Notification of Nonenforcement of Health and Human Services Grants Regulation, 63809-63811 [2019-24384]
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 223 / Tuesday, November 19, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
States prior to publication of the rule in
the Federal Register. This action is not
a ‘‘major rule’’ as defined by 5 U.S.C.
804(2).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 721
Environmental protection, Chemicals,
Hazardous substances, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: November 5, 2019.
Tala Henry,
Deputy Director, Office of Pollution
Prevention and Toxics.
Therefore, 40 CFR part 721 is
corrected as follows:
PART 721—[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for part 721
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2604, 2607, and
2625(c).
2. In § 721.11107, revise paragraph
(a)(2)(ii) to read as follows:
■
§ 721.11107 Alkanediol, 2,2-bis
(substituted alkyl)-polymer with substituted
alkane, heteromonocycles, alkenoate
(generic).
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(ii) Hazard communication.
Requirements as specified in § 721.72(a)
through (e) (concentration set 0.1
percent), (f), (g)(1)(i), (ii), (iv), (vii), (ix),
(respiratory sensitization), (g)(2)(i), (v),
and (g)(5). Alternative hazard and
warning statements that meet the
criteria of the Globally Harmonized
System and OSHA Hazard
Communication Standard may be used.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2019–24945 Filed 11–18–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
45 CFR Part 75
Notification of Nonenforcement of
Health and Human Services Grants
Regulation
Office of the Secretary, HHS.
Notification of exercise of
enforcement discretion.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
This notification is to inform
the public that the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS) has
determined that the rulemaking that
resulted in the regulatory provisions
promulgated on Dec. 12, 2016, regarding
HHS’s grant regulations, raises
significant concerns about compliance
with the Regulatory Flexibility Act. The
provisions will not be enforced pending
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES
SUMMARY:
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a repromulgation that complies with the
Act.
DATES: November 19, 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Richard Brundage at (202) 401–6107.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Department of Health and Human
Services has determined that the
rulemaking which promulgated or
amended 45 CFR 75.101(f), 75.110(a),
75.300(c) and (d), 75.305(a), 75.365,
75.414(c) and (f), and 75.477, published
at 81 FR 89393 (Dec. 12, 2016), raises
significant concerns about compliance
with the requirements of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601 et
seq. The Department has accordingly
determined to exercise its enforcement
discretion not to enforce the regulations
until they have been repromulgated
with a proper RFA analysis.
I. Statutory Background
The RFA generally requires that when
an agency issues a proposed rule, or a
final rule (after publishing a proposed
rule) pursuant to section 553(b) of the
APA or another law, the agency must
prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis
that meets the requirements of the RFA
and publish such analysis in the
Federal Register. 5 U.S.C. 603, 604. The
RFA is a ‘‘[p]urely procedural’’ statute,
but ‘‘set[s] out precise, specific steps an
agency must take.’’ Nat’l Telephone Coop Ass’n v. FCC, 563 F.3d 536, 540 (D.C.
Cir. 2009) (internal quotation marks
omitted). Specifically, the RFA normally
requires agencies to describe the impact
of a rulemaking on small entities by
providing a regulatory impact analysis.
Such analysis must address the
consideration of regulatory options that
would lessen the economic effect of the
rule on small entities. The RFA defines
a ‘‘small entity’’ as (1) a proprietary firm
meeting the size standards of the Small
Business Administration (SBA); 1 (2) a
nonprofit organization that is not
dominant in its field; or (3) a small
government jurisdiction with a
population of less than 50,000. 5 U.S.C.
601(3)–(6).2 The requirement does not
apply if the head of the agency ‘‘certifies
that the rule will not, if promulgated,
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.’’
Id. section 605(b). The agency must,
however, publish the certification in the
Federal Register at the time of
1 Depending on the industry, SBA considers
businesses to be small by virtue of having less than
between $7.5 million and $38.5 million in average
annual revenue.
2 The Department considers a rule to have a
significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities if at least 5% of small
entities experience an impact of more than 3% of
revenue.
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63809
publication of the proposed or final
rule, ‘‘along with a statement providing
the factual basis for such certification.’’
