OMB Puts Children's Health at Risk with Data Quality Act

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released new guidelines for assessing cancer risk March 29 after years of deliberation. These guidelines officially recognize for the first time that children are particularly vulnerable to certain cancer-causing chemicals. However, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), while reviewing the guidelines, inserted two requirements, including that any EPA cancer evaluation meet the standards of the Data Quality Act (DQA), which will have the effect of putting more children at risk.

read in full

Agencies Continue to Abandon Protective Plans

Key agencies charged with protecting public health, safety and the environment continued to abandon work on long-identified priorities for new or improved regulatory safeguards, according to the fall 2004 Unified Agenda released last December.

read in full

White House Adds Rule to Hit List After Calling it 'Accomplishment'

Just three months after touting an interim rule controlling Listeria in ready-to-eat meats as a "regulatory reform accomplishment," the White House added that same rule to a list of regulations to be weakened or eliminated. Corporate special interests nominated the Listeria rule for rollbacks in response to a call from the White House's Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, which used its annual draft report on the costs and benefits of regulations last February to request industry's nominations for regulatory protections to be weakened or eliminated.

read in full

Sunset, Results Commission Proposals Likely

Both the White House and congressional Republicans have vowed to introduce legislative packages that would force programs to fight for their lives every 10 years and would link controversial performance ratings to decisions about the very structure of government.

read in full

Watcher: March 22, 2005

Federal Budget
  • House, Senate Pass Irresponsible FY06 Budget Resolutions
  • Smith, Kennedy Amendments Could Doom Budget Resolution
  • Despite Compromise, House Conservatives Could Threaten Budget Resolution
  • Bush Pushes Private Accounts as Public Support Drops
  • Bush, Congress Hide True Costs of Permanent Tax Cuts

read in full

Latest Watcher

Be sure to read the latest issue of The Watcher. Reg policy articles in this issue: Appeals Court Rejects Right of Action in Open Government Law GOP Threatens to Turn ‘Unfunded Mandates’ Into Roadblock White House Endorses Parts of Anti-Regulatory Hit List House Committee Approves Government Performance Rating Bill Bill for DHS to Waive All Law Rides on Iraq War Supplemental Is Cost-Benefit Analysis Needed?

read in full

Appeals Court Rejects Right of Action in Open Government Law

A federal appeals court has ruled that the Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA), an open government statute designed to guarantee that committees advising federal agencies are not biased, does not create a private right of action.

read in full

IRS Asking Justice Department to Step in on NAACP Audit

The Internal Revenue Service is referring to the Justice Department the refusal by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People to respond to an IRS summons, according to BNA. The case arose in the fall of 2004 when the IRS notified the NAACP it was conducting an examination into whether a speech by Chairman Julian Bond that criticized policies of President Bush constituted prohibited campaign intervention.

read in full

Study Shows Business Outspends Nonprofits 5-1 on Issue Ads

The Annenberg Public Policy Center has published new research examining legislative issue ads, focusing on the Washington, DC, area during the 108th Congress. They found "Corporate interests outspent citizen/cause interests by more than five to one," and that advertising on many issues was one-sided. Not surprisingly, the side that spent more was more likely to have a favorable outcome.

read in full

Bush Budget Fails to Support Non-itemizer Deduction

The Bush Administration has indicated that it will no longer push for passage of the non-itemizer deduction, even as a new study shows the provision would increase charitable giving. However, the non-itemizer provision remains a centerpiece of legislation introduced by Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA) and a priority for Republican leadership.

read in full

Pages