Column: Reducing regulations assists American families and the economy

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Most American families spend more on regulatory compliance than they do on food, education or any other expense besides housing, according to a new report. From zoning and permit restrictions to lumber and steel tariffs, the total regulatory bill for the average household is nearly $16,000 per year, or at least $2.1 trillion in total.

This country’s high regulatory cost burden affects voters far more than whatever culture war distraction is currently insulting their intelligence. Yet Washington’s regulatory problem is a problem for all of us, affecting everything from your household dishwasher to the car you drive to artificial intelligence.

Judging from the burgeoning number of pages in the Federal Register, the digest where all proposed and final regulations are published, we’re drowning in red tape. The page count reached its second-highest ever total last year, at more than 89,000 pages. This year’s edition is on pace to top 100,000 pages for the first time in its 89-year history.

More than 3,000 new final regulations appeared in 2023. More than 3,600 are on the way, according to the most recent Unified Agenda, which tracks upcoming regulations. And that’s just the formal rulemaking. Agencies often dodge the formal rulemaking process by issuing guidance documents, memoranda and other unaccountable forms of regulatory “dark matter.” Nobody knows how much dark matter there is, but a Trump-era Executive Order uncovered at least 100,000 guidance documents.

Until the recent Loper Bright Supreme Court decision, courts would defer to agencies’ guidance documents for interpreting their rules, which essentially let agencies do anything they want. The ruling will help mitigate that problem, but thanks to President Joe Biden overturning Trump-era guidance portals, the public still has no consistent access to agency guidance documents and other dark matter to find out what’s in them. The Guidance Out Of Darkness (GOOD) Act, sponsored by Sen. Ron Johnson, R-WI, would create a centralized portal where all agency guidance and other dark matter will be publicly accessible. It essentially codifies the Trump-era Executive Order.

The GOOD Act has already passed the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs unanimously with bipartisan support. Though Biden rescinded the original Trump Order, he has signaled that he would sign the GOOD Act if it reaches his desk.

Another problem is that the executive branch now does most of the legislative branch’s job. For every bill that Congress passed last year, agencies issued 46 regulations. This is part of a long-running trend where the executive branch becomes more powerful at the other branches’ expense.

This must change. The whole point of the separation of powers is to limit the harm that any one person (or administration) can do. Imagine if The Other Side gained absolute control of the government, and you will understand why America limits and separates government powers.

Yet another problem is regulations that linger on the books. There are currently more than a million regulatory restrictions spread across the Code of Federal Regulations’ 188,000 pages. Neither Congress nor agencies are interested in cleaning out obsolete, redundant, and harmful rules from this massive stockpile. One solution is to outsource the job.

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