Id. The RFA also requires the agency to
provide the certification and the
statement with the factual justification
to the SBA Chief Counsel for Advocacy.
Id.
If the agency head has not waived the
requirements for a regulatory flexibility
analysis in accordance with the RFA’s
waiver provision, and no other RFA
exception applies, the agency must
prepare the regulatory flexibility
analysis and publish it in the Federal
Register at the time of promulgation or,
if the rule is promulgated in response to
an emergency that makes timely
compliance impracticable, within 180
days of publication of the final rule. 5
U.S.C. 604(a), 608(b).3 In addition, the
RFA provides for judicial review of an
agency’s compliance with its provisions
under some circumstances, which can
result in a court ordering the agency to
take corrective action by remanding the
rule to the agency and deferring
enforcement of the rule against small
entities. Id. section 611(a)(4).
II. Absence of RFA Analysis or
Certification
The rulemaking that promulgated and
amended 45 CFR 75.101(f), 75.110(a),
75.300(c) and (d), 75.305(a), 75.365,
75.414(c) and (f), and 75.477, published
at 81 FR 89393 (Dec. 12, 2016), raises
significant concerns about compliance
with the requirements of the RFA, 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq. The Department
neither performed the RFA analysis
described in 5 U.S.C. 602–604, nor
expressly certified that the rules ‘‘will
not . . . have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities’’ and provided a statement with
the factual basis for such certification as
provided for by section 605(b). See 81
FR 89393 (Dec. 12, 2016). The
rulemaking simply declared that it
would ‘‘not have a significant economic
3 Section 608(b) provides that except as provided
in section 605(b), an agency head may not waive the
requirements of section 604 for final rules. An
agency head may delay the completion of the
requirements of section 604 of the title for a period
of not more than one hundred and eighty days after
the date of publication in the Federal Register of
a final rule by publishing in the Federal Register,
not later than such date of publication, a written
finding, with reasons therefor, that the final rule is
being promulgated in response to an emergency that
makes timely compliance with the provisions of
section 604 of the title impracticable. If the agency
has not prepared a final regulatory analysis
pursuant to section 604 of the title within one
hundred and eighty days from the date of
publication of the final rule, such rule shall lapse
and have no effect. Such rule shall not be
repromulgated until a final regulatory flexibility
analysis has been completed by the agency. 5 U.S.C.
608(b).
E:\FR\FM\19NOR1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 223 / Tuesday, November 19, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
impact beyond HHS’s current
regulations,’’ without even mentioning
small entities or grappling with the
obvious interests of such entities that
should have been protected by the RFA
process. The Department is accordingly
exercising its enforcement discretion
and as such, these regulatory provisions
will not be enforced, pending
repromulgation.
The Department failed to make the
certification, and provide the factual
statement, described by the statute.
Where an agency engaged in notice
and comment rulemaking pursuant to
section 553 does not perform a RFA
analysis, the head of the agency
normally must certify that a rule will
not have a significant impact on small
entities, and the agency must ordinarily
provide a statement that lays out the
facts that support the certification. The
agency’s Federal Register publication
must, thus, include a certification under
section 605(b) that discusses the impact
of a rule on a substantial number of
small entities and ‘‘a statement
providing the factual basis for such
certification.’’ While this is not a high
bar, the Government must, at a
minimum, show that it made a
reasonable, good faith effort to consider
at least some facts relevant to small
entities impacted by the rule. Compare
North Carolina Fisheries Ass’n, Inc. v.
Daley, 16 F. Supp. 2d 647, 651–53 (E.D.
Va. 1997) (finding that certification was
noncompliant because it did not discuss
any facts regarding the impact on small
entities in the time period subject to the
rule), with Nat. Women, Infants and
Children Grocers Ass’n v. Food and
Nutrition Serv., 416 F. Supp. 2d 92,
108–09 (D.D.C. 2006) (holding that
certification complied because it
explained that the challenged rule
applied to the states, which had varying
market conditions), and Cactus Corner,
LLC v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric., 346 F. Supp.
