape by building economic reality-checks into every step of the regulatory process. Its an immediate step Washington can take to help unleash the forces of job creation again in America."   Senator Pryor: We need a 21st Century regulatory system that promotes growth innovation and job creation. By ensuring all parties have a seat at the table at the beginning of the process this legislation prevents overly burdensome and drawn-out regulations from interfering with our nations prosperity." For decades presidents of both parties have issued executive orders to produce more sensible less burdensome regulations.  This bill makes the principles of those bipartisan directives permanent enforceable and applicable to all regulatory agencies including independent agencies. The Act also requires agencies to tailor new regulations to impose the least cost necessary to achieve policy goals set out by Congress. Finally the bill requires agencies to hold formal hearings to test the assumptions and evidence on which the costliest new rules are based.
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