Code of Federal Regulations: Difference between revisions
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==List of regulation titles== |
==List of regulation titles== |
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[[File:Code of Federal Regulations Mid-Manhattan Library.JPG|thumb|right|Code of Federal Regulations, seen at the Mid-Manhattan Library. Editions of Title 3, on the President, are kept on archive. Notice that for the first year of each new presidency, the volume is thicker.]] |
[[File:Code of Federal Regulations Mid-Manhattan Library.JPG|thumb|right|Code of Federal Regulations, seen at the Mid-Manhattan Library. Editions of Title 3, on the President, are kept on archive. Notice that for the first year of each new presidency, the volume is thicker.]] |
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* [[Title 1 of the |
* [[Title 1 of the United States Code|Title 1: General Provisions]] |
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* [[Title 2 of the |
* [[Title 2 of the United States Code|Title 2: Grants and Agreements]] |
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* [[Title 3 of the |
* [[Title 3 of the United States Code|Title 3: The President]] |
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* [[Title 4 of the |
* [[Title 4 of the United States Code|Title 4: Accounts]] |
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* [[Title 5 of the |
* [[Title 5 of the United States Code|Title 5: Administrative Personnel]] |
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* [[Title 6 of the |
* [[Title 6 of the United States Code|Title 6: Homeland Security]] |
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* [[Title 7 of the |
* [[Title 7 of the United States Code|Title 7: Agriculture]] |
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* [[Title 8 of the |
* [[Title 8 of the United States Code|Title 8: Aliens and Nationality]] |
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* [[Title 9 of the |
* [[Title 9 of the United States Code|Title 9: Animals and Animal Products]] |
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* [[Title 10 of the |
* [[Title 10 of the United States Code|Title 10: Energy]] |
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* [[Title 11 of the |
* [[Title 11 of the United States Code|Title 11: Federal Elections]] |
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* [[Title 12 of the |
* [[Title 12 of the United States Code|Title 12: Banks and Banking]] |
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* [[Title 13 of the |
* [[Title 13 of the United States Code|Title 13: Business Credit and Assistance]] |
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* [[Federal Aviation Regulations|Title 14: Aeronautics and Space]] (also known as the Federal Aviation Regulations, administered by the [[Federal Aviation Administration]]) |
* [[Federal Aviation Regulations|Title 14: Aeronautics and Space]] (also known as the Federal Aviation Regulations, administered by the [[Federal Aviation Administration]]) |
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* [[Title 15 of the |
* [[Title 15 of the United States Code|Title 15: Commerce and Foreign Trade]] |
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* [[Title 16 of the |
* [[Title 16 of the United States Code|Title 16: Commercial Practices]] |
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* [[Title 17 of the |
* [[Title 17 of the United States Code|Title 17: Commodity and Securities Exchanges]] |
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* [[Title 18 of the |
* [[Title 18 of the United States Code|Title 18: Conservation of Power and Water Resources]] |
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* [[Title 19 of the |
* [[Title 19 of the United States Code|Title 19: Customs Duties]] |
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* [[Title 20 of the |
* [[Title 20 of the United States Code|Title 20: Employees' Benefits]] |
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* [[Title 21 of the |
* [[Title 21 of the United States Code|Title 21: Food and Drugs]] (administered by the US [[Food and Drug Administration]] and the US [[Drug Enforcement Administration]]) |
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* [[Title 22 of the |
* [[Title 22 of the United States Code|Title 22: Foreign Relations]] |
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* [[Title 23 of the |
* [[Title 23 of the United States Code|Title 23: Highways]] |
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* [[Title 24 of the |
* [[Title 24 of the United States Code|Title 24: Housing and Urban Development]] |
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* [[Title 25 of the Code of Federal Regulations|Title 25: Indians]] |
* [[Title 25 of the Code of Federal Regulations|Title 25: Indians]] |
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* [[Treasury regulations|Title 26: Internal Revenue]] |
* [[Treasury regulations|Title 26: Internal Revenue]] |
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* [[Title 27 of the |
* [[Title 27 of the United States Code|Title 27: Alcohol, Tobacco Products and Firearms]] |
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* [[Title 28 of the |
* [[Title 28 of the United States Code|Title 28: Judicial Administration]] |