2d 1075 (E.D. Cal. 2004) (finding that
certification complied because it
defined and discussed the small
wholesalers impacted by the rule and
made predictions about the likely
impact of the rule).
In the preamble to the December 12,
2016 final rules, the Department stated
it had an obligation under the RFA to
‘‘provide a final regulatory flexibility
analysis or to certify that the rule[s] will
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities.’’ 81 FR at 89394. It then listed
a subset of the regulatory changes:
Aligning the grants regulation at part 75
‘‘with various regulatory and statutory
provisions,’’ implementing Supreme
Court decisions, and codifying longstanding policies. Without explaining
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whether or how these regulatory
changes might apply to small entities,
the Department simply concluded that,
‘‘[i]n order to ensure that the public
receives the most value, it is essential
that HHS grant programs function as
effectively and efficiently as possible,
and that there is a high level of
accountability to prevent waste, fraud,
and abuse. The additions provide
enhanced direction for the public and
will not have a significant economic
impact beyond HHS’s current
regulations.’’ See 81 FR at 89394.4
This statement in the Federal Register
raises serious questions about
compliance with the RFA’s requirement
that the agency head must certify that
the rules will not have a significant
economic effect on a substantial number
of small entities. The statement fails to
mention the economic impact on small
entities in particular or to even
acknowledge that the regulation would
apply to small entities. Furthermore,
there is nothing in the final rules that
provides a factual basis for any
inference that the rules would not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Indeed, if anything, there are
indications that the rulemaking likely
did have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. The absence of a factual basis
for a required section 605 certification,
too, would be inconsistent with the
requirements of the RFA. See 5 U.S.C.
605(b).
The rules were not submitted to the
SBA Chief Counsel for Advocacy.
When a certification is required, the
RFA further requires that the agency
‘‘provide such certification and
statement to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration.’’ 5 U.S.C. 605(b). The
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA
maintains records of the proposed and
final rules submitted to it pursuant to
the RFA. The Office of the Chief
Counsel has informed the Department’s
General Counsel that it does not have a
record of having received the rules
pursuant to the RFA.
The rules may have affected a
significant number of small entities.
The provisions in the final rules may
have affected a significant number of
small entities, which underscores why
Congress prohibited agency heads from
waiving the requirement to conduct an
otherwise required regulatory impact
analysis except in the narrow
4 The RFA discussion in the preamble to the
proposed rule was virtually identical. See Health
and Human Services Grants Regulation, 81 FR
45270, 45272 (July 13, 2016).
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Sfmt 4700
circumstance where an agency can
provide the factual basis for a
certification by the agency head that
there is no significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities.5 For example, § 75.477(b)
precludes a grantee from including as
allowable costs those payments that it
may make to the Internal Revenue
Service in lieu of providing minimum
essential coverage (MEC) to its
employees. While nearly all large
employers offer their employees MEC,
in 2015, among companies with 50 to
199 employees, around 8 percent did
not. The 8 percent equates to
approximately 14,000 small businesses.
See https://files.kff.org/attachment/
report-2015-employer-health-benefitssurvey at 44; https://www.sba.gov/
advocacy/firm-size-data (2014).
Moreover, if an entity (including
governmental or non-profit entities)
with at least 50 full-time employees
failed to meet the MEC requirements, it
could be assessed a penalty equal to the
number of its full-time employees for
the year (minus up to 30 employees)
times $2,000 if at least one full-time
employee purchased health coverage
with premium tax credits through the
health insurance exchange. Any
reasonable certification under section
605(b) necessarily would have had to
reflect the potential impact on those
14,000 small businesses from this single
provision.
A similar showing would have been
sensible to perform with respect to the
other regulatory provisions contained in
the rulemaking that culminated in the
December 12, 2016 final rules. Indeed,
the data that existed at the time of the
rulemaking revealed that various
provisions could, in fact, affect a
significant number of small entities. For
example, § 75.414(c) limits
reimbursement for indirect costs on
training grants to eight percent. The
proposed rule (see 81 FR 45270 (July 13,
2016)) indicated that the amendment to
paragraph (c) reflected HHS’s
longstanding policy. However, under
the Richardson Waiver (see 36 FR 2532
(Feb. 5, 1971)), such policy, absent
rulemaking, is not binding. Thus, there
was no valid, binding limit on
reimbursement of indirect costs prior to
the issuance of this rule, and no
corresponding showing of the economic
implications for small entities,
including non-profits, of this new
5 Even in the case of an emergency, the agency
must conduct a regulatory flexibility analysis.
