[Senate Hearing 114-904]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]


                                                        S. Hrg. 114-904

                    EXAMINING THE FEDERAL REGULATORY
                   SYSTEM TO IMPROVE ACCOUNTABILITY,
                      TRANSPARENCY, AND INTEGRITY

=======================================================================

                                HEARING

                               BEFORE THE

                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
                          UNITED STATES SENATE

                    ONE HUNDRED FOURTEENTH CONGRESS

                             FIRST SESSION

                               __________

                             JUNE 10, 2015

                               __________

                           Serial No. J-114-21

                               __________

         Printed for the use of the Committee on the Judiciary
         
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                   U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE                    
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                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY

                  CHARLES E. GRASSLEY, Iowa, Chairman
ORRIN G. HATCH, Utah                 PATRICK J. LEAHY, Vermont, Ranking 
JEFF SESSIONS, Alabama                   Member
LINDSEY O. GRAHAM, South Carolina    DIANNE FEINSTEIN, California
JOHN CORNYN, Texas                   CHARLES E. SCHUMER, New York
MICHAEL S. LEE, Utah                 RICHARD J. DURBIN, Illinois
TED CRUZ, Texas                      SHELDON WHITEHOUSE, Rhode Island
JEFF FLAKE, Arizona                  AMY KLOBUCHAR, Minnesota
DAVID VITTER, Louisiana              AL FRANKEN, Minnesota
DAVID PERDUE, Georgia                CHRISTOPHER A. COONS, Delaware
THOM TILLIS, North Carolina          RICHARD BLUMENTHAL, Connecticut

                Kolan L. Davis, Majority Staff Director
                Kristine Lucius, Minority Staff Director
                            
                            
                            C O N T E N T S

                              ----------                              

                           OPENING STATEMENTS

                                                                   Page

Grassley, Hon. Charles E.........................................     1
    Prepared statement...........................................    34
Leahy, Hon. Patrick
    Prepared statement...........................................    37
Cornyn, Hon. John................................................     5
Vitter, Hon. David
    Prepared statement...........................................    39
Whitehouse, Hon. Sheldon.........................................     3

                               WITNESSES

Cooper, Charles J................................................    13
    Prepared statement...........................................   219
    Responses to written questions...............................   242

Kovacs, William L................................................     7
    Prepared statement...........................................    41
    Responses to written questions...............................   259

Parenteau, Patrick...............................................    12
    Prepared statement...........................................   211
    Questions submitted with no response returned................   240

Steen, Ellen.....................................................    10
    Prepared statement...........................................   108
    Responses to written questions...............................   295

Weissman, Robert.................................................     9
    Prepared statement...........................................    66
    Questions submitted with no response returned................   241

                                APPENDIX

Items submitted for the record...................................    33

 
                    EXAMINING THE FEDERAL REGULATORY
                   SYSTEM TO IMPROVE ACCOUNTABILITY,
                      TRANSPARENCY, AND INTEGRITY

                              ----------                              


                        WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 2015

                              United States Senate,
                                Committee on the Judiciary,
                                                    Washington, DC.
    The Committee met, pursuant to notice, at 10 a.m., in Room 
226, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Hon. Charles E. Grassley, 
Chairman of the Committee, presiding.
    Present: Senators Grassley [presiding], Hatch, Cornyn, 
Flake, Perdue, Tillis, Whitehouse, Coons, and Blumenthal.

         OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. CHARLES E. GRASSLEY,

             A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF IOWA

    Chairman Grassley. Good morning, everybody. The Senate has 
a constitutional duty to conduct oversight, and, of course, 
that is oversight of the executive branch, and in doing that, 
we want to ensure that the Federal regulatory system remains 
accountable, and, of course, transparency brings about 
accountability. Today's hearing gives us a chance to take a 
broad look at where things stand.
    We all remember from civics classes that under our 
constitutional separation of powers, Congress makes the laws, 
the executive branch enforces, and the judicial branch 
interprets. If only it were that straightforward.
    According to Professor of Law Jonathan Turley, quote, ``Our 
carefully constructed system of checks and balances is being 
negated by the rise of a fourth branch, an administrative state 
of sprawling departments and agencies that govern with 
increasing autonomy and decreasing transparency'', end of 
quote.
    The Federal Register indicates that there are over 430 
departments, agencies, and sub-agencies in the Federal 
Government. The pronouncements of this ever-expanding 
administrative state impact nearly every aspect of Americans' 
daily lives.
    Data support this. The 113th Congress enacted just under 
300 laws. Over the same 2-year period, the Federal bureaucracy 
finalized 7,000 regulations. Just looking at these numbers, 
there is no denying that unelected bureaucrats are a real 
lawmaking force in our country.
    If you remember, in 1946, why Congress passed the 
Administrative Procedure Act because of growing power of the 
Federal bureaucracy, and they did this to help ensure that 
regulations are crafted in an open, accountable, and 
transparent manner, and that agency actions are reviewable by 
the courts to ensure compliance.
    Among the protections built into the APA is the public 
notice-and-comment rulemaking process, whereby Americans can 
weigh in on regulations, and agencies must objectively take 
those concerns into account before finalizing. This process is 
supposed to provide a meaningful opportunity for the public to 
hold regulators accountable and to help insure that regulations 
are crafted in the public interest and according to law rather 
than tailored to special interests. The Judiciary Committee has 
primary jurisdiction over the Administrative Procedure Act, and 
we need to improve our oversight of it.
    Unfortunately, we see repeated efforts today by agencies to 
undermine the public's role in rulemaking and tactics that 
render the notice-and-comment process a formality.
    Some agencies resort to litigation tactics like sue and 
settle to speed up the rulemaking process and to keep affected 
members of the public--and even the States--away from the table 
when key regulatory decisions are being negotiated behind 
closed doors.
    These tactics often result in consent decrees or settlement 
agreements between an agency and like-minded interest groups, 
committing the agency to actions that have not been publicly 
scrutinized. In February, I introduced the Sunshine for 
Regulatory Decrees and Settlements Act, a bill that would shine 
light on these tactics and provide much needed transparency. 
That is just one part of the issue.
    We also see agencies going through the motions of notice-
and-comment rulemaking, yet the public's role in the process 
appears to be anything but meaningful. The EPA's recent 
finalized Waters of the U.S. rule stands out as a sweeping 
example of that problem.
    Instead of attempting to address the legitimate concerns 
raised during the open comment period, the EPA and its allies 
in the professional advocacy community pushed a narrative that 
portrayed critics of the rule as misinformed, nutty, or in 
favor of water pollution.
    Agencies are supposed to remain objective during the 
notice-and-comment period. The EPA's efforts to drive support 
for its own rule--while belittling the concerns of the public--
indicate that it had a clear end goal in mind, regardless of 
public opinion or the rule of law.
    According to the New York Times--now, take this into 
consideration. In the New York Times, quote ``the EPA's tactics 
in supporting the rule are clearly designed to move public 
opinion, at a time when Congress was considering legislation to 
block the agency from putting the rule into effect,'' end of 
quote.
    I share the concerns of folks in my State of Iowa with the 
Waters of the U.S. rule. Its sweeping scope has left farmers in 
limbo about what they can and cannot do on their own land. The 
indifferent attitude the EPA took toward agriculture is a real 
concern for my constituents who understand the impact that 
agriculture has on the State's economy. It is just like the EPA 
does not know that only God determines if it rains 10 minutes 
or 10 inches in one night.
    More broadly, it is a real concern for just how 
unaccountable our regulatory system has become. Congress 
recognized early in the threat of agency overreach. 
Accordingly, the APA provides for judicial review.
    However, as the influence and reach of the administrative 
state grows, it seems like the ability and willingness of the 
Federal courts to hold it accountable has diminished. Over 30 
years ago, the Supreme Court articulated the now famous Chevron 
doctrine, whereby Federal courts largely defer to an agency's 
legal interpretation of a statute it administers.
    Recently, the Supreme Court determined that such heavy 
deference extends even to an agency's interpretation of the 
scope of its own jurisdiction.
    Placing such questions of law into the hands of those who 
also write and enforce laws raises serious concerns. I often 
quote James Madison, so let me do it again: quote, ``The 
accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and 
judiciary, in the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many . 
. . may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny,'' 
end of quote.
    It is important that we consider these issues carefully. It 
is equally important that Congress recognize its own 
responsibility on the expansion of rulemaking. For too long, 
Congress has delegated in broad strokes, asking the agencies to 
sort out details. If Congress is going to ask courts to tackle 
the tough questions, it needs to be willing to do so itself by 
reasserting its lawmaking power and by speaking clearly and 
precisely when it chooses to use that power.
    What is clear is that the status quo is not acceptable. 
Today small businesses and entrepreneurs operate in a 
regulatory environment that provides little relief from 
excessive red tape, and one that offers little certainty upon 
which to base risk and investment. Agencies are falling far 
short of their duties to weigh the costs and benefits of new 
regulations, and there is little the courts seem to want to do 
to hold them accountable. Regulations with hundreds of 
millions--and even billions--of dollars in impact are being 
imposed on the U.S. economy, all without a sufficient check.
    We have this hearing, and I call on my Ranking Member, who 
may have different views on this issue, but he and I get along 
very well. I hope you understand that.

         OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. SHELDON WHITEHOUSE,

         A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF RHODE ISLAND

    Senator Whitehouse. I understand it very well, Mr. 
Chairman. I enjoy working with you, but as you predicted, we do 
have very different views on this particular topic.
    I thank the witnesses for joining us, and I thank Chairman 
Grassley for calling attention to the important topic of 
Federal regulation.
    The title of this hearing sounds neutral enough. Who can 
argue against transparency and integrity? I am concerned that 
its purpose is simply to further my Republican colleagues' 
relentless and extreme anti-regulatory, pro-big-business 
polluter agenda. It is an agenda with which, according to 
polls, most Americans disagree but which special interests 
love. Whether we are talking about environmental or health or 
consumer or financial regulations, today's Republican Party, 
unlike previous Republican Parties, seems determined to roll 
back important public protections, and often in very misleading 
terms.
    Over in another room in this building today, we are marking 
up what is Orwellianly called the ``Federal Water Quality 
Protection Act,'' a bill whose purpose is to take down Federal 
water quality protections.
    The arguments tend to be one-sided, highlighting potential 
jobs lost, while completely ignoring potential jobs created and 
economic and health gains, and railing against overzealous 
regulation while never acknowledging the role of overly lax 
regulation in contributing to recent crises and disasters.
    Regulatory agencies have through our lifetimes provided 
vital protection to the American people, and we in Congress 
should exercise our oversight responsibly, focusing on 
realities rather than on rhetoric.
    One of the majority's case studies for overzealous 
regulation today is the rule recently finalized by EPA and the 
Army Corps of Engineers to define Waters of the United States 
under the Clear Water Act. This rule was developed over many 
months, following more than 400 meetings across the country, 
review of over 1 million public comments, and vigorous 
grassroots outreach.
    In my home State of Rhode Island, this rule is going to 
protect small streams and wetlands that are vital for our fish 
and wildlife. Rhode Island residents and nonresidents spend 
hundreds of millions yearly on wildlife recreation, including 
$130 million on fishing alone. More than 400,000 Rhode 
Islanders participated in wildlife recreation activities in 
2011 when the sample was taken. This rule is good economic news 
in Rhode Island, and actually probably good economic news in 
most places around the country. That is why the American 
Sustainable Business Council, which represents 200,000 
businesses that rely on clean water, supports the Clean Water 
Rule. A polling commissioned by the council found that 89 
percent of small business owners, including 78 percent of 
Republicans, favor Federal rules like those proposed by the EPA 
to protect upstream headwaters; 71 percent of small business 
owners agree that clean water is necessary for jobs and the 
economy; 67 percent are concerned that water pollution could 
hurt their business in the future. Of course, others pushing 
for this Clean Water Rule are the American Fisheries Society, 
the American Fly Fishing Trade Association, Back Country 
Hunters and Anglers, the Berkley Conservation Institute, the 
Bull Moose Sportsmen's Alliance, the Dallas Safari Club, the 
Izaak Walton League of America, the National Wildlife 
Federation, Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership, and 
Trout Unlimited.
    Attacks on this rule often seem based more in terms of 
conspiracy theory than factual accuracy. Here is just a 
sampling of what some Republican colleagues have said about the 
proposed rule.
    Here is one: ``Under this plan, there would be no body of 
water in America, including mud puddles and canals, that would 
not be at risk from job-destroying Federal regulation.'' That 
is former Representative Doc Hastings.
    House Small Business Committee Chairman Sam Graves: 
``Permits may be required for activities such as removing 
debris and vegetation from a ditch, applying pesticides, 
building a fence, or pond, or discharging pollutants''--well, 
maybe discharging pollutants.
    Republican Representative Glenn Thompson of Pennsylvania 
calls the rule, ``a historic power grab that poses,'' get this, 
``a fundamental threat to our economy and way of life.''
    ``Brazen effort'' is another phrase that has been used. 
``Gross Federal overreach''; ``would require cost-prohibitive 
Federal permits for any proposal tangentially affecting 
virtually any body of water in the United States.'' We have 
even heard from colleagues on the EPW Committee that the rule 
might jeopardize fireworks on the 4th of July.
    In fact, the rule maintains the exclusion of prior 
converted cropland, meaning over 50 million acres of Clean 
Water Act permitting is still not required. It excludes the 
vast majority of roadside ditches and ditches on agricultural 
lands. It eliminates jurisdiction over artificially irrigated 
areas, constructed stock watering ponds, irrigation basins, and 
the like. It fully preserves the permitting exemptions for 
farming, ranching, and forestry, and it clearly states that the 
Clean Water Act does not apply to groundwater.
    Unfortunately, this does not stop the histrionics. When the 
final rule came out, House Speaker Boehner said this rule, 
quote ``is a raw and tyrannical power grab that will crush 
jobs,'' and that, and I'll quote again ``the rule is being 
shoved down the throats of hardworking people with no input''--
no input. What was it, 400 million outreaches, meetings? --
``and places landowners, small businesses, farmers, and 
manufacturers on the road to a regulatory and economic hell.''
    Mr. Chairman, the only people who think clean streams and 
rivers are economic hell are deep-pocketed polluters, and I am 
confident that there will be fireworks on the 4th of July after 
this rule goes into effect.
    Thank you.
    Chairman Grassley. We are not going to put you down on the 
undecided list.
    [Laughter.]
    Thank you.
    Senator Whitehouse. Thank you, sir.
    Chairman Grassley. Normally I do not call on other Members, 
but I want to call on Senator Cornyn because he has had an 
interest in this for a long time and helped us get this moving.
    Senator Cornyn. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I promise to 
be brief.
    Senator Whitehouse. Would the Senator yield just for one 
moment? The EPW is marking up the Federal--humorously called 
``Federal Water Quality Protection Act,'' so, I have to go back 
and forth. Forgive me if I get up and come back and forth. It 
has nothing to do with what any Senator or any witness has 
said.
    Chairman Grassley. Thank you. Go ahead.

             OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. JOHN CORNYN,

             A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF TEXAS

    Senator Cornyn. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I think this is 
perhaps one of the most profound and least well understood 
issues confronting our self-governing democracy today, and I 
realize that is a dramatic statement, but I believe it is 
actually true. Increasingly, as you point out, regulatory 
agencies have become the lawmaker, the judge, the jury, and the 
executioner, rhetorically speaking, when it comes to the 
administrative state.
    I am particularly troubled, as you pointed out, with the 
decisions by the courts which have shown deference to the legal 
interpretation of the agencies' own jurisdiction and own 
authorities. That is a power, I believe, reserved to the 
judiciary and not to an administrative agency.
    As you point out, this has become a fourth branch of 
Government which serves very useful purposes if kept within its 
proper bounds. Unfortunately, it has become a runaway train 
with no accountability and the kind of accountability that we 
experience, which is entirely appropriate, that when people 
disagree with us and what we do, they vote us out of office. 
They vote against us. You cannot do that to a nameless and 
faceless bureaucrat.
    Most recently this has come to my attention when, of 
course, the Securities and Exchange Commission decided to take 
its administrative appeals in-house because of their losing 
streak in the courts. Recently a Federal judge ruled this 
decision likely--to move in-house to more favorable 
circumstances and venue for the administrative agency--one 
Federal judge said that that was likely unconstitutional.
    There is an important role that the regulatory agencies 
play in our lives, and contrary to Senator Whitehouse's 
statements, this is not about no regulation or overregulation. 
This is about keeping it within its proper bounds.
    I very much appreciate your holding this hearing because I 
think this is one of the most profound issues confronting our 
self-governing democracy today, and, unfortunately, it is one 
of the least well understood. Thank you for giving me a chance.
    Chairman Grassley. I am about ready to introduce the 
witnesses, but a couple housekeeping matters.
    I will be here for about half of this hearing, and then 
Senator Hatch is going to take over because I have constituent 
meetings. Of course, as always, the record will remain open 1 
week for the submission of written questions and other 
materials, and we would appreciate the witnesses' responding to 
those.
    I will now introduce William Kovacs, senior vice president 
for Environmental, Technology & Regulatory Affairs, Chamber of 
Commerce. He leads the Chamber's efforts on comprehensive 
energy legislation, environmental rulemaking, 
telecommunications reform, emergency technologies, and the 
application of sound science to the Federal rulemaking process.
    Robert Weissman is president of Public Citizen, a consumer 
and public interest advocacy group, very well noted here on the 
Hill and throughout the country. He is also co-chair of the 
Coalition of Sensible Safeguards.
    Ellen Steen, general counsel and secretary of the American 
Farm Bureau Federation. Prior to Farm Bureau affiliation, she 
was a partner in the Environmental and Natural Resource Group 
of the law firm of Crowell and Moring. Her practice primarily 
focused on policy litigation, enforcement defense, 
administrative advocacy concerning Federal water quality, 
particularly issues involving the validity and interpretation 
of the Clean Water Act.
    Professor Patrick Parenteau, who is professor of law and 
senior counsel, Environmental and Natural Resources Law Clinic 
at Vermont Law School, previously serving as vice president for 
conservation with National Wildlife Federation, regional 
counsel to New England Regional Office of the EPA, and 
commissioner of the Vermont Department of Environmental 
Conservation.
    Charles Cooper is a founding member and chairman of Cooper 
& Kirk, a litigation firm specializing in commercial, 
regulatory, and constitutional disputes. He has over 35 years 
of legal experience, both Government and private practice, with 
several appearances before the Supreme Court. In 1985, 
President Reagan appointed him to the position of Assistant 
Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, U.S. Department of 
Justice.
    I welcome all of you, and most importantly, thank you all 
for the long statements that you are submitting for the record 
and the 5 minutes in which you are testifying and being here to 
answer questions. We will start as I introduced you, from my 
left to my right. Mr. Kovacs.

             STATEMENT OF WILLIAM L. KOVACS, SENIOR

            VICE PRESIDENT, ENVIRONMENT, TECHNOLOGY

               & REGULATORY AFFAIRS, U.S. CHAMBER

                  OF COMMERCE, WASHINGTON, DC

    Mr. Kovacs. Senator Grassley and Members of the Committee, 
thank you for inviting me to testify today on examining the 
Federal regulatory system to improve accountability, 
transparency, and integrity. These are perhaps the three most 
essential characteristics for the proper functioning of the 
regulatory process.
    While we have interest groups and, frankly, Members of 
Congress fighting every day over the benefits and costs of 
specific regulation, there is an unfortunately little attention 
paid to how the process works and how regulations are 
developed.
    The rule book, as Senator Grassley stated, was written in 
1946 by Congress when it enacted the Administrative Procedure 
Act. At that time, there were very few agencies and far less 
complexity.
    How rules are developed should be the absolute top priority 
of Congress since how regulations are developed is essential to 
ensuring that the powers Congress delegates to agencies are 
used to achieve congressional intent.
    The regulatory process is massive with almost 200,000 
regulations that impact every sector of society. However, when 
the Chamber did an analysis of all of what we would call the 
regular rules, the major impact rules, and the high impact 
rules, we came to the conclusion that the rulemaking process 
works reasonably well for what we would call routine matters. 
However, there are deficiencies in the process that allow 
agencies to enact very broad and costly regulations that are 
not based on the words of a statute but are considered by the 
courts to be quote, unquote, ``permissible'' in the reading of 
a statute. These regulatory laws, such as net neutrality or 
Waters of the U.S., are far broader than Congress could ever 
enact in this present political environment. Yet they are 
imposed upon us by heads of agencies with little effort.
    Our Founders intended the lawmaking process to be difficult 
for Congress, but with Congress passing these broad and vague 
laws that delegate great discretion to agencies to enact wide-
ranging laws through regulation, lawmaking has become 
extraordinarily easy.
    Adding to the ease of lawmaking through regulations, the 
courts have extended deference to agency action, thereby 
insulating agency decisions from stringent judicial review 
needed as a check on the abuse of power. Congress has been 
recognized that Congress can delegate, and that when it 
delegates, whatever interpretation the agency provides is 
permissible. Then when you add court deference to agency 
action, you have completely taken the checks out of the system.
    The challenge, therefore, is for Congress to preserve the 
efficiency of the informal rulemaking structure for the vast 
bulk of the 4,000 regulations issued every year while ensuring 
that when agencies engage in broad-based lawmaking, that the 
agencies establish that rule in a way in which Congress 
intended.
    Several suggestions for achieving the accountability, 
transparency, and integrity of the regulatory process.
    First, we strongly support and urge you to support the 
Regulatory Accountability Act, which has already passed the 
House of Representatives. It skillfully addresses the few 
regulations a year costing over $1 billion and having 
nationwide impact. I say a few, because out of the 4,000, when 
you analyze it, you have about 3,700 that are what we would 
call run-of-the-mill, standard-setting, and routine. You have 
about 300 that are called major and significant in the sense 
that they cost over $100 million or more. Then you have 
literally three or four that are what we call the high impact. 
These are Waters of the U.S., net neutrality, the Clean Power 
Plan. These are the regulations that are nationwide 
rulemakings, and they need different attention. Over the last 
15 years, there have only been 30 of these. The Regulatory 
Accountability Act accomplishes this goal by requiring more 
disclosure up front, integrating the Information Quality Act as 
part of the rulemaking process, and imposing the same 
requirements on independent agencies as executive agencies. It 
also establishes requirements for a more stringent 
administrative record and sets a higher standard for court 
review.
    We would also recommend passage of the Federal Permitting 
Improvement Act of 2015, which was passed out of Committee by a 
vote of 12-1. It provides timelines for agencies for reviewing 
permits and reduces the statute of limitations for bringing a 
lawsuit from 6 years to 2 years.
    We also strongly support S. 378, Senator Grassley's 
Sunshine for Regulatory Decrees, which addresses the sue and 
settle issue, which I am sure I will have questions on.
    We would also recommend that you take the citizen suits 
which are scattered throughout the entire code and codify them 
in Title 28. The purpose of codifying them in Title 28 is so 
you can undertake the kind of oversight that you really need on 
citizen suits because they have greatly changed who has access 
to the courts and who has standing to be in court.
    Thank you very much.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Kovacs appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chairman Grassley. Thank you, Mr. Kovacs. Mr. Weissman.

                 STATEMENT OF ROBERT WEISSMAN,

           PRESIDENT, PUBLIC CITIZEN, WASHINGTON, DC

    Mr. Weissman. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
    I think the starting point for a discussion about the 
regulatory process should be a recognition of how important 
regulation is in preserving our standard of living. Much of 
what we take for granted on a day-to-day basis is due to 
effective regulation. As a result of regulations adopted over 
the last many decades, our food is safer, our air is cleaner to 
breathe, our water safe to drink; the disabled have better 
access to facilities across the country; consumers have been 
saved countless billions of dollars; workers are guaranteed a 
minimum wage, safe workplaces. The benefits of regulations 
adopted over the last decade as well as earlier vastly outweigh 
the costs even by corporate-friendly accounting measures.
    These are not just historic gains. These are ongoing gains. 
Recent rules have benefited consumers and the environment by 
improving auto fuel efficiency. Rules have been adopted to 
implement your very important Physician Payments Sunshine Act, 
and many other developments in the last several years.
    We know as well that regulatory failure comes with enormous 
costs, both through deregulation, the failure to adopt 
appropriate regulation, and especially the failure to enforce 
existing regulatory rules. There are different stories for what 
caused the Great Recession, but they all essentially involve 
massive abuse by Wall Street and the failure of regulators to 
control Wall Street.
    It is important to recognize the costs associated. Millions 
of people were thrown out of work; millions lost their homes. 
The economy lost $20 trillion, according to the GAO, a number 
that vastly exceeds anything that could ever be attributed to 
the cost of regulation with reasonable accounting measures.
    We have a whole series of recent disasters that should be 
properly understood as regulatory failures: the BP oil blowout; 
the GM ignition switch disaster, killing more than 100 people; 
the Takata air bag scandal; the New England Compounding 
pharmacy disaster; and many others. That is what happens when 
we do not have a properly functioning regulatory system.
    As those comments suggest, underscoring the importance of 
regulation does not mean that the regulatory system is working 
effectively as it is. And in my written testimony, I outline a 
number of areas for improvement. I wanted to focus just briefly 
in my oral comments on two crucial areas.
    The first is the need to improve regulatory enforcement in 
a variety of ways. Various inspection agencies are massively 
underresourced and cannot possibly do their job of protecting 
workers, the food supply, the safety of our medicines, and many 
others.
    Additionally, I think we have seen in the last decade a 
very disturbing trend regarding criminal prosecution for 
corporate wrongdoing, or I should better say criminal 
nonprosecution for corporate wrongdoing. The Justice Department 
has evolved a pattern over the last decade or more of entering 
into deferred and nonprosecution agreements with corporate 
wrongdoers basically engaging in regulatory-type violations but 
violations of the criminal law. These giant corporations, large 
banks especially but not only, are able to escape the kinds of 
criminal penalties that would apply to a street criminal.
    We have also seen, particularly in the last few weeks, some 
criminal prosecutions, but the accompaniment of those criminal 
prosecutions by waivers of the sanctions that would normally 
apply--the Securities and Exchange Commission and potentially 
elsewhere. I hope the Committee can focus great attention on 
this. It is really a double standard that has now become 
systemic to favor large businesses, not available to small 
companies, not available to individuals.
    A second area that I wanted to focus on of a serious 
problem in the current regulatory system is delay. It takes a 
long time to issue regulations. Regulatory delay is pervasive 
in the system, and agencies, moreover, routinely fail to meet 
congressional directives for specific deadlines to issue rules. 
The submitted testimony from the Chamber of Commerce says that 
the EPA misses targeted deadlines more than 90 percent of the 
time. Five years after the passage of Dodd-Frank, more than a 
third of the required rules with targeted deadlines have not 
been met. It routinely takes the Occupational Safety and Health 
Administration 8 or 12 years to get rules out. We were involved 
in a case discussed in my testimony that it has taken 20 years 
to get a rule for truck driver safety training that is still 
not issued.
    This delay leads to both regulatory uncertainty and lost 
benefits to society. Its causes, I think, are excessive 
industry influence at the agencies, but also too many analytic 
requirements imposed on the agencies, and I think the one thing 
Congress should not do in this regard is impose additional 
requirements that would certainly mean additional delay at the 
agencies.
    There is much more to be said, as you indicated in your 
opening remarks. This is a very broad topic, and we look 
forward to further conversation. Thank you very much.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Weissman appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chairman Grassley. Thank you, Mr. Weissman. Ms. Steen.

               STATEMENT OF ELLEN STEEN, GENERAL

              COUNSEL AND SECRETARY, AMERICAN FARM

                BUREAU FEDERATION, WASHINGTON DC

    Ms. Steen. Chairman Grassley and Members of the Committee, 
thank you for the opportunity to testify on behalf of the 
American Farm Bureau Federation and the Nation's farmers and 
ranchers. My name is Ellen Steen, and I am the general counsel 
and secretary of AFBF. I have spent roughly two decades 
immersed in the development, implementation, and judicial 
review of EPA rules and policies under the Clean Water Act. I 
have been involved in dozens of agency rulemakings, litigated 
the validity and interpretation of EPA rules, and experienced 
firsthand the deference that courts extend to Agency 
regulations and to Agency interpretations of their rules.
    I am here today because of my organization's experience 
over the past year with a major new Clean Water Act rulemaking 
by EPA and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. This is a rule of 
extraordinary practical importance for farmers, ranchers, and 
most anyone else who grows, builds, or makes anything in this 
Nation. After carefully studying the proposed rule about a year 
ago, we at AFBF concluded that the rule's vague and broad 
language would define Waters of the United States to include 
countless land areas that are common in and around farm fields 
and ranches across the countryside. These are areas that do not 
look a bit like water. They look like land, and they are 
farmed. By defining them as Waters of the U.S., the rule would 
make it illegal to farm, yes, build a fence, cut trees, build a 
house, or do most anything else there without first navigating 
a costly and complex permitting regime.
    From the day it first issued the proposed rule, EPA behaved 
like an advocate for a decision that was already made, willing 
to say most anything to achieve the desired result. It waged a 
public relations campaign aimed directly at farmers and 
ranchers, providing false and misleading assurances in speeches 
and in blogs that the rule will not increase permitting 
requirements for farmers or get in the way of farming.
    Those of us who have litigated Agency rules and Agency 
interpretations of their rules know that courts will not give 
weight to today's speeches and blogs. Our experience is that 
EPA and the Corps will interpret their rules broadly, not 
narrowly. In the enforcement proceedings that are sure to come, 
with an agency, a judge, and an ambiguous regulation, the 
Agency's interpretation will be unassailable.
    EPA also engaged in an extraordinary social media campaign 
aimed at a different audience: the broader public. That 
campaign consisted almost entirely of nonsubstantive platitudes 
about the importance of clean water, which no one disputes. It 
used simplistic blogs, tweets, and YouTube videos to generate 
purported support for the rule among well-intended people who 
have absolutely no idea what the rule would actually do or what 
it will cost.
    EPA later claimed public support for the rule, even though 
the vast majority of those who actually read the rule--State 
and local governments, businesses, and organizations 
representing virtually every sector of the American economy--
vehemently opposed it.
    Regardless of whether you support it, oppose, or never 
heard of the Waters rule, I would hope that many of you would 
agree that this is not how rulemaking should be conducted. Call 
me old-fashioned, but I believe agencies should try to keep an 
open mind or at least the appearance of an open mind during 
rulemaking. They should try to be honest and transparently 
account for the regulatory impact and the cost of their 
actions, even when they expect opposition. I hope this 
Committee's efforts will lead us in that direction.
    Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Ms. Steen appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chairman Grassley. Thank you, Ms. Steen. Professor 
Parenteau.

