This is the accessible text file for GAO report number GAO-02-491T 
entitled 'Regulatory Flexibility Act: Clarification of Key Terms Still 
Needed' which was released on March 6, 2002. 

This text file was formatted by the U.S. General Accounting Office 
(GAO) to be accessible to users with visual impairments, as part of a 
longer term project to improve GAO products' accessibility. Every 
attempt has been made to maintain the structural and data integrity of 
the original printed product. Accessibility features, such as text 
descriptions of tables, consecutively numbered footnotes placed at the 
end of the file, and the text of agency comment letters, are provided 
but may not exactly duplicate the presentation or format of the 
printed version. The portable document format (PDF) file is an exact 
electronic replica of the printed version. We welcome your feedback. 
Please E-mail your comments regarding the contents or accessibility 
features of this document to Webmaster@gao.gov. 

This is a work of the U.S. government and is not subject to copyright 
protection in the United States. It may be reproduced and distributed 
in its entirety without further permission from GAO. Because this work 
may contain copyrighted images or other material, permission from the 
copyright holder may be necessary if you wish to reproduce this 
material separately. 

United States General Accounting Office: 
GAO: 

Testimony: 

Before the Committee on Small Business, House of Representatives: 

For Release on Delivery: 
Expected at 10 a.m. EDT: 
Wednesday, March 6, 2002: 

Regulatory Flexibility Act: 

Clarification of Key Terms Still Needed: 

Statement of Victor Rezendes: 
Managing Director: 
Strategic Issues Team: 

GAO-02-491T: 

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee: 

I am pleased to be here today to discuss the implementation of the 
Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA), as amended, and the Small 
Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA). 
[Footnote 1] As you requested, I will discuss our work on the 
implementation of these two statutes in recent years. 

The RFA requires federal agencies to examine the impact of their 
proposed and final rules on "small entities" (small businesses, small 
governmental jurisdictions, and small organizations) and to solicit 
the ideas and comments of such entities for this purpose. 
Specifically, whenever agencies are required to publish a notice of 
proposed rulemaking, the RFA requires agencies to prepare an initial 
and a final regulatory flexibility analysis. However, the act also 
states that those analytical requirements do not apply if the head of 
the agency certifies that the rule will not have a "significant 
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities," or what I 
will—for the sake of brevity—term a "significant impact." SBREFA was 
enacted to strengthen the RFA's protections for small entities, and 
some of the act's requirements are built on this "significant impact" 
determination. For example, one provision of SBREFA requires that 
before publishing a proposed rule that may have a significant impact, 
the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Occupational Safety 
and Health Administration must convene a small business advocacy 
review panel for the draft rule, and collect the advice and 
recommendations of representatives of affected small entities about 
the potential impact of the draft rule.[Footnote 2] 

We have reviewed the implementation of the RFA and SBREFA several 
times during recent years, with topics ranging from specific 
provisions in each statute to the overall implementation of the RFA. 
Although both of these reform initiatives have clearly affected how 
federal agencies regulate, we believe that their full promise has not 
been realized. To achieve that promise, Congress may need to clarify 
what it expects the agencies to do with regard to the statutes' 
requirements. In particular, Congress may need to clearly delineate—or 
have some other organization delineate—what is meant by the terms 
"significant economic impact" and "substantial number of small 
entities." The RFA does not define what Congress meant by these terms 
and does not give any entity the authority or responsibility to define 
them governmentwide. As a result, agencies have had to construct their 
own definitions, and those definitions vary. Over the past decade, we 
have recommended several times that Congress provide greater clarity 
with regard to these terms, but to date Congress has not acted on our 
recommendations.[Footnote 3] 

The questions that remain unanswered are numerous and varied. For 
example, does Congress believe that the economic impact of a rule 
should be measured in terms of compliance costs as a percentage of 
businesses' annual revenues or the percentage of work hours available 
to the firms? If so, is 3 percent (or 1 percent) of revenues or work 
hours an appropriate definition of "significant?" Should agencies take 
into account the cumulative impact of their rules on small entities, 
even within a particular program area? Should agencies count the 
impact of the underlying statutes when determining whether their rules 
have a significant impact? What should be considered a "rule" for 
purposes of the requirement in the RFA that the agencies review rules 
with a significant impact within 10 years of their promulgation? 
Should agencies review rules that had a significant impact at the time 
they were originally published, or only those that currently have that 
effect? Should agencies conduct regulatory flexibility analyses for 
rules that have a positive economic impact on small entities, or
only for rules with a negative impact? 