Congress simply gave the agency an additional 180
days to conduct the analysis in case of an
emergency, underscoring how important Congress
considered the regulatory flexibility analysis to be.
See 5 U.S.C. 608(b).
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 223 / Tuesday, November 19, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
limitation on overhead reimbursement.
A proper RFA analysis likely should
have considered the effect that moving
from a nonbinding policy to binding
rule would have on small entities. Cf.
Am. Federation of Labor v. Chertoff, 552
F. Supp. 2d 999, 1013 (N.D. Cal. 2007)
(noting ‘‘serious questions [about]
whether DHS violated the RFA’’ when
it refused to conduct a final flexibility
analysis about a rule that ‘‘as good as
mandates costly compliance with a new
90-day timeframe’’). There was also no
showing concerning § 75.300(c) and (d),
which may impose compliance costs on
recipients by subjecting the recipients to
conflicting statutory and non-statutory
requirements.
The regulatory provisions
promulgated in the final rules will not
be enforced pending rulemaking.
As described above, unless waived
pursuant to section 605(b), the RFA
generally requires an agency to prepare
a final regulatory flexibility analysis.
See 5 U.S.C. 604(a), 611(a). The
preparation of such analysis may be
delayed by up to 180 days after the
publication of the final rule in cases of
emergency. See 5 U.S.C. 608(b).
Moreover, flawed RFA analyses have
been the basis for judicial review of
rulemakings.
Because the Department has serious
concerns about whether the RFA
analysis performed here complied with
the RFA, the Department is announcing
that it will not enforce the regulatory
provisions, pending repromulgation of
the Rule. The majority of the
Department’s grantees are small
entities,6 and the RFA process
undertaken with respect to this Rule
raises significant concerns about
whether their interests were protected
in the manner the statute prescribes.
Rather than apply a nonenforcement
policy only to small entities, however,
the Department is exercising its
discretion to not enforce the rules with
respect to any grantees until the rules
have been properly re-promulgated with
an impact analysis that hews to the
requirements of the RFA. Applying
these rules differently to agency
grantees depending on size would be
unfair, create increased compliance
costs for all entities as they seek to
determine whether they are or are not
still subject to the rules, and impose
additional administrative burdens on
the Department disproportionate to the
benefit of enforcement.
Accordingly, the regulatory actions,
promulgated through the December 12,
2016 final rules, 81 FR 89393, namely,
6 See,
e.g., https://taggs.hhs.gov/ReportsGrants/
GrantsByRecipClass.
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the additions of 45 CFR 75.101(f),
75.300(c) and (d), 75.414(c)(1)(i) through
(iii), and 75.477, and the amendments to
45 CFR 75.110(a), 75.305(a), 75.365, and
75.414(f), will not be enforced pending
repromulgation.7
Dated: November 1, 2019.
Eric D. Hargan,
Deputy Secretary, Department of Health and
Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2019–24384 Filed 11–18–19; 8:45 am]
1996 (61 FR 26677, pages 26708, 26712,
and 26725) contained typographical
errors. The correcting amendments in
this document fix those errors. The
Commission is also correcting an error
in a footnote and table—Table 3—Paired
Frequencies (MHz), [12.5 kHz
bandwidth]. The corrected rules are
§§ 74.602(i)(2), 78.18(a)(5)(ii),
101.115(b)(2), 101.147(b)(2) and
101.803(e)(2).
List of Subjects
BILLING CODE 4150–24–P
47 CFR Part 74
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 78
47 CFR Parts 74, 78, and 101
[GN Docket No. 82–334; WT Docket No. 00–
19, RM–9418; FCC 02–218; and WT Docket
No. 94–148, FCC 96–51]
Establishment of a Spectrum
Utilization Policy for the Fixed and
Mobile Services’ Use of Certain Bands
Between 947 MHz and 40 GHz;
Streamline Processing of Microwave
Applications in the Wireless
Telecommunications Services and
Telecommunications Industry
Association Petition for Rulemaking;
Terrestrial Microwave Fixed Radio
Services
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Correcting amendments.
AGENCY:
The Federal Communications
Commission (FCC/Commission) is
correcting final rules that had
typographical errors that were
published in three separate reports in
the Federal Register. In those
documents, the Commission used table
8 MHz maximum authorized bandwidth
channels that had an error in various
rules. This document corrects the errors.
DATES: Effective November 19, 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stephen Buenzow of the Wireless
Telecommunications Bureau,
Broadband Division at (717) 338–2647
or Stephen.Buenzow@fcc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Commission’s documents GN Docket
No. 82–334, published March 9, 1987
(52 FR 7136, pages 7142 and 7144); WT
Docket No. 00–19, RM–9418, FCC 02–
218, published May 28, 1996 (61 FR
26677, as amended at 62 FR 4924, Feb.
3, 1997, page 4925); and WT Docket No.
94–148, FCC 96–51, published May 28,
SUMMARY:
7 Elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register,
the Department publishes a notice of proposed
rulemaking to begin the process of repromulgating,
as appropriate, these rules.
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Communications equipment, Radio,
Television.
Cable television, television,
Communications equipment, Radio.
47 CFR Part 101
Communications equipment, Radio.
Accordingly, 47 CFR parts 74, 78, and
101 are corrected by making the
following correcting amendments:
PART 74—EXPERIMENTAL RADIO,
AUXILIARY, SPECIAL BROADCAST
AND OTHER PROGRAM
DISTRIBUTIONAL SERVICES
1. The authority citation for part 74
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 302a, 303, 307,
309, 310, 336, and 554.
2. In § 74.602, amend the table in
paragraph (i)(2) by revising the entry for
‘‘6446.0’’ to reads as follows:
■
§ 74.602
*
Frequency assignment.
*
*
(i) * * *
(2) * * *
*
*
Receive
(or transmit)
(MHz)
Transmit
(or receive MHz)
*
*
6446.0
*
*
6496.0
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
PART 78—CABLE TELEVISION RELAY
SERVICE
3. The authority citation for part 78
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 152, 153, 154, 301,
303, 307, 308, 309.
4. In § 78.18, amend paragraph
(a)(5)(ii) by revising entry for ‘‘6446.0’’
read as follows:
■
E:\FR\FM\19NOR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 223 (Tuesday, November 19, 2019)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 63809-63811]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-24384]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
45 CFR Part 75
Notification of Nonenforcement of Health and Human Services
Grants Regulation
AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, HHS.
ACTION: Notification of exercise of enforcement discretion.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notification is to inform the public that the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has determined that the
rulemaking that resulted in the regulatory provisions promulgated on
Dec. 12, 2016, regarding HHS's grant regulations, raises significant
concerns about compliance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act. The
provisions will not be enforced pending a repromulgation that complies
with the Act.
DATES: November 19, 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Richard Brundage at (202) 401-6107.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Department of Health and Human Services
has determined that the rulemaking which promulgated or amended 45 CFR
75.101(f), 75.110(a), 75.300(c) and (d), 75.305(a), 75.365, 75.414(c)
and (f), and 75.477, published at 81 FR 89393 (Dec. 12, 2016), raises
significant concerns about compliance with the requirements of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq. The Department
has accordingly determined to exercise its enforcement discretion not
to enforce the regulations until they have been repromulgated with a
proper RFA analysis.
I. Statutory Background
The RFA generally requires that when an agency issues a proposed
rule, or a final rule (after publishing a proposed rule) pursuant to
section 553(b) of the APA or another law, the agency must prepare a
regulatory flexibility analysis that meets the requirements of the RFA
and publish such analysis in the Federal Register. 5 U.S.C. 603, 604.
The RFA is a ``[p]urely procedural'' statute, but ``set[s] out precise,
specific steps an agency must take.'' Nat'l Telephone Co-op Ass'n v.
FCC, 563 F.3d 536, 540 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (internal quotation marks
omitted). Specifically, the RFA normally requires agencies to describe
the impact of a rulemaking on small entities by providing a regulatory
impact analysis. Such analysis must address the consideration of
regulatory options that would lessen the economic effect of the rule on
small entities. The RFA defines a ``small entity'' as (1) a proprietary
firm meeting the size standards of the Small Business Administration
(SBA); \1\ (2) a nonprofit organization that is not dominant in its
field; or (3) a small government jurisdiction with a population of less
than 50,000. 5 U.S.C. 601(3)-(6).\2\ The requirement does not apply if
the head of the agency ``certifies that the rule will not, if
promulgated, have a significant economic impact on a substantial number
of small entities.'' Id. section 605(b). The agency must, however,
publish the certification in the Federal Register at the time of
publication of the proposed or final rule, ``along with a statement
providing the factual basis for such certification.'' Id. The RFA also
requires the agency to provide the certification and the statement with
the factual justification to the SBA Chief Counsel for Advocacy. Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Depending on the industry, SBA considers businesses to be
small by virtue of having less than between $7.5 million and $38.5
million in average annual revenue.
\2\ The Department considers a rule to have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities if at
least 5% of small entities experience an impact of more than 3% of
revenue.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
If the agency head has not waived the requirements for a regulatory
flexibility analysis in accordance with the RFA's waiver provision, and
no other RFA exception applies, the agency must prepare the regulatory
flexibility analysis and publish it in the Federal Register at the time
of promulgation or, if the rule is promulgated in response to an
emergency that makes timely compliance impracticable, within 180 days
of publication of the final rule. 5 U.S.C. 604(a), 608(b).\3\ In
addition, the RFA provides for judicial review of an agency's
compliance with its provisions under some circumstances, which can
result in a court ordering the agency to take corrective action by
remanding the rule to the agency and deferring enforcement of the rule
against small entities. Id. section 611(a)(4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Section 608(b) provides that except as provided in section
605(b), an agency head may not waive the requirements of section 604
for final rules. An agency head may delay the completion of the
requirements of section 604 of the title for a period of not more
than one hundred and eighty days after the date of publication in
the Federal Register of a final rule by publishing in the Federal
Register, not later than such date of publication, a written
finding, with reasons therefor, that the final rule is being
promulgated in response to an emergency that makes timely compliance
with the provisions of section 604 of the title impracticable. If
the agency has not prepared a final regulatory analysis pursuant to
section 604 of the title within one hundred and eighty days from the
date of publication of the final rule, such rule shall lapse and
have no effect. Such rule shall not be repromulgated until a final
regulatory flexibility analysis has been completed by the agency. 5
U.S.C. 608(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Absence of RFA Analysis or Certification
The rulemaking that promulgated and amended 45 CFR 75.101(f),
75.110(a), 75.300(c) and (d), 75.305(a), 75.365, 75.414(c) and (f), and
75.477, published at 81 FR 89393 (Dec. 12, 2016), raises significant
concerns about compliance with the requirements of the RFA, 5 U.S.C.
601 et seq. The Department neither performed the RFA analysis described
in 5 U.S.C. 602-604, nor expressly certified that the rules ``will not
. . . have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities'' and provided a statement with the factual basis for
such certification as provided for by section 605(b). See 81 FR 89393
(Dec. 12, 2016). The rulemaking simply declared that it would ``not
have a significant economic
[[Page 63810]]
impact beyond HHS's current regulations,'' without even mentioning
small entities or grappling with the obvious interests of such entities
that should have been protected by the RFA process. The Department is
accordingly exercising its enforcement discretion and as such, these
regulatory provisions will not be enforced, pending repromulgation.
The Department failed to make the certification, and provide the
factual statement, described by the statute.