                STATEMENT OF PATRICK PARENTEAU,

              PROFESSOR OF LAW AND SENIOR COUNSEL,

              ENVIRONMENTAL AND NATURAL RESOURCES

                LAW CLINIC, VERMONT LAW SCHOOL,

                    SOUTH ROYALTON, VERMONT

    Professor Parenteau. Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Members of 
the Committee. I appreciate the opportunity to be here. I would 
note the irony. I am going to address specifically the Waters 
of the U.S. rule. The irony here is that the Supreme Court 
refused to give the agencies deference under Chevron and also 
was unable to come to any consensus on the Supreme Court as to 
where the limits of Federal jurisdiction were. That is why it 
fell to EPA to write the rule. Chief Justice Roberts was very 
pointed in his concurring opinion in Rapanos, saying the 
agencies have the discretion to write a rule, you should do 
such a thing. That recommendation was joined by Justice Breyer. 
It was joined by Justice Alito in a subsequent case.
    EPA and the administration went to Congress, asked for a 
bill to clarify the scope of Federal jurisdiction under the 
Clean Water Act to address the concerns raised by the Supreme 
Court in the Rapanos case, but, of course, those bills went 
nowhere.
    It is a real irony that the responsibility for resolving 
what has been a very, very unfortunate 10 years of confusion, 
uncertainty, and frustration has fallen to EPA. In my judgment, 
EPA has made a good-faith effort, has gone well beyond any 
standard under the Administrative Procedure Act that you could 
possibly require an agency to do.
    You might think of a benchmark. In response to the Rapanos 
decision, the George W. Bush administration issued a set of 
guidance documents. There was no public participation on that 
guidance. There were no meetings, no outreach, no public 
comments, no scientific analysis. The guidance was issued, and 
the response from nearly everyone was, we do not need guidance, 
we need a rule. We need a rule that is based on science. We 
need a rule that takes account of the unintended consequences 
that might occur if it is not well-crafted. We need you to take 
the time to do it right.
    In my judgment, Mr. Chairman, that is exactly what EPA has 
done here. Nothing in the law requires 400 meetings across the 
country with stakeholders, with local officials, with farmers, 
and others concerned about this rule. Nothing in the 
Administrative Procedure Act or law requires 207 days of public 
comment. That is four times the amount of public comment period 
that is the standard under the Administrative Procedure Act.
    Nothing in the Administrative Procedure Act, the Clean 
Water Act, or any other law required EPA to commission a 300-
page scientific assessment of where to draw some of these very 
complicated, difficult lines. Nothing in the law required EPA 
to have that scientific study peer-reviewed by the Scientific 
Advisory Board, which is a body that exists for that purpose 
but does not usually do that for rules like this.
    EPA in every measure went beyond what the law requires, 
what history and practice had been, and did the very best job 
it possibly could. It is not surprising that not everybody is 
satisfied with it. There are many in the environmental 
community that are not satisfied with it, I can assure you. In 
many respects, EPA listened to what people were saying, the 
criticisms that it got. It made major changes in the final 
rule. I can say this after 40 years of dealing with this 
statute, I have never seen the Agency be clearer and more 
quantitative and draw brighter lines on the limits of Federal 
jurisdiction than what I see in this final rule. It will now be 
subject to judicial review, and there will be a number of 
challenges. Those who say that it is an overreach by the 
Agency, that it is a violation of the Clean Water Act, that it 
is a violation of the Constitution, that it is confiscating 
people's private property, that it is regulating puddles, 
whatever it is that they say and have said consistently through 
the comment period, now they will have their day in court. They 
will have the opportunity to put on the record the facts and 
the law to back up the allegations that have been made about 
the deficiencies in this rule. That is our system. For better 
or for worse, that is our system.
    I have been on both sides of the deference issue. I have 
argued in favor of it; I have argued against it. I have won 
some; I have lost some. That is the way it works in our system 
of three-part Government.
    I think it says something when three former EPA 
Administrators of different administrations, bipartisan, all 
three of them--Christie Todd Whitman, Carol Browner, Bill 
Reilly--all three of them said EPA in this instance has gone 
above and beyond what EPA has done before in outreach to the 
public. The group that is the advisory group to EPA on local--
consultation and outreach with local officials praised EPA for 
its collaborative partnership approach, and that began in 2013, 
long before the formal rulemaking process began.
    I think it is time to let this rule work. You could have 
had 401 meetings. You could have had 500 meetings. It would not 
have satisfied those that are opposed to broad Federal 
jurisdiction. It is time to give EPA's rule a chance to work.
    Thank you, Your Honor.
    [The prepared statement of Professor Parenteau appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chairman Grassley. Thank you. Mr. Cooper, now go ahead.