These questions are not simply matters of administrative conjecture 
within the agencies. They lie at the heart of the RFA and SBREFA, and 
the answers to the questions can have a substantive effect on the 
amount of regulatory relief provided through those statutes. Because 
Congress did not answer these questions when the statutes were 
enacted, agencies have had to develop their own answers—and those 
answers differ. If Congress does not like the answers that the 
agencies have developed, it needs to either amend the underlying 
statutes and provide what it believes are the correct answers or give 
some other entity the authority to issue guidance on these issues. 

EPA’s Use of RFA Discretion: 

The implications of the current lack of clarity with regard to the 
term "significant impact" and the discretion that agencies have to 
define it were clearly illustrated in a report that we prepared for 
the Senate Committee on Small Business 2 years ago.[Footnote 4] One 
part of our report focused on a proposed rule that EPA published in 
August 1999 that would, upon implementation, lower certain reporting 
thresholds for lead and lead compounds under the Toxics Release 
Inventory program from as high as 25,000 pounds to 10 pounds.[Footnote 
5] At the time, EPA said that the total cost of the rule in the first 
year of implementation would be about $116 million. The agency 
estimated that approximately 5,600 small businesses would be affected 
by the rule, and that the first-year costs of the rule for each of 
these small businesses would be from $5,200 to $7,500. However, EPA 
certified that the rule would not have a significant impact, and 
therefore did not trigger certain analytical and procedural 
requirements in the RFA. 

EPA' determination that the proposed lead rule would not have a 
significant impact on small entities was not unique. Its four major 
program offices certified about 78 percent of the substantive proposed 
rules that they published in the 2 1/2 years before SBREFA took effect 
in 1996, but certified 96 percent of the proposed rules published in 
the 2 1/2 years after the act's implementation. In fact, two of the 
program offices—the Office of Prevention, Pesticides and Toxic 
Substances and the Office of Solid Waste—certified all 47 of their 
proposed rules in this post-SBREFA period as not having a significant 
impact. The Office of Air and Radiation certified 97 percent of its 
proposed rules during this period, and the Office of Water certified 
88 percent. EPA officials told us that the increased rate of
certification after SBREFA's implementation was caused by a change in 
the agency's RFA guidance on what constituted a significant impact. 
Prior to SBREFA, EPA's policy was to prepare a regulatory flexibility 
analysis for any rule that the agency expected to have any impact on 
any small entities. The officials said that this guidance was changed 
because the SBREFA requirement to convene an advocacy review panel for 
any proposed rule that was not certified made the continuation of the 
agency's more inclusive RFA policy too costly and impractical. In 
other words, EPA indicated that SBREFA-—the statute that Congress 
enacted to strengthen the RFA--caused the agency to use the discretion 
permitted in the RFA and conduct fewer regulatory flexibility analyses. 

EPA's current guidance on how the RFA should be implemented includes 
numerical guidelines that establish what appears to be a high 
threshold for what constitutes a significant impact. Under those 
guidelines, an EPA rule could theoretically impose $10,000 in 
compliance costs on 10,000 small businesses, but the guidelines 
indicate that the agency can presume that the rule does not trigger 
the requirements of the RFA as long as those costs do not represent at 
least 1 percent of the affected businesses' annual revenues. The 
guidance does not take into account the profit margins of the 
businesses involved or the cumulative impact of the agency's rules on 
small businesses—even within a particular subject area like the Toxics 
Release Inventory. 

Previous Reports on the RFA and SBREFA: 

We have issued several other reports in recent years on the 
implementation of the RFA and SBREFA that, in combination, illustrate 
both the promise and the problems associated with the statutes. For 
example, in 1991, we examined the implementation of the RFA with 
regard to small governments and concluded that each of the four 
federal agencies that we reviewed had a different interpretation of 
key RFA provisions.[Footnote 6] We said that the act allowed agencies 
to interpret when they believed their proposed regulations affected 
small government, and recommended that Congress consider amending the 
RFA to require the Small Business Administration (SBA) to develop 
criteria regarding whether and how to conduct the required analyses. 

In 1994, we examined 12 years of annual reports prepared by the SBA 
Chief Counsel for Advocacy and said the reports indicated variable 
compliance with the RFA—a conclusion that the Office of Advocacy also 
reached in its 20-year report on the RFA.[Footnote 7] SBA repeatedly 
characterized some agencies as satisfying the act's requirements, but 
other agencies were consistently viewed as recalcitrant. Other 
agencies' performance reportedly varied over time or varied by 
subagency. We said that one reason for agencies' lack of compliance 
with the RFA's requirements was that the act did not expressly 
authorize SBA to interpret key provisions in the statute and did not 
require SBA to develop criteria for agencies to follow in reviewing 
their rules. We said that if Congress wanted to strengthen the 
implementation of the RFA, it should consider amending the act to (1) 
provide SBA with authority and responsibility to interpret the RFA's 
provisions and (2) require SBA, in consultation with the Office of 
Management and Budget (OMB), to develop criteria as to whether and how 
federal agencies should conduct RFA analyses. 