Where an agency engaged in notice and comment rulemaking pursuant
to section 553 does not perform a RFA analysis, the head of the agency
normally must certify that a rule will not have a significant impact on
small entities, and the agency must ordinarily provide a statement that
lays out the facts that support the certification. The agency's Federal
Register publication must, thus, include a certification under section
605(b) that discusses the impact of a rule on a substantial number of
small entities and ``a statement providing the factual basis for such
certification.'' While this is not a high bar, the Government must, at
a minimum, show that it made a reasonable, good faith effort to
consider at least some facts relevant to small entities impacted by the
rule. Compare North Carolina Fisheries Ass'n, Inc. v. Daley, 16 F.
Supp. 2d 647, 651-53 (E.D. Va. 1997) (finding that certification was
noncompliant because it did not discuss any facts regarding the impact
on small entities in the time period subject to the rule), with Nat.
Women, Infants and Children Grocers Ass'n v. Food and Nutrition Serv.,
416 F. Supp. 2d 92, 108-09 (D.D.C. 2006) (holding that certification
complied because it explained that the challenged rule applied to the
states, which had varying market conditions), and Cactus Corner, LLC v.
U.S. Dep't of Agric., 346 F. Supp. 2d 1075 (E.D. Cal. 2004) (finding
that certification complied because it defined and discussed the small
wholesalers impacted by the rule and made predictions about the likely
impact of the rule).
In the preamble to the December 12, 2016 final rules, the
Department stated it had an obligation under the RFA to ``provide a
final regulatory flexibility analysis or to certify that the rule[s]
will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities.'' 81 FR at 89394. It then listed a subset of the
regulatory changes: Aligning the grants regulation at part 75 ``with
various regulatory and statutory provisions,'' implementing Supreme
Court decisions, and codifying long-standing policies. Without
explaining whether or how these regulatory changes might apply to small
entities, the Department simply concluded that, ``[i]n order to ensure
that the public receives the most value, it is essential that HHS grant
programs function as effectively and efficiently as possible, and that
there is a high level of accountability to prevent waste, fraud, and
abuse. The additions provide enhanced direction for the public and will
not have a significant economic impact beyond HHS's current
regulations.'' See 81 FR at 89394.\4\
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\4\ The RFA discussion in the preamble to the proposed rule was
virtually identical. See Health and Human Services Grants
Regulation, 81 FR 45270, 45272 (July 13, 2016).
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This statement in the Federal Register raises serious questions
about compliance with the RFA's requirement that the agency head must
certify that the rules will not have a significant economic effect on a
substantial number of small entities. The statement fails to mention
the economic impact on small entities in particular or to even
acknowledge that the regulation would apply to small entities.
Furthermore, there is nothing in the final rules that provides a
factual basis for any inference that the rules would not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
Indeed, if anything, there are indications that the rulemaking likely
did have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The absence of a factual basis for a required section 605
certification, too, would be inconsistent with the requirements of the
RFA. See 5 U.S.C. 605(b).
The rules were not submitted to the SBA Chief Counsel for Advocacy.
When a certification is required, the RFA further requires that the
agency ``provide such certification and statement to the Chief Counsel
for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration.'' 5 U.S.C. 605(b).
The Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA maintains records of the
proposed and final rules submitted to it pursuant to the RFA. The
Office of the Chief Counsel has informed the Department's General
Counsel that it does not have a record of having received the rules
pursuant to the RFA.
The rules may have affected a significant number of small entities.
The provisions in the final rules may have affected a significant
number of small entities, which underscores why Congress prohibited
agency heads from waiving the requirement to conduct an otherwise
required regulatory impact analysis except in the narrow circumstance
where an agency can provide the factual basis for a certification by
the agency head that there is no significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.\5\ For example, Sec. 75.477(b)
precludes a grantee from including as allowable costs those payments
that it may make to the Internal Revenue Service in lieu of providing
minimum essential coverage (MEC) to its employees. While nearly all
large employers offer their employees MEC, in 2015, among companies
with 50 to 199 employees, around 8 percent did not. The 8 percent
equates to approximately 14,000 small businesses. See https://files.kff.org/attachment/report-2015-employer-health-benefits-survey at
44; https://www.sba.gov/advocacy/firm-size-data (2014). Moreover, if an
entity (including governmental or non-profit entities) with at least 50
full-time employees failed to meet the MEC requirements, it could be
assessed a penalty equal to the number of its full-time employees for
the year (minus up to 30 employees) times $2,000 if at least one full-
time employee purchased health coverage with premium tax credits
through the health insurance exchange. Any reasonable certification
under section 605(b) necessarily would have had to reflect the
potential impact on those 14,000 small businesses from this single
provision.