                STATEMENT OF CHARLES J. COOPER,

                 FOUNDING PARTNER AND CHAIRMAN,

              COOPER & KIRK, PLLC, WASHINGTON, DC

    Mr. Cooper. Good morning, Chairman Grassley and Senator 
Hatch and other distinguished Members of the Committee, and 
thank you for inviting me to appear in this important hearing.
    As Chief Justice Roberts has recently lamented, ``The 
Framers could hardly have envisioned today's `vast and varied 
Federal bureaucracy' and the authority administrative agencies 
now hold over our economic, social, and political activities.'' 
The modern administrative state has become a sovereign unto 
itself, a one-branch Government whose regulatory grasp reaches 
virtually into every human activity.
    The focus of my remarks this morning will be on the Chevron 
doctrine, a judge-made rule of judicial deference to agencies 
that, when it was decided in 1984, placed the administrative 
state's regulatory power on steroids.
    Chevron requires courts to read any ambiguity in a Federal 
statute as an implicit congressional delegation authorizing the 
administering agency to fill a gap left open by Congress with 
the agency's own interpretation of the statute, an 
interpretation that the courts are bound to accept and to 
enforce, so long as it is reasonable.
    In the three decades since Chevron was decided, Chevron and 
its progeny have transformed the administrative state into a 
kind of super court, vested with the last word, binding even on 
the U.S. Supreme Court as to the meaning of ambiguous statutory 
and regulatory provisions.
    Since the early part of the 20th century, the 
administrative state has been permitted to accumulate and 
exercise legislative, executive, and judicial power, despite 
the Constitution's careful allocation of these powers 
exclusively in the Congress, the President, and the courts. 
Although the powers wielded by the administrative state are 
vast, it is politically accountable neither to the Congress 
nor, for the most part, to the President. Chevron exacerbates 
these serious separation of powers concerns by ensuring that 
the administrative state also largely escapes legal 
accountability to the courts.
    I believe that Chevron's doctrine of deference is at war 
both with the Administrative Procedure Act itself and with the 
Constitution's separation of powers.
    Turning first to the APA, Chevron is flatly inconsistent 
with the plain text of Section 706, which instructs the 
reviewing court to decide all relevant questions of law and to 
interpret any statutory provisions. The language is imperative, 
commanding that courts shall decide all questions of law. Under 
Chevron, the agency under review, not the reviewing court, 
authoritatively decides the relevant questions of law. Chevron 
simply cannot be squared with this language in Section 706.
    Nor can Chevron be squared with our constitutional 
structure. It has been clear since Marbury v. Madison that the 
authority conclusively to say what the law is is a judicial 
power, one that Article III vests exclusively in the judicial 
department, not the executive. Since the Constitution also does 
not give the legislative branch any share of the judicial 
power, Congress cannot delegate that power to an agency.
    It follows, I would submit, that courts must retain the 
sole authority to issue binding interpretations of law, not 
only by Congress' express direction in the APA itself, but by 
constitutional command. Chevron, by licensing the wholesale 
transfer of this authority to agencies, is at war with both.
    I want to close by urging Congress to act to abrogate 
Chevron and enforce our Constitution's fundamental design. Of 
course, abrogating Chevron will not alone reform the 
administrative state. A broader reform effort is required and 
should be undertaken, an effort that should include careful 
consideration of pending legislation like the SCRUB Act, the 
REINS Act, the Sunshine Act--Senator Grassley--all of which 
seek to curb different pathologies of the fourth branch. No 
reform of the administrative state will be adequate without 
addressing Chevron. Congress has the power to abrogate Chevron 
simply by amending Section 706 of the APA to add language 
making explicit--I should say, rather, making even more 
explicit that reviewing courts must decide all questions of law 
without according any deference to an agency, and by further 
providing that any ambiguity in a statute shall not be 
construed as a delegation to an agency of either lawmaking or 
interpretive power. By abrogating Chevron in this way, Congress 
not only would reaffirm its original command in the APA that 
reviewing courts rather than the agencies under review decide 
all questions of law, but it would also restore one of our 
Nation's most basic constitutional principles.
    Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Cooper appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chairman Grassley. Before I start my questioning, I 
announced that Senator Hatch was going to take over because I 
had constituent meetings. I just want to thank Senator Hatch--
he is so busy as Chairman of the Finance Committee--that he 
would do that, so thank you very much, Senator.
    Before I question, I would like to back up to what Mr. 
Cooper said by quoting Senator McCarran's remark about Section 
706, which reads--this is what comes from, I think, the 
Congressional Record: ``To the extent necessary to decision, 
and when presented the reviewing court shall decide all 
relevant questions of law, interpret constitutional and 
statutory provisions, and determine the meaning for the 
applicability of the terms of an agency action.'' That goes 
back to when the Act was passed.
    Mr. Kovacs, I am particularly concerned about the practice 
of sue and settle. It is a litigation process to negotiate 
agreements behind closed doors, as I have said. I am concerned 
that the practice keeps affected parties away from the process. 
Could you speak specifically to the ways that sue and settle 
tactics undermine the transparency and accountability needed--
built into the APA? I think more importantly than that question 
is how the practice of sue and settle is inconsistent with how 
the APA was envisioned to work.
    Mr. Kovacs. Yes, Senator, the APA, after having been fought 
out in Congress for almost 18 years, really was an attempt to 
have the agencies for the first time become transparent and to 
put the regulated industries on an equal footing with the 
agencies, and that information was to be disclosed.
    What sue and settle does is more than just affecting the 
agencies and the APA. It literally affects all of federalism. 
For example, when sue and settle occurs, you have a private 
party dealing with an agency, and the private party says you 
have missed a deadline, or we think you ought to do this 
particular regulation.
    What happens in that situation is when you have an agency 
like EPA, which Mr. Weissman says--and he quotes our 
testimony--``misses the deadline 98 percent of the time,'' the 
sue and settle agreement takes 1 of the 400 rules that EPA may 
issue in a year, 1 of the 400 or 2 of the 400, 5 of the 400, 
and puts them under court supervision with a consent decree, at 
the top of the list. What you are doing at that point is, 
rather than having the Agency acting as an independent neutral 
party, deciding how to prioritize many duties, with sue and 
settle, you have interest groups coming in and getting the 
court to sign off the consent decree and prioritize specific 
regulations.
    The interest groups have actually taken control over the 
Agency through this process.
    Chairman Grassley. Ms. Steen, I have had the same concerns 
about Waters of the U.S. expressed by my constituents, and 
under current judicial deference doctrines, agencies have wide 
discretion interpreting their own regulations. Question: Are 
you concerned that courts will grant broad deference to EPA's 
interpretation of its own rules and then for your members and 
even business owners and others who are not your members will 
be left with little certainty about whether their actions are 
in compliance with the law?
    Ms. Steen. Yes, sir, that is a huge concern of ours, 
because this new rule is going to get a lot of deference from 
the courts. EPA's interpretation of the rule is going to get 
almost complete deference from the court. The traditional 
agricultural exemptions that EPA keeps referring to throughout 
this rulemaking process have been extremely limited by the 
agencies and their interpretations of the law over the years. 
That is why we know, we read this rule, and we can see--anyone 
who practices law in this area can see where this train is 
headed, and it is headed toward wide-scale permitting 
requirements for farmers and ranchers. Any practitioner under 
the Clean Water Act knows that. EPA officials in this town will 
acknowledge it in private conversations, and yet the talking 
points and the speeches by the Agency in this rulemaking have 
denied it. They have denied it to farmers and ranchers. They 
have provided misleading assurances that farmers and ranchers 
are not going to face increased permit requirements.
    Those statements are not going to be before the court. What 
is going to be before the court is the text of the rule, the 
Federal Register preambles, and all of those documents have 
been carefully set up to invite--not just allow but invite the 
interpretation that land that is farmed today can be farmed no 
longer without a Federal permit for farmers and ranchers.
    If you think that is a good idea, if you want wide-scale 
permitting, Federal permitting under the Clean Water Act for 
farming activities, fine, let us have that discussion. Let us 
look at the cost. Let us look at the impact on the 96 percent 
of U.S. farmers who are family owned and operated small 
businesses. Let us look at the effect on those operations. Let 
us look at the effect. What will the effect be on forcing 
consolidation within agriculture, forcing larger farms? Because 
small farms have very little ability to deal with these types 
of regulatory programs. EPA has refused to look at those costs 
and to look at those impacts, denying that they exist, and 
going forward with a rule that they know is going to have that 
result. That is infuriating to me.
    Chairman Grassley. I am going to yield the floor, the 
Chairmanship, to Chairman Hatch.
    I am sorry I did not do this before. I have a statement by 
the Ranking Member, Senator Patrick Leahy, to put in the 
record. Without objection.
    [The prepared statement of Senator Leahy appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chairman Grassley. Thank you, Senator Hatch.
    Senator Hatch. Thank you.
    Chairman Grassley. I will have questions to submit to the 
rest of you. I am sorry I did not get further. Go ahead.
    Senator Hatch [presiding.] Let me ask this of you, Mr. 
Cooper. Federal regulations today impose by some estimates a 
burden of $1.86 trillion on the economy. That is roughly 
$15,000 per household and more than corporate and individual 
income taxes combined. Too much regulation, especially too much 
outdated regulation, means higher prices, lower paychecks, and 
fewer jobs for hardworking Americans.
    Every President since Jimmy Carter has agreed on the need 
to review our existing regulations to make sure that they are 
efficient and are no more intrusive and burdensome than is 
absolutely necessary. Nevertheless, the regulatory burden keeps 
growing year after year. The Code of Federal Regulations, now 
more than 175,000 pages long, contains more than 200 volumes.
    According to the study by the American Action Forum, the 
Obama administration's efforts to review old rules actually 
added more than $23 billion in costs on the economy and nearly 
9 million hours of paperwork.
    To turn this long-standing bipartisan commitment into a 
reality, we need to take the responsibility of reviewing old 
rules away from the bureaucrats who keep failing at that task. 
That is why I introduced the SCRUB Act, which uses the 
successful model of the independent BRAC commission and applies 
it to our existing regulatory burden.
    Mr. Cooper, as an expert on administrative law, do you 
agree that it is time we take a different approach to tackling 
this problem with outdated red tape burdening our economy so 
that we can actually get some things done in this country and 
get some of this regulatory burden off our backs?
    Mr. Cooper. Senator Hatch, I very much agree with those 
propositions. I think there may be some irony, I guess, in 
someone who decries, as I do, the breadth and the growth of the 
administrative state to support the addition of another 
commission to that body. The purpose of this commission, as I 
understand it, under the SCRUB Act, would be to examine the 
administrative state, examine retroactively, which has never 
been done, examine retroactively in a systematic fashion the 
regulatory burdens that these thousands and thousands, 176,000 
pages, as I understand it, of regulations imposed upon our 
economy and the American people. I think that would be an 
excellent place to start anyway with regulatory reform.
    It also, I think, respects our constitutional system of 
separation of powers. Nothing would come out of this 
commission, as I understand it, without--its actions would be 
recommendations, just like the BRAC commission, as you said, 
Senator Hatch. They would come to the Congress, and they would 
be enacted under fast-track procedures, to be sure, but enacted 
or not enacted. The Constitution's structure is respected.
    Yes, Senator Hatch, I do certainly embrace that reform.
    Senator Hatch. Thank you.
    Mr. Kovacs, your testimony identified a whole range of ways 
in which the current process by which agencies make regulations 
is utterly broken, from curtailing the opportunity for 
meaningful input from the public to flouting the legal 
requirements for transparency and accountability. Given this 
mess, the courts are often the only practical means of holding 
this out-of-control bureaucracy accountable.
    Does not excessive deference by the courts to the agencies 
critically--does that not critically limit the opportunity to 
hold the agencies accountable and instead has not this 
deference allowed the agencies to expand the scope of their 
power dramatically?
    Mr. Kovacs. Certainly, Senator Hatch, once you have 
deference, the agency really does not have a check on it. I 
mean, I think most of us would agree with that. It would be 
unfair to say that getting rid of deference would solve all the 
problems. Congress has delegated very broad authorities to the 
agencies. The Supreme Court has recognized the delegation. 
Congress has imposed or has legislated citizen suits and really 
since the time they were enacted has not had any oversight on 
them. The standing provisions, because of the citizen suit and 
who can get into court, are substantially different for the 
business community than they are for the environmental 
community. There have been statistics showing that it is about 
a 2:1 ratio in terms of who has standing. Then on top of that, 
you add deference.
    This hearing is very important because there are ways in 
which we could begin to address this, especially with--and I 
keep on saying--the Regulatory Accountability Act.
    Senator Hatch. Thank you. My time is up. Senator Perdue, we 
will turn to you next.
    Senator Perdue. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    You know, the U.S. economy has actually shrunk in the 
last--first part of this year. The liberal economic policies of 
this administration, which includes the most draconian 
overreach of the regulator force, regulator agencies, that have 
occurred in my lifetime, have absolutely served to destroy this 
economy. This administration is failing the very people it 
champions--the middle class--the working middle class it claims 
to champion.
    I can tell you from my trips home that bankers, farmers, 
manufacturers, doctors, retailers, anybody that I talk to tells 
me the number one issue in Washington is not their dysfunction, 
not their gridlock, but the effects of this dramatic and 
combative and punitive overreach of Federal regulators. We have 
created the fourth arm of Government: the regulators. They 
create more laws than we do in Congress. The economy, our free 
enterprise system, is the one that is being impacted the most, 
and the people who work in that economy.
    It is hard to underestimate--or overestimate the burden 
that the Federal regulators are putting on our economy today. 
We do not have the luxury in a competitive world to do this. 
Nobody wants to destroy our water, our air, our environment. 
The people, in my experience, who do the best job of protecting 
that are the farmers, and they are the ones that are out-crying 
the most right now about this overreach on the U.S. waters act, 
and I have a question about that for Ms. Steen.
    According to a recent study, a very respected study done by 
a national association, our regulation costs our businesses 
$2.1 trillion annually. That is almost 12 percent of our GDP, 
or $10,000 for every employee in America per year. Of course we 
want rules. We have had those since our beginning. Of course, 
we want regulation. This dramatic overreach is killing American 
business and our ability to compete abroad.
    It is just a fact that Federal regulation 
disproportionately hurts small businesses. It takes 17 percent 
of small businesses' revenue right now just to deal with 
Federal regulation. That does not account for State regulation. 
Those are just the economic burdens. The loss of productive 
man-hours and associated drag on innovation and entrepreneurial 
energy and to push countries--companies to leave our country 
for this very reason.
    These side effects and unintended consequences are 
unimaginable. When I was a kid working on a farm growing up, 
the ag agent would show up and actually help us understand how 
to comply. I actually worked in a dairy for a while, and they 
showed us how to comply. Today those same agents are looking to 
put people out of business. The punitive nature is 
unacceptable. More than 40 years I have worked in the private 
sector, and I have dealt firsthand with this overreach. I have 
never seen it to be more aggressive, more punitive, more 
combative than it is today in the last 5 or 6 years.
    I have seen what excessive Federal regulation can do to a 
business' productivity, profitability, and its job-creating 
ability. Right now we have had for a few years the most 
overreaching impact on our businesses due to our regulators.
    Combating this enormous regulatory burden and actually 
shrinking it is one of the main reasons I personally came to 
Washington and give up my life to do this.
    I want to thank the Chairman for holding this hearing. I 
think this is the single most important issue and poses the 
biggest threat to our free enterprise system today, second 
probably only to our national debt.
    Turning to Waters of the U.S., Ms. Steen, very quickly, I 
am very concerned about this. This is unprecedented. It is a 
radical assertion of agency jurisdiction and would have a 
dramatic impact on my State, Georgia farmers particularly. This 
is a letter that I received from a board of commissioners of 
one of the largest counties in our State. These are not radical 
people, and the sarcasm from the other side that tells me 
that--or tells the public that anybody that disagrees with the 
Waters of the U.S. impending regulation is ignorant and self-
serving and, you know, just the marginalizing condescension is 
intellectually insulting to me.
    This is a very well thought out letter. They have over 
3,000 miles of roads in that county, 1,500 miles of streams, 
almost 1,000 miles of ditches on the right-of-ways of those 
roads, and 1,400 miles of additional drainage ditches that 
would come under the purview of this law. Frankly, the way the 
EPA marketed--you mentioned this earlier, Ms. Steen--and 
promoted this rule in social media just boggles my mind. This 
was not notice-and-comment rulemaking. Yes, they talked to 400 
people out there--400 meetings, and then they promptly ignored 
most of it. This was not notice and comment at all. This was a 
political campaign that the Obama administration was running 
from the very get-go through the EPA, just like when they could 
not get cap and trade, they told the EPA to kill coal, and they 
did it in a year.
    Ms. Steen, about the Waters of the U.S., have you seen 
other agencies behave like this in your career? You have got a 
long, distinguished career. Can you put in context for us these 
actions and the dramatic broad-reaching impact with respect to 
this rulemaking?
    Ms. Steen. I would like to be able to do that more broadly 
beyond EPA, but my career has focused on EPA. What I can say is 
that throughout my career of dealing with EPA regulations--and 
I have always been on the industry side. I have always been on 
the regulated side of the issues, and many of those issues and 
rulemakings have been very hotly contested over the years. What 
I have never seen even from EPA is the level of gamesmanship 
and deception that I have seen going on in this rulemaking. For 
those who believe that there should be an open and honest 
discussion with the public, with Congress, an open and honest 
analysis on the front end of the cost and the impact of new 
regulations, it is frightening, and it is disheartening, and it 
is disillusioning. No, I have never seen anything like it 
before.
    Senator Perdue. Thank you.
    Mr. Kovacs, I would like to go back to sue and settle. This 
is a question that I think bears a lot of comment and thought. 
I would like to address how litigants are able to game the 
regulatory system by using citizen suits and, as has recently 
been the case, work with sympathetic agency officials, 
sometimes past co-workers, who are not interested in normal 
notice-and-comment procedures. Do we have any idea what the 
overall impact of these types of sue-and-settle cases is on the 
regulatory framework?
    Mr. Kovacs. Certainly, just--and this sort of dovetails 
nice with Ellen's comments. We went back and did an analysis of 
all the--what we call the high-impact rules, those over $1 
billion between 2000 and 2013. There were 30 of them from all 
of the Federal agencies. Seventeen of them came out of EPA, and 
most of them were related to sue and settle. That is the 
impact. They are able to begin prioritizing the Agency agenda, 
and that I think is a much bigger problem than anything else, 
because they literally not only own the Agency and their 
priorities, but they also have a court that is supervising the 
Agency, and the only party that can actually intervene into the 
court proceeding is either the environmental group or the 
Agency. We are locked out because we do not have standing.
    Senator Perdue. Thank you.
    Mr. Chairman, I am over my time, but I just want to make 
one last comment. I really applaud the Chairman for conducting 
this hearing. I think we need to have further hearings on this. 
I will submit other questions, but I would love to talk about 
not just the EPA but what the NLRB is doing, the CFPB, and 
other regulators out there. This is having a dramatic impact on 
our ability to drive a recovery and get people back to work 
again. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Senator Hatch. I sure agree with you. Senator Tillis.
    Senator Tillis. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    While the Senator from Rhode Island was reading his 
statement, I almost felt guilty because I realized that I have 
made some statements and not properly attributed the other 
Senators who had used the comments before, because I associate 
myself with a lot of the concerns that other Senators have 
expressed about regulatory overreach.
    I was the Speaker of the House down in North Carolina for 4 
years before I came into the Senate back in January, and we, in 
4 successive years, implemented regulatory reform that has, I 
think, been one of the single greatest stimulators for our 
economy. We are outperforming almost every other State in the 
Southeast as a result of right-sizing reforms. We did simple 
things like saying you cannot promulgate new regulations in 
excess of Federal standards unless you consult with the 
legislature, have a business case, demonstrate the 
environmental or other benefit for the regulation versus the 
cost, commonsense reforms like that that I think this Congress 
needs to take a look at.
    I have just a few brief questions. I think the first one 
may be most appropriate for Ms. Steen or Mr. Kovacs. You know, 
I think the other thing that is lost in the discussion, we talk 
about regulatory abuse and corporate greed. In North Carolina, 
80 percent of the jobs that are created are created by small 
businesses. A lot of these are mom-and-pop shops that do not 
have the advantage of large departments of regulatory affairs.
    A lot of the jobs that have been created over the past 
couple of years have been hundreds of thousands of jobs in 
regulatory affairs departments. Not a single hour of 
productivity is created by these jobs. We all high-five and we 
say hundreds of thousands of jobs have been created. Go take a 
look at those jobs and understand why we are not increasing 
productivity, why we are not seeing capital investments, why we 
are not seeing savings applied to productive ends.
    Back in these small businesses, the thing that I worry 
about when I talk to farmers, and I talk to small businesses, 
they do not have the benefit--Ms. Steen, I will star with you. 
They do not really have the benefit to engage on a proactive 
basis in the public comment period to really be able to 
articulate at their level the damaging effects, depending upon 
where you go with regulation, some of which are needed. Do 
you--and, Mr. Kovacs, you can chime in as well. Do you all have 
any suggestions on ways that we could really improve more 
genuine and meaningful input of these folks that oftentimes do 
not even hear about the regulations or the promulgation or the 
potential implementation of the regulations until it is too 
late for them to provide meaningful, practical input? Any 
suggestions on the process? We will start with you, Ms. Steen, 
and then we will come to Mr. Kovacs.
    Ms. Steen. I wish I could think of a fantastic new idea for 
how to improve the voice of those ordinary Americans in the 
process. I think with respect to farmers and ranchers, many of 
them rely on groups like ours to dissect the new regulations, 
to make sense of it, to translate it into terms that a non-
Clean Water Act practitioner can understand, and then to help 
them have that voice. We try to do a good job of that.
    What is so frustrating is that--and we had a really 
important conversation with our stakeholders, with farmers and 
ranchers across the country during this process, and many of 
them did get very active, very vocal to try to speak out on the 
rule. When you speak out and the response back from the Agency 
is, ``That is silly,'' ``That is silly,'' ``That is 
ludicrous,'' ``You do not need a permit now, you are not going 
to need one later,'' what do you, an ordinary person, say when 
the Administrator of the EPA says that to you?
    Senator Tillis. Mr. Kovacs.
    Mr. Kovacs. Senator, this is truly one area where Congress 
has really tried to have input. If you go through--for example, 
you enacted the Regulatory Flexibility Act, which was 
specifically to empanel businesses to have them talk to the 
Agency. For both Waters of the U.S. as well as the others, the 
Agency refused to go through this panel process.
    To involve States, Congress has enacted the Unfunded 
Mandates Reform Act. Any regulation over $100 million, the 
Agency has to determine whether it is an unfunded mandate on 
the State. The agencies have refused to undertake this process. 
Thirty-five years ago, Congress was so concerned about the 
regulatory impact on jobs that it mandated that EPA do a 
continuing evaluation of the impact on employment, and it has 
never done one in 35 years.
    You have got a process where the agencies have completely 
separated themselves from Congress, and they really do not feel 
as though they have to do this for you, and because the courts, 
unlike with NEPA where the courts have actually grafted on a 
private right of action, the courts have not grafted on a 
private right of action for UMRA or Regulatory Flexibility or 
for the employment impacts.
    So, it's much deeper. This is some kind of disregard, where 
they don't even attempt to do what you have asked them to do, 
so they get all the facts as part of the process.
    Senator Tillis. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chair. I have 
several questions that I am going to submit, and hopefully we 
can get your feedback. One that I find particularly disturbing 
or offensive as a nonlawyer is the sue and settle practice and 
some ideas on how we may be able to get more active involvement 
and other third parties or the courts in that. I will submit 
those for the record and look forward to all of your feedback. 
We submit it to each and every one of you for your feedback.
    Senator Tillis. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Senator Hatch. Thank you, Senator. Senator Whitehouse.
    Senator Whitehouse. Thank you very much. Sorry I have had 
to be in and out. We have actually been marking up the bill 
that is to some degree the subject of this hearing over in the 
EPW, so I have had to be back and forth.
    Professor Parenteau, could you just give us a quick 
overview of the--on the Clean Waters rule, the backdrop from 
the U.S. Supreme Court that constrains and informs what EPA is 
obliged to do under this rule and how that has played out in 
the rule? Sometimes people commenting on this rule act as if 
the EPA had a free hand to do anything, to ignore certain types 
of pollution, to ignore certain types of effects on waterways 
and so forth. In fact, the Supreme Court has spoken pretty 
strongly about this, and under our system of Government, 
administrative agencies are obliged to follow what the U.S. 
Supreme Court has said.
    Professor Parenteau. Correct, Senator Whitehouse, and the 
seminal decision is the Riverside Bayview case from 1985. That 
is the first time the U.S. Supreme Court squarely addressed the 
question of what did Congress intend to cover when it enacted 
the 1972 Clean Water Act. It was a unanimous decision. You do 
not see that very often anymore--a unanimous decision 9 to 0 
from the U.S. Supreme Court, authored by Justice White, a 
westerner, who understands water, if anybody did. The decision 
is worth reading, and I commend it to every Member of the 
Committee, because the U.S. Supreme Court read and interpreted 
Congress' intent in 1972 to give a very broad definition to the 
term ``Waters of the United States'' and grounded that 
interpretation on science.
    The opinion really was a foreshadowing of what we now think 
of as more of the ecological age. Justice White went on about 
the functions and values of streams and wetlands to public 
health, to recreation, to fisheries, to economic interests, to 
the national interest, and it is a ringing endorsement of 
strong Federal involvement in the effort to restore and 
maintain the chemical, physical, biological integrity of the 
Nation's waters.
    From that very high point of jurisprudence under the Clean 
Water Act in 1985, we go to the 2001 decision in SWANCC, in the 
Rehnquist Court, and in that decision Justice Rehnquist was 
able to garner a majority, 5 to 4, a narrow decision, to say we 