In our 1998 report on the implementation of the small business 
advocacy review panel requirements in SBREFA, we said that the lack of 
clarity regarding whether EPA should have convened panels for two of 
its proposed rules was traceable to the lack of agreed-upon 
governmentwide criteria as to whether a rule has a significant impact. 
[Footnote 8] Nevertheless, we said that the panels that had been 
convened were generally well received by both the agencies and the 
small business representatives. We also said that if Congress wished 
to clarify and strengthen the implementation of the RFA and SBREFA, it 
should consider (1) providing SBA or another entity with clearer 
authority and responsibility to interpret the RFA's provisions and (2) 
requiring SBA or some other entity to develop criteria defining a 
"significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities." 

In 1999, we noted a similar lack of clarity regarding the RFA's 
requirement that agencies review their existing rules that have a 
significant impact within 10 years of their promulgation.[Footnote 9] 
We said that if Congress is concerned that this section of the RFA has 
been subject to varying interpretations, it may wish to clarify those 
provisions. We also recommended that OMB take certain actions to 
improve the administration of these review requirements, some of which 
have been implemented. 

Last year we issued two reports on the implementation of SBREFA. One 
report examined section 223 of the act, which required federal 
agencies to establish a policy for the reduction and/or waiver of 
civil penalties on small entities.[Footnote 10] All of the agencies' 
penalty relief policies that we reviewed were within the discretion 
that Congress provided, but the policies varied considerably. Some of 
the policies covered only a portion of the agencies' civil penalty 
enforcement actions, and some provided small entities with no greater 
penalty relief than large entities. The agencies also varied in how 
key terms such as "small entities" and "penalty reduction" were 
defined. We said that if Congress wanted to strengthen section 223 of 
SBREFA it should amend the act to require that agencies' policies 
cover all of the agencies civil penalty enforcement actions and 
provide small entities with more penalty relief than other similarly 
situated entities. Also, to facilitate congressional oversight, we 
suggested that Congress require agencies to maintain data on their 
civil penalty relief efforts.[Footnote 11] 

The other report that we issued on SBREFA last year examined the 
requirement in section 212 that agencies publish small entity 
compliance guides for any rule that requires a final regulatory 
flexibility analysis under the RFA.[Footnote 12] We concluded that 
section 212 did not have much of an impact on the agencies that we 
examined, and its implementation also varied across and sometimes 
within the agencies. Some of the section's ineffectiveness and 
inconsistency is traceable to the definitional problems in the RFA 
that I discussed previously. Therefore, if an agency concluded that a 
rule imposing thousands of dollars of costs on thousands of small 
entities did not trigger the requirements of the RFA, section 212 did 
not require the agency to prepare a compliance guide. Other problems 
were traceable to the discretion provided in section 212 itself. Under 
the statute, agencies can designate a previously published document as 
its small entity compliance guide, or develop and publish a guide with 
no input from small entities years after the rule takes effect. We 
again recommended that Congress take action to clarify what 
constitutes a "significant economic impact" and a "substantial number 
of small entities," and also suggested changes to section 212 to make 
its implementation more consistent and effective. 

Two years ago we convened a meeting at GAO on the rule review 
provision of the RFA, focusing on why the required reviews were not 
being conducted. Attending that meeting were representatives from 12 
agencies that appeared to issue rules with an impact on small 
entities, representatives from relevant oversight organizations (e.g., 
OMB and SBA's Office of Advocacy), and congressional staff from the 
House and Senate committees on small business. The meeting revealed 
significant differences of opinion regarding key terms in the statute. 
For example, some agencies did not consider their rules to have a 
significant impact because they believed the underlying statutes, not 
the agency-developed regulations, caused the effect on small entities. 
There was also confusion regarding whether the agencies were supposed 
to review rules that had a significant impact on small entities at the 
time the rules were first published in the Federal Register or those 
that currently have such an impact. It was not even clear what should 
be considered a "rule" under the RFA's rule review requirements—the 
entire section of the Code of Federal Regulations that was affected by 
the rule, or just the part of the existing rule that was being 
amended. By the end of the meeting it was clear that, as one 
congressional staff member said, "determining compliance with (the 
RFA) is less obvious than we believed before." 

Mr. Chairman, this concludes my prepared statement. I would be happy 
to respond to any questions. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] The RFA is codified at 5 U.S.C. §601-612 and took effect on 
January 1, 1981. 