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\5\ Even in the case of an emergency, the agency must conduct a
regulatory flexibility analysis. Congress simply gave the agency an
additional 180 days to conduct the analysis in case of an emergency,
underscoring how important Congress considered the regulatory
flexibility analysis to be. See 5 U.S.C. 608(b).
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A similar showing would have been sensible to perform with respect
to the other regulatory provisions contained in the rulemaking that
culminated in the December 12, 2016 final rules. Indeed, the data that
existed at the time of the rulemaking revealed that various provisions
could, in fact, affect a significant number of small entities. For
example, Sec. 75.414(c) limits reimbursement for indirect costs on
training grants to eight percent. The proposed rule (see 81 FR 45270
(July 13, 2016)) indicated that the amendment to paragraph (c)
reflected HHS's longstanding policy. However, under the Richardson
Waiver (see 36 FR 2532 (Feb. 5, 1971)), such policy, absent rulemaking,
is not binding. Thus, there was no valid, binding limit on
reimbursement of indirect costs prior to the issuance of this rule, and
no corresponding showing of the economic implications for small
entities, including non-profits, of this new
[[Page 63811]]
limitation on overhead reimbursement. A proper RFA analysis likely
should have considered the effect that moving from a nonbinding policy
to binding rule would have on small entities. Cf. Am. Federation of
Labor v. Chertoff, 552 F. Supp. 2d 999, 1013 (N.D. Cal. 2007) (noting
``serious questions [about] whether DHS violated the RFA'' when it
refused to conduct a final flexibility analysis about a rule that ``as
good as mandates costly compliance with a new 90-day timeframe'').
There was also no showing concerning Sec. 75.300(c) and (d), which may
impose compliance costs on recipients by subjecting the recipients to
conflicting statutory and non-statutory requirements.
The regulatory provisions promulgated in the final rules will not
be enforced pending rulemaking.
As described above, unless waived pursuant to section 605(b), the
RFA generally requires an agency to prepare a final regulatory
flexibility analysis. See 5 U.S.C. 604(a), 611(a). The preparation of
such analysis may be delayed by up to 180 days after the publication of
the final rule in cases of emergency. See 5 U.S.C. 608(b). Moreover,
flawed RFA analyses have been the basis for judicial review of
rulemakings.
Because the Department has serious concerns about whether the RFA
analysis performed here complied with the RFA, the Department is
announcing that it will not enforce the regulatory provisions, pending
repromulgation of the Rule. The majority of the Department's grantees
are small entities,\6\ and the RFA process undertaken with respect to
this Rule raises significant concerns about whether their interests
were protected in the manner the statute prescribes. Rather than apply
a nonenforcement policy only to small entities, however, the Department
is exercising its discretion to not enforce the rules with respect to
any grantees until the rules have been properly re-promulgated with an
impact analysis that hews to the requirements of the RFA. Applying
these rules differently to agency grantees depending on size would be
unfair, create increased compliance costs for all entities as they seek
to determine whether they are or are not still subject to the rules,
and impose additional administrative burdens on the Department
disproportionate to the benefit of enforcement.
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\6\ See, e.g., https://taggs.hhs.gov/ReportsGrants/GrantsByRecipClass.
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Accordingly, the regulatory actions, promulgated through the
December 12, 2016 final rules, 81 FR 89393, namely, the additions of 45
CFR 75.101(f), 75.300(c) and (d), 75.414(c)(1)(i) through (iii), and
75.477, and the amendments to 45 CFR 75.110(a), 75.305(a), 75.365, and
75.414(f), will not be enforced pending repromulgation.\7\
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\7\ Elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, the
Department publishes a notice of proposed rulemaking to begin the
process of repromulgating, as appropriate, these rules.
Dated: November 1, 2019.
Eric D. Hargan,
Deputy Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2019-24384 Filed 11-18-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4150-24-P