are not going to give Chevron deference to the Agency's 
interpretation of the scope of the Clean Water Act. We cannot 
decide for ourselves exactly what the scope of that Act is, but 
we know that whatever the Corps is using at the time is not it. 
Then we had a hiatus period between 2001 and 2006 when the 
Rapanos case came down, where people were trying to figure out 
what is the meaning of the SWANCC decision? It dealt with a 
very atypical situation of an abandoned sand and gravel pit in 
northern Cook County, Illinois, and no hydrologic connection to 
any other water, totally intrastate, nonnavigable, and the 
Corps had asserted jurisdiction based on migratory bird use. 
So, a very narrow decision by the Court.
    In Rapanos, once again you had another wetlands question, 
and once again a narrow--this time actually a fractured 
decision where no majority of the Court could agree on where 
the line should be drawn. Again, refusing to grant the Agency's 
interpretation any deference, but unable to come up with a 
judicial definition and a default. That is where Chief Justice 
Roberts squarely said to the agencies you have to engage in a 
rulemaking. Justice Kennedy said that rulemaking has to be 
grounded in science. It has to be grounded in the functions and 
values of the streams and wetlands you are talking about. It 
has to be qualitative. It has to be rigorous. EPA has picked up 
that challenge. That is what they have done in this rule.
    Senator Whitehouse. Did the Supreme Court give any 
instructions about the extent to which economic considerations 
had to be balanced into that equation?
    Professor Parenteau. Of course, the Supreme Court is always 
saying Congress has more than one purpose in mind with every 
statute, including the Clean Water Act, and the EPA has to take 
into account the impacts on the regulated community and others 
from rules that are adopted in interpreting the law. EPA is 
always caught in the middle. There are people pushing EPA to 
restrict the jurisdiction of the Act, people pushing EPA to 
extend it, people saying, ``I rely on clean water.'' We had 
testimony before EPW, as you will recall, Senator Whitehouse, 
from the brewing industry saying, ``God help us if we do not 
have clean water to make beer.'' We had testimony from the 
fishing industry saying, ``God help us if we do not have clean 
water to support our fisheries, and if we do not have streams 
where the fish can spawn, and if we do not have wetlands that 
provide the nutrients for the fisheries to grow. Please protect 
these economic assets for our business interests.''
    These are complex issues. There are a lot of winners and 
losers, if you want to look at it that way. Some people benefit 
from strong regulation; some people benefit from weak 
regulation. The Agency is caught in the middle, always, in 
trying to balance these competing concerns. There is no perfect 
outcome, there is no formula for this. You do the best that you 
can, and I think EPA did.
    Senator Hatch. Thank you, Senator. The Senator from 
Arizona.
    Senator Flake. Thank you. I also am very concerned about 
the EPA's Waters of the U.S. rule. Coming from Arizona, we have 
a lot of dry river beds that have somehow been caught up in 
this as well, and the logic just seems beyond most of us for 
this.
    I recently introduced the Defending Rivers from 
Overreaching Politics Act of 2015 with Senator McCain and 
Senator Fischer. I think the bill is necessary because the 
science behind the rule is essentially unfinished.
    The Assistant Secretary of the Army Corps, I think it was 
Jo-Ellen Darcy, stated the regulations were based on the 
Scientific Connectivity Report. They claimed the report showed 
connections between nearly all water bodies, but the proposed 
rule was drafted before the science on which the proposed rule 
was based had been reviewed by the Scientific Advisory Board of 
the EPA. I do not think it makes sense to most of us to 
promulgate a rule before the science is more settled in this 
regard.
    Do you want to comment on that, Ms. Steen? Have they gotten 
ahead of some of the science here?
    Ms. Steen. Well, I think they have taken a very aggressive 
approach to the science, and I think they have done it--of 
course, science is relevant to the question of what is a 
jurisdictional water, and this report's cases support that. I 
think the Agency has taken the opportunity to take the science 
and use it to extend the law right back to where it was before 
those Supreme Court decisions to encompass essentially any 
water, any water feature within the United States if the Agency 
chooses to do that. I do not think that is what Congress meant 
in 1972, and I do not think that any amount of science about 
the interconnectedness of things would persuade anyone that in 
1972, when it wrote the Clean Water Act, Congress had in mind 
that you might take that and regulate a small dip in the 
landscape where water simply channels and flows when it rains 
and at no other time. In my opinion, the Agency has taken the 
opportunity to cloak the rule in science because science is 
very difficult to challenge in court.
    Senator Flake. Mr. Cooper, do you have any thoughts on this 
with regard to science?
    Mr. Cooper. Senator Flake, I am going to defer to Ms. 
Steen's response to the specific study on that question.
    Senator Flake. All right. A question for you, Mr. Cooper. 
As everybody here has testified to, there are a number of 
requirements on agencies to improve transparency and 
accountability when issuing regulations such as the notice-and-
comment process. However, we are seeing a practice among 
agencies of pursuing quasi-regulatory strategies such as 
memoranda, policy statements, and guidance in an attempt to 
effect policy change without triggering some of the 
requirements with regard to notice. Do you want to comment on 
that? Is that a real problem?
    Mr. Cooper. It is a very serious problem, Senator Flake. 
Just in the context of my own experience as a practitioner and 
litigator, I am involved in a lawsuit challenging what is 
called Operation Choke Point, a situation in which the banking 
regulatory agencies along with the Department of Justice have 
sought very aggressively to try to cutoff, to choke off the 
financial access of certain disfavored businesses; perfectly 
lawful but disfavored businesses in this country. They have 
done that not through notice-and-comment rulemaking but through 
backroom types of pressure on the banks, the banks they 
regulate, to try to terminate--terminate the relationships that 
the banks have and the access to critical financial services of 
these disfavored businesses that the banks have banking 
relationships with.
    Senator Flake, I would also add that the authority that the 
regulators have, the administrative state has, not only to 
interpret the statutes under which they are authorized, but to 
also interpret authoritatively the regulations that they then 
enact under those provisions creates a kind of a domino effect, 
giving them just enormous, enormous powers. They get not only 
to write the rules, they can interpret the rules that they 
actually write.
    Senator Flake. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Senator Hatch. Thank you. The Senator from Delaware.
    Senator Coons. Thank you, Senator Hatch. To the witnesses 
today and Senators, I come to the Senate with myself having 
some experience in business, having spent 8 years as in-house 
counsel at a company, a multinational where compliance with 
regulations was a challenge for us and was a cost and something 
that we wrestled with at times. As a Senator and former county 
executive, I have heard complaints from businesses large and 
small about compliance costs, complexity, difficulty, whether 
EPA or OSHA. I am well aware that regulations sometimes cause a 
cost and headaches and concerns that corporations would rather 
not pay.
    I have also had the opportunity, just as a citizen as well 
as an elected official, to see instances where corporations cut 
corners and ruined lives, and we are all aware of the 
regulatory capture that facilitated some of the Deepwater 
Horizon disaster, which fouled the gulf coast and caused more 
than $50 billion in damages and closed thousands of small 
businesses. I am wary of legislative proposals that try to roll 
back agency action on the basis that industry does not have 
enough say in rules. I think we need to both respect the needs 
of business and their legitimate concerns, but not lose sight 
of the fact that the first goal of regulations ought to be to 
protect the public health and safety.
    Mr. Weissman, if I might, I just wanted to open with a 
question about the cost of regulation, which is a common 
complaint that I have heard and experienced. An OMB analysis 
suggested in 2013 regulatory benefits for major rules exceeded 
total regulatory costs by several multiples, somewhere between 
2 and 14 times. Can you talk to how Federal regulatory agencies 
consider costs and benefits when deciding whether to go forward 
with a regulation? How does that assessment of costs and 
benefits differ from how a business might look at it?
    Mr. Weissman. Thank you very much, Senator Coons. The 
idea--I would say as a starting point that agencies by and 
large are deeply sensitive to compliance costs of the rules 
they issue, in our view often too sensitive and often too close 
to the industries that are complaining about it.
    For rule from the executive branch, they are subjected to 
review by the OMB through the OIRA Office, and they go through 
one or another version of cost-benefit analysis where there is 
very careful consideration of costs and actually, I must say, 
less careful consideration of benefits. I detail the disparity 
between the two in my written testimony.
    Looking at the aggregate picture, as you point out, the 
actual documented cost of significant rules versus the actual 
documented benefit of significant rules over the last decade, 
the benefits vastly exceed the cost. You take the low-end 
benefit and the high-end cost, it is about 2-1/2 times. If you 
go to the other spectrum, it is now 15 times in the last report 
from OMB. The benefits of rulemaking using narrow accounting 
measures really are significant for society. Those I think 
undercount--they overcount costs because they often rely on 
cost estimates from industries that do not take into account 
technological dynamism, economies of scale, the ability to 
adapt, and, retrospectively, costs are usually far less than 
they were predicted to be. They also undercount on the benefits 
side second-order effects, but also all kinds of things that 
are not quantitative. It is hard to reduce health, safety, 
privacy, democracy, fairness, sense of community to dollar 
terms, but that is what they are forced to do when they are 
looking across that. I think from a social point of view, there 
is no question about this.
    You are correct that businesses may look at the cost issue 
differently. A technological standard that may impose a cost on 
one firm, say $1 million, that firm might reasonably just look 
at it as a $1 million cost. That is, in fact, how it will be 
counted in a cost-benefit analysis. From a social point of 
view, there may be so many offsetting benefits just from that 
cost, which is to say they are investing, they are buying some 
new technology, someone is innovating to respond to that 
technology. There may be all kinds of economic benefits--even 
though there is a cost to the firm, there may be social--
offsetting social benefits, social and economic benefits for 
society.
    Senator Coons. I would assume that all of us would agree 
that a Federal agency, when going through rulemaking, should 
consider the costs and benefits to all affected Americans, not 
just or solely the corporations that are affected.
    Just as a closing comment, with the indulgence of the 
Chair, my twins just turned 16. I am particularly sensitive to 
the fact that automobile accidents claim 30,000 lives a year 
and are the leading cause of death for young people. As a 
perhaps overly concerned parent, Public Citizen was founded in 
large part to promote commonsense automobile regulations in the 
face of strong resistance because of implementation costs. 
Since Public Citizen's founding, automobile deaths have 
declined 60 percent. This is a per capita population basis. Is 
that an example of regulatory success or failure?
    Mr. Weissman. I would say that is an example of enormous 
regulatory success, but there are some failures that are worth 
pointing out. The GM ignition switch failure, which has cost 
more than 100 lives, that is an example of regulatory failure. 
The agency should have done a better job, and it is now saying 
so in a recent report.
    I also detail in my testimony the failure of the agency to 
adhere to congressionally mandated deadlines to impose a back-
over rule that would prevent accidents where people are 
unable--drivers are unable to see what is behind them and back 
into usually small children or sometimes the elderly. We had to 
sue the agency to get a rule out of the Department of 
Transportation. The effect of that delay was about 100 lives a 
year or more because the agency failed to act. Why did the 
agency fail to act? Partly because of misguided cost-benefit 
analysis and maybe especially because of undue political 
interference from the auto industry.
    Senator Coons. Thank you, Mr. Weissman. I see I have 
exceeded my time. Thank you for your work.
    Senator Hatch. Thank you, Senator. Senator Blumenthal.
    Senator Blumenthal. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    You know, when I think about rulemaking, I often think 
about the tragedy that occurred at L'Ambiance Plaza in 
Bridgeport, Connecticut. I do not know how many of you are 
familiar with what happened in 1987, or with the 28 men who 
never came home that day, men like Mike Adona, who left his 
wife and his three daughters to go to work. He never came home. 
Like 27 of his co-workers, he was killed when a half-finished 
structure that he was building collapsed on him, killing 28 of 
them. His employer had been using a method known as ``lift slab 
construction.'' The Occupational Safety and Health 
Administration knew that lift slab construction was dangerous. 
In 1982, in fact, it initiated a rulemaking designed to 
strictly regulate that process. 1982. It knew that similar use 
of that construction process had led to deaths around the 
country, but it did nothing, partly because of burdensome 
procedural requirements. Partly because of special interest 
pushback, partly because of a lack of will on the part of the 
agency, those regulations had not been finalized on the day 
that Mr. Adona lost his life in 1987. That death--his death--
was preventable, so were the deaths of 27 of his co-workers, if 
the regulatory process had worked.
    Regulations have real-life consequences. They have real-
life costs in dollars and lives. Delay has costs as well when 
agencies have to jump through hoop after hoop after hoop and 
fail to do their job.
    I have just come from a hearing of the Commerce Committee 
where we were discussing the issue of positive train control, a 
technology that has been in existence for years and years and 
years. The deadline for implementing it is approaching at the 
end of 2015. Most railroads will have failed to adopt it, and 
the FRA, a Federal agency, has failed to take sufficient action 
to enforce that deadline, as well as some 60 or 70 other 
recommendations from the NTSB for rail safety.
    I think that the blame will be on Congress as well as the 
FRA and the railroads for failing to implement stronger 
measures that will impose fines and penalties for failure to 
meet regulatory deadlines.
    I would like to ask, Mr. Weissman, if your authority to 