[2] This provision of SBREFA is codified at 5 U.S.C. §609 and took 
effect on June 29, 1996. 

[3] Last year, legislation was introduced in the Senate (S. 849, the 
Agency Accountability Act of 2001) that would, in part, require the 
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration to 
promulgate regulations to define the terms "significant economic 
impact" and "substantial number of small entities." 

[4] U.S. General Accounting Office, Regulatory Flexibility Act: 
Implementation in EPA Program Offices and Proposed Lead Rule, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-00-193] (Washington, 
D.C.: Sept. 20, 2000). 

[5] The proposed lead rule was published at 64 Fed. Reg. 42222 (1999). 
Toxics Release Inventory reporting is required by section 313 of the 
Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act of 1986 (EPCRA) (42 
U.S.C. §11023). Reporting is also required under the Pollution 
Prevention Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. §13106), which added reporting 
requirements to EPCRA's reporting requirements in 1991. 

[6] U.S. General Accounting Office, Regulatory Flexibility Act: 
Inherent Weaknesses May Limit Its Usefulness for Small Governments, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/HRD-91-61] (Washington, 
D.C.: Jan. 11, 1991). 

[7] U.S. General Accounting Office, Regulatory Flexibility Act: Status 
of Agencies' Compliance, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-94-105] (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 
27, 1994). The Office of Advocacy's report is entitled 20 Years of the 
Regulatory Flexibility Act: Rulemaking in a Dynamic Economy 
(Washington, D.C.: 2000). 

[8] U.S. General Accounting Office, Regulatory Reform: Implementation 
of the Small Business Advocacy Review Panel Requirements, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-98-36] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 18, 
1998). 

[9] U.S. General Accounting Office, Regulatory Flexibility Act: 
Agencies' Interpretations of Review Requirements Vary, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-99-55] (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 2, 
1999). 

[10] U.S. General Accounting Office, Regulatory Reform: Implementation 
of Selected Agencies' Civil Penalty Relief Policies for Small 
Entities, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-01-280] 
(Washington, D.C.: Feb. 20, 2001). 

[11] Last year, legislation was introduced in the Senate (S. 1271, the 
Small Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2001) that would, in part, 
require agencies to report information on civil penalty relief to 
certain congressional committees. 

[12] Regulatory Reform: Compliance Guide Requirement Has Had Little 
Effect on Agency Practices, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-02-172] (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 28, 
2001). 

[End of section] 

GAO’s Mission: 

The General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress, 
exists to support Congress in meeting its constitutional 
responsibilities and to help improve the performance and 
accountability of the federal government for the American people. GAO 
examines the use of public funds; evaluates federal programs and 
policies; and provides analyses, recommendations, and other assistance 
to help Congress make informed oversight, policy, and funding 
decisions. GAO’s commitment to good government is reflected in its 
core values of accountability, integrity, and reliability. 

Obtaining Copies of GAO Reports and Testimony: 

The fastest and easiest way to obtain copies of GAO documents at no 
cost is through the Internet. GAO’s Web site [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov] contains abstracts and full text files of current 
reports and testimony and an expanding archive of older products. The 
Web site features a search engine to help you locate documents using 
key words and phrases. You can print these documents in their 
entirety, including charts and other graphics. 

Each day, GAO issues a list of newly released reports, testimony, and 
correspondence. GAO posts this list, known as “Today’s Reports,” on 
its Web site daily. The list contains links to the full-text document 
files. To have GAO e-mail this list to you every afternoon, go to 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov] and select “Subscribe to daily E-mail 
alert for newly released products” under the GAO Reports heading. 

Order by Mail or Phone: 

The first copy of each printed report is free. Additional copies are 
$2 each. A check or money order should be made out to the 
Superintendent of Documents. GAO also accepts VISA and Mastercard. 
Orders for 100 or more copies mailed to a single address are 
discounted 25 percent. Orders should be sent to: 

U.S. General Accounting Office: 441 G Street NW, Room LM: 
Washington, D.C. 20548: 

To order by Phone: 
Voice: (202) 512-6000: 
TDD: (202) 512-2537: 
Fax: (202) 512-6061: 

To Report Fraud, Waste, and Abuse in Federal Programs Contact: 

Web site: [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/fraudnet/fraudnet.htm]: 
E-mail: fraudnet@gao.gov: 
Automated answering system: (800) 424-5454 or (202) 512-7470: 

Public Affairs: 

Jeff Nelligan, managing director, 
NelliganJ@gao.gov: 
(202) 512-4800: 
U.S. General Accounting Office: 
441 G Street NW, Room 7149:
Washington, D.C. 20548: