Notice & Comment

Legacy ABA AdLaw Section Notice and Comment Blog

Notice & Comment

Agencies Seek Applications for Food and Drug Safety Workgroup, by Lynn White

The Food and Drug Administration, Office of National Coordinator for Health IT, and Federal Communications Commission (FCC) are seeking applications for the Food and Drug Administration Safety Innovation Act Workgroup (FDASIA). The FDASIA will “inform the development of a report on an appropriate, risk-based regulatory framework pertaining to health information technology including mobile medical applications that […]

Notice & Comment

9th Annual Administrative Law and Regulatory Practice Institute

Registration is now open for the 2013 Administrative Law and Regulatory Practice Institute, April 3-4, 2013, in Washington, DC at the Capitol Hilton.  The institute will cover hot topics and emerging issues in administrative law.  Stay tuned for the full conference agenda! This post was originally published on the legacy ABA Section of Administrative Law […]

Notice & Comment

EEOC Seeking Input on Quality Control Plan, by Lynn White

The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) invites public input on its efforts to develop a Quality Control Plan (QCP). The EEOC Strategic Enforcement Plan for Fiscal Years 2012-2016 requires the agency to develop a QCP for public and private sector investigations and conciliations and federal sector hearings and appeals. The agency is specifically seeking […]

Notice & Comment

Agency Spotlight: DOL Issues FMLA Final Rule, by Lynn White

On February 6, 2013, the Department of Labor (DOL) published a final rule in the Federal Register (78 FR 8833-8947) revising Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA) benefit requirements for family members of servicemembers. The FMLA provides qualifying family members of injured or ill servicemembers (military caregiver) or activated National Guard or Reserve members (qualifying exigency) […]

Notice & Comment

Dilution of Auer Deference? by Michael Herz

It is hornbook administrative law that agencies’ interpretations of their own regulations received heightened judicial deference.  The standard cites are Bowles v. Seminole Rock Co., 325 U.S. 410 (1945), and Auer v. Robbins, 519 U.S. 79 (1997).  The principle has a number of possible justifications: (a) the agency best understands what interpretation will make sense […]

Notice & Comment

DC Panel on Hearings and Technology, by Michael Herz

Readers in DC may be interested in Administrative Judging in the 21st Century: The Hi-Tech Courtroom and “Googling” the Evidence, a brown-bag session that will take place at the ABA on June 21. The discussion will be devoted to changes in administrative hearings resulting from the new courtroom technology, including nation-wide video-conferencing, wireless networks, hand-held […]

Notice & Comment

June 4 Roundtable on the Law of Counterterrorism, by Michael Herz

On Monday, June 4, several of the contributors to the Section’s well received new book, The Law of Counterterrorism, will participate in a roundtable discussion on cutting-edge topics covered in the book, including detention and interrogation, military commissions, and the KSM trial at Guantanamo.  This will be fascinating and timely discussion.  It is free and open to […]

Notice & Comment

New Executive Order on International Regulatory Cooperation, by Michael Herz

Today President Obama issued an Executive Order on International Regulatory Cooperation.  The Order can be found here. The essential goal of the new Order is to focus agencies on the burdens created when US regulatory requirements diverge from those of other nations.  Such concerns require a delicate balancing act, reflected in the careful wording of […]

Notice & Comment

Spring Conference and Council Meeting, by Michael Herz

The Section’s Spring Conference and Council Meetings will take place Friday-Sunday, April 20-22, in Princeton, NJ. On Friday, April 20, the Section, along with Princeton’s Program in Law and Public Affairs and Center for Information Technology Policy, is hosting a symposium on “The Administrative Agency in the Electronic Age.”  Speakers from the ad law professoriat […]

Notice & Comment

Employment: Openings at ACUS and Congressional Research Service, by Jonathan Rusch

Both the Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS) and the Congressional Research Service (CRS) are now hiring for senior-level positions.  At ACUS, there are currently two senior-level positions for which applications are being sought:   (1)  Research Director.  This is an SES-level position.  The vacancy announcement is posted on USAJobs, and will be open through […]

Notice & Comment

Teleforum on the Regulatory Accountability Act 2/1, by Michael Herz

On Wednesday, February 1, at 3:00 pm Eastern time, the Federalist Society’s Administrative Law Section will host a “teleforum” on the Regulatory Accountability Act (H.R. 3010).  The Act, which passed the House in December, would make sweeping changes to the APA, particularly with regard to rulemaking. The featured speakers are both distinguished former chairs of the […]

Notice & Comment

Environmental Law/International Law: Developments in Chevron Challenge to $18 Billion Dollar Judgment in Ecuador, by Jonathan Rusch

On January 3, Chevron Corporation issued a press release reporting that a three-judge panel of “temporary judges presiding over appellate proceedings in the Provincial Court of Justice of Sucumbíos in Lago Agrio, Ecuador in an environmental lawsuit involving Texaco Petroleum Company,” had ruled against the companies.  The appellate court’s ruling upheld a February 2011 lower […]

Notice & Comment

Criminal Process/Securities, Commodities, and Exchanges: SEC Charges Investment Adviser with $500 Billion in Fake Securities Using Social Media, by Jonathan Rusch

On January 4, the Securities and Exchange Commission charged an investment adviser with offering to sell $500 billion in fictitious securities, using social media such as LinkedIn.  The SEC press release on the case stated that the adviser, Anthony Fields, “used LinkedIn discussions to promote fictitious ‘bank guarantees’ and ‘medium-term notes’,” and that his postings “resulted […]