implement citizen suits is taken away, will there be a 
sufficient check on the Government to meet these deadlines?
    Mr. Weissman. I should say, first of all, we do not have 
nearly the authority as a public interest advocacy group that 
has been characterized here. In contrast to what Mr. Kovacs 
said, in general, regulated industry has standing always to 
bring challenges. Public interest groups have a difficult time 
bringing cases on behalf of a general public interest rather 
than a particularized one. Exactly as you say, regulatory delay 
has real human cost, and I think we cannot do enough to tell 
the stories that you are telling because they remove us from 
the statistical abstractions that make it easy to avoid the 
real-life consequences.
    The cases that we bring or the cases that are really 
regulatory accountability, agency accountability cases, that 
are misnamed ``sue and settle,'' those are cases designed to 
force agencies to comply with deadline as Congress has 
instructed them to do overwhelmingly. What we see in case after 
case is that the agencies feel free to ignore congressional 
deadlines until there is a subsequent judicial order. The 
agencies will tell you that. Those cases are really vital.
    The examples you highlighted--and just to go back to this 
back-over rule case, which you know a great deal about, and I 
think is really infuriating, congressional mandate to take 
action, and the regulators were slow-walking it. They did not 
like the cost-benefit analysis. They were not thinking about 
the real lives at stake. Had we not brought litigation to force 
a rule out, we would still be waiting for that rule, and we 
would probably be waiting for that rule in 2020.
    Senator Blumenthal. I appreciate that very excellent 
answer.
    Mr. Kovacs, can you discuss the contention that sue and 
settle lawsuits undermine public participation in rulemaking?
    Mr. Kovacs. Certainly. We--the issue is that EPA, and I 
think there is agreement on it, misses somewhere between 85 
percent and 98 percent of all of its deadlines. What happens 
when you have a sue and settle and you have a court order 
ordering the Agency to do a certain thing, those rules actually 
then become the priority. What happens is the Agency itself, 
instead of being this independent actor deciding what the 
priorities are based on what you in Congress give them as a 
budget and what they think you are directing them to do, are 
now pigeonholed into dealing with a certain group of cases 
because they have a court order. Under the Administrative 
Procedure Act, we all should have an equal access to both the 
Agency as well as to the court.
    The second point there is a law review article where they 
did a statistical analysis, and the business community was 
denied standing 50 percent more of the time than the public 
advocacy side.
    Senator Blumenthal. Any other comments in response to that 
question? Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Senator Hatch. Thank you, Senator--did you want to say 
something?
    Mr. Weissman. I would like to say something, if I might, 
Mr. Chair. It is not the case that the agency has discretion to 
choose to follow congressional orders. There is no discretion 
in these cases. The agency does not get to choose its 
priorities. The agencies are supposed to do what Congress has 
instructed them to do.
    Senator Blumenthal. Because it is the law of the land.
    Mr. Weissman. Because it is the law. The lawsuits are 
intended to enforce congressional will. There is no agencies 
run amok. There are no special powers conferred on public 
interest groups. We are trying to help enforce congressional 
will on the agencies.
    Senator Blumenthal. Essentially, the lack of Federal 
enforcement means that either citizens or State attorneys 
general or others take the place of those Federal agencies that 
are neglecting their duty.
    I think there was one more comment.
    Professor Parenteau. Thank you, Senator Blumenthal. Just a 
very quick one, and that is to say that in no circumstance 
could a court ever enter an order that would bind an agency in 
a future rulemaking, period. Under the Meese memorandum, the 
Department of Justice incorporates--and I have seen every one 
of them--the Department of Justice incorporates in every single 
decree a requirement that if rulemaking is anticipated as a 
result of the settlement agreement, that rulemaking will be 
conducted under the Administrative Procedure Act. Nothing that 
is done in the consent decree can bind the agency in any way, 
shape, or form, so public participation is protected in these 
decrees.
    Senator Blumenthal. I think that answers the question that 
I raised about the effect on public participation. Thank you.
    Senator Hatch. Thank you, Senator.
    Mr. Cooper, in his seminal opinion in Marbury v. Madison 
that secured the principle of judicial review, Chief Justice 
John Marshall wrote, quote, ``It is emphatically the province 
and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is'', 
unquote. Is Chevron compatible with Justice Marshall's words? 
Or is Chevron better described as commanding the judiciary to 
say what the law is almost anything that a Federal agency wants 
the law to be?
    Mr. Cooper. Senator Hatch, Chevron is not at all compatible 
with Marbury v. Madison. That was one of the opening points I 
tried to emphasize in my statement. The Court made clear that 
it is the province, peculiar province, of the judiciary to say 
what the law is, and in that regard they were relying on 
Alexander Hamilton's famous statement in Federalist No. 78.
    Contrast that with the Chevron doctrine where, despite the 
language of Section 706 of the APA which directs, consistent 
with the separation of powers, that the reviewing court rather 
than the reviewed agency, the reviewing court shall decide all 
questions of law and, therefore, to interpret the statutes 
before them. Contrast that with Chevron, which demands that the 
courts actually accept agency interpretations notwithstanding 
the fact that they think they are wrong, they think they are 
wrong, they are not the best understanding using the 
traditional tools of statutory construction, the best 
understanding of Congress' meaning, the meaning of the statute, 
Congress' intent. So long as the agency is somewhere on the 
target--somewhere on the target--Senator Hatch, the courts must 
defer to that even though, again, they believe they are wrong. 
That includes the U.S. Supreme Court. It is the reviewing--it 
is now the agency that has the last word, and that cannot be 
squared with Marbury v. Madison or our separation of powers.
    Senator Hatch. Mr. Kovacs, and also you, Mr. Cooper, would 
you identify some of the most unreasonable cases that you have 
encountered over the years in which Chevron is used as an 
excuse to allow an agency to defy the law? One example that 
readily comes to my mind is the King v. Burwell case that is 
before the Supreme Court right now, which is heard by the Court 
this term, and which the fourth circuit below ratified HHS' 
effort to rewrite what I consider to be the unambiguous text of 
the Obamacare statute using Chevron deference. I will turn to 
you first, Mr. Kovacs.
    Mr. Kovacs. I think when you get into the deference issue, 
it is more of--yes, it is case by case and it is what the 
courts are doing, but it is more of the psychology of the 
agency. There is no check in the system. Some courts do not 
always apply deference but most do. What happens is the agency 
knows that they can push the limits of their rulemaking and 
there is really not going to be a check because the agency 
knows that the court is generally going to apply the deference. 
I think that is the bigger problem that is driving this. It 
just unlocks any inhibitions the agency has to ignoring 
congressional intent.
    Senator Hatch. Could you list a few unreasonable cases?
    Mr. Kovacs. I will give you--send you a response to that in 
writing, and we will give you three or four of them.
    Senator Hatch. That would be fine.
    Mr. Cooper. Senator Hatch, let me give you a concrete 
example of the liberating effect that I would submit to you 
Chevron has on the administrative state and all of the agencies 
within it. In a case called Utility Air Regulatory Group v. 
EPA, decided just, I guess, last term actually, the term 
before, perhaps, the issue was whether the EPA could 
effectively and, you know, quite straightforwardly ignore 
numerical requirements in a statute. The statute itself imposed 
permitting requirement on all stationary sources emitting 100 
or 250 tons of air pollutants per year. The EPA, in regulating 
greenhouse gas emissions, could not live with those numerical 
requirements, and so it simply rewrote them to require permit 
applications relating to 82,000 tons of air pollution a year.
    The Supreme Court rejected that use of the Agency's 
interpretive authority saying now they have gone beyond even 
where Chevron allows them to go. But that case was 5 to 4. 
There were four Justices prepared to accept under Chevron 
deference an agency's actually rewriting interpreting numerical 
requirements to be something other than what they are.
    There are legions--legions of cases, Senator Hatch, that 
show the Agency is quite understandably extending their 
interpretive authority to the very extent of its limits, and 
its limits are very wide--anything that is reasonable, any 
interpretation that is within the permissible scope of 
Congress' possible meaning.
    It is hard enough, Senator Hatch, when an agency or a court 
attempts in good faith using the traditional tools of statutory 
construction to discern the meaning as best they can, the best 
meaning of a statute. With the agencies being given essentially 
carte blanche authority to get anywhere on the target, they 
will always get as close to the edge as they can that advances 
their particular bureaucratic agenda. That is understandable, 
and I do not blame them for that. The problem is there is no 
judicial check on that activity.
    Senator Hatch. Mr. Kovacs, proponents of increased 
regulation frequently frame their efforts as an attack on big 
business. Isn't it true that a lot of small businesses are 
affected and that many of these expensive new rules hurt small 
businesses the most, and farmers and ranchers and others, 
because they cannot afford the expensive compliance 
infrastructure of larger businesses? Moreover, isn't it worth 
considering how the costs of regulations get passed on to 
ordinary Americans in the form of higher prices, smaller 
paychecks, fewer job opportunities? I could go on and on.
    Mr. Kovacs. Senator, as you know, Congress in the passage 
of the Regulatory Flexibility Act required the Small Business 
Advocacy Group to meet with the agencies on regulations that 
have a substantial impact on a large number of small 
businesses, and, for example, in the WOTUS rule, EPA refused to 
meet with any of the panels. They did the same thing in the 
Clean Power Plan, and they did the same thing with ozone. They 
took the position that there was absolutely no cost on small 
business.
    Again, going back to Chevron and the psychology, you have 
an agency that says, ``We just do not have to comply,'' and 
that is a little bit different than saying that they should 
care.
    The second part is, 35 years ago, Congress in all of the 
environmental statutes put in this requirement on EPA to do 
this continuous evaluation on employment and job impacts. For 
35 years, the Agency has refused. What happens is when you go 
back to the 1970s and you look at what really the structure of 
the deal was between Democrats and Republicians--Congress 
recognized that regulations would have an impact on jobs, and 
it would have an impact on industry because they were going to 
be expensive. In return, Congress asked for this continuing 
evaluation. Congress got the regulations. Congress never got 
the evaluation. To some extent, you are dealing without the 
information you have asked for 35 years to have.
    The second thing in terms of the modeling, we did a very 
extensive study on how EPA uses modeling, and out of the 56 
rules that would have had to be modeled just because of their 
cost, 54 of the rules used what they call the ``partial 
economic analysis.'' Partial economic analysis only estimates 
how many new jobs you would put into a facility just to comply 
with the regulation. They did not use the whole economy 
modeling, which would have actually looked at, well, what is 
the cost of the new jobs, what is the cost of the new product, 
and how does that cost travel through the economy?
    One quick example. On the utility MACT, for example, EPA 
estimated, I believe, that there were going to be 8,000 jobs 
created by the regulation; they would be the consultants. When 
we did the whole economy modeling and we actually took EPA's 
numbers and just ran it with the whole economy model, it came 
out to, I think, about 85,000 lost jobs.
    Even in the model--and the Senate has taken care of a lot 
of that, you and Senator Vitter have got the SAB doing now this 
whole economy modeling to find out why the Agency is not using 
it more.
    Senator Hatch. Thank you.
    Mr. Cooper, just another question to you. Would you discuss 
your views on the Skidmore decision? Compare it to the Chevron 
deference. Is Skidmore an improvement over Chevron, or does it 
suffer from the same faults?
    Mr. Cooper. Senator Hatch, I believe Skidmore is a large 
improvement over Chevron. Chevron essentially liberated the 
agencies from Skidmore. Skidmore had been the governing 
standard of judicial review of agency action.
    Do not misunderstand me, though. Skidmore was not--was 
framed in vague enough language that it, too, obscured what in 
my opinion should be the goal of any agency and should be the 
standard of review of any court reviewing agency interpretation 
of ambiguous statutory provisions, which is: What is the right 
answer? What is the answer that, again, using the traditional 
tools of statutory construction, best captures the meaning of 
the provision that Congress intended?
    Skidmore--Skidmore essentially says to put it in bottom-
line terms. The Court will review anything that the agency 
considered, including its consistency with its own prior 
practices, that is persuasive to the Court that the agency got 
it right. That is an improvement on Chevron, but it is not, in 
my opinion, the right standard.
    Senator Hatch. There are a whole bunch of other questions I 
would like to ask, but I think we have kept you all here long 
enough, so I will submit those in writing.
    Senator Hatch. This is an important hearing, and, of 
course, we are trying to find some effective solutions that 
will work for everybody rather than just one side or the other, 
because right now it is not working. Right now, bureaucracy 
tends to engulf everything in our lives, and somehow or other 
we have got to get back to where statutes mean what they say 
and we do not have unelected bureaucrats deciding all these 
laws the way they are today and imposing them upon everybody at 
a cost of trillions of dollars over the years.
    This is important stuff, and I just want to thank all of 
you for being here and for taking time off of your busy 
schedules to help us on the Committee to understand a little 
bit more about what this is all about.
    Thanks for your time, and we appreciate your effort, and 
with that--I do not see anybody else here--we will adjourn 
until further notice. Thank you.
    [Whereupon, at 11:52 p.m., the hearing was adjourned.]
    [Additional material submitted for the record follows.]

                            A P P E N D I X

Submitted by Senator Leahy:

 Former EPA Administrators........................................   306
 
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