ARSA RSS Feed ARSA LinkedIn
Ask ARSA Pay ARSA

ARSA Recommends Shedding Light on Federal Rulemaking Process

The law demands an open rulemaking process and the federal government must improve its procedures for incorporating materials by reference into regulations, ARSA told the National Archives and Records Administration on May 3.

ARSA’s comments were in response to a recent petition requesting changes to the way federal agencies are able to incorporate materials by reference when drafting regulatory mandates. Currently, when drafting a regulation, departments may incorporate by reference (IBR) materials that contain substantive requirements. However, there is no specific requirement that the referenced matter be publically available during the rulemaking process.

As the FAA frequently IBRs important manufacturer service information in draft Airworthiness Directives (ADs), this is an important issue for the aviation maintenance industry. Often, this material is not available to those without a relationship with the manufacturer; essentially “hiding” detailed information, making it all but impossible for all affected persons to comment on proposed rules and leaving those responsible for compliance in the dark until issuance and of a final rule.

“Wholesale adoption of unavailable materials precludes meaningful comment from those affected when an AD is proposed and results in uncertainty about compliance once the rule is issued,” said ARSA Executive Director Sarah MacLeod.

“ARSA believes that documents essential to compliance and enforcement must be available during all phases of the rulemaking process. ARSA’s members are directly responsible for strict compliance with public safety regulations and are in the best position to provide the substantive comments necessary for the agency to fulfill its obligations. But, they cannot provide those comments if they are left in the dark by use of materials that are not readily available,” said MacLeod.

~~~ posted 5/9/12 ~~~



More from ARSA

FAA Expands SMS Applicability without Part 145 (for now)

On April 26, the FAA published to the Federal Register its new rule expanding Safety Management Systems (SMS) requirements to all operators of commuter and on-demand service and commercial air…Read More

Help Assess Commercialization of Anti-Corrosion Technology

ARSA has been approached by a government contractor preparing a Commercialization Readiness Assessment Report for a product developed through the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program.  The product being assessed…Read More

2024 Annual Conference Highlight – In the Fire with AVS-1

March 12-15, 2024 Sponsors | Information Arlington, Virginia and Washington, D.C. with Livestream Options for Conference Ambassadors Conference Highlight – In the Fire with AVS-1 On March 14, ARSA Executive Director…Read More

Focusing on Falsification in FAA Proposal

On April 8, ARSA and four other industry trade associations commented on an FAA notice of proposed rulemaking to consolidate the many falsification sections across 14 CFR into a single…Read More

ARSA, Allies Push FAA to Withdraw D&A Rulemaking

On April 5, a group of seven aviation trade associations submitted joint comments to the FAA’s notice of proposed rulemaking to extend drug and alcohol testing requirements to repair station…Read More
Schaeffler Aerospace
ARSA