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* [[Title 29 of the |
* [[Title 29 of the United States Code|Title 29: Labor]] |
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* [[Title 30 of the |
* [[Title 30 of the United States Code|Title 30: Mineral Resources]] |
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* [[Title 31 of the |
* [[Title 31 of the United States Code|Title 31: Money and Finance: Treasury]] |
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* [[Title 32 of the |
* [[Title 32 of the United States Code|Title 32: National Defense]] |
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* [[Title 33 of the |
* [[Title 33 of the United States Code|Title 33: Navigation and Navigable Waters]] |
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* [[Title 34 of the |
* [[Title 34 of the United States Code|Title 34: Education]] |
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* [[Title 35 of the |
* [[Title 35 of the United States Code|Title 35: Reserved]] (formerly [[Panama Canal]]) |
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* [[Title 36 of the |
* [[Title 36 of the United States Code|Title 36: Parks, Forests, and Public Property]] |
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* [[Title 37 of the |
* [[Title 37 of the United States Code|Title 37: Patents, Trademarks, and Copyrights]] |
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* [[Title 38 of the |
* [[Title 38 of the United States Code|Title 38: Pensions, Bonuses, and Veterans' Relief]] |
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* [[Title 39 of the |
* [[Title 39 of the United States Code|Title 39: Postal Service]] |
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* [[Title 40 of the |
* [[Title 40 of the United States Code|Title 40: Protection of Environment]] (administered by the [[United States Environmental Protection Agency]]) |
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* [[Title 41 of the |
* [[Title 41 of the United States Code|Title 41: Public Contracts and Property Management]] |
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* [[Title 42 of the |
* [[Title 42 of the United States Code|Title 42: Public Health]] |
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* [[Title 43 of the |
* [[Title 43 of the United States Code|Title 43: Public Lands: Interior]] |
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* [[Title 44 of the |
* [[Title 44 of the United States Code|Title 44: Emergency Management and Assistance]] |
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* [[Title 45 of the |
* [[Title 45 of the United States Code|Title 45: Public Welfare]] |
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* [[Title 46 of the |
* [[Title 46 of the United States Code|Title 46: Shipping]] |
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* [[Title 47 of the |
* [[Title 47 of the United States Code|Title 47: Telecommunication]] (also known as the "FCC Rules", administered by the [[Federal Communications Commission]]) |
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* [[Federal Acquisition Regulations|Title 48: Federal Acquisition Regulations System]] |
* [[Federal Acquisition Regulations|Title 48: Federal Acquisition Regulations System]] |
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* [[Title 49 of the |
* [[Title 49 of the United States Code|Title 49: Transportation]] |
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* [[Title 50 of the |
* [[Title 50 of the United States Code|Title 50: Wildlife and Fisheries]] |
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==Notes== |
==Notes== |
Revision as of 01:57, 2 October 2011
This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2009) |
Administrative law |
---|
General principles |
Grounds for judicial review |
Administrative law in common law jurisdictions |
Administrative law in civil law jurisdictions |
Related topics |
The Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) is the codification of the general and permanent rules and regulations (sometimes called administrative law) published in the Federal Register by the executive departments and agencies of the Federal Government of the United States. The CFR is published by the Office of the Federal Register, an agency of the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA).
The CFR is divided into 50 titles that represent broad areas subject to Federal regulation.
Background
Administrative law exists because the United States Congress often grants broad authority to executive branch agencies to interpret the statutes in the United States Code (and in uncodified statutes) which the agencies are entrusted with enforcing. Congress may be too busy, congested, or gridlocked to micromanage the jurisdiction of those agencies by writing statutes that cover every possible detail, or Congress may determine that the technical specialists at the agency are best equipped to develop detailed applications of statutes to particular fact patterns as they arise.
Under the Administrative Procedure Act, the agencies are permitted to promulgate detailed rules and regulations through a public "rulemaking" process where the public is allowed to comment, known as public information. After a period of time, the rules and regulations are usually published in the Federal Register.
Effect of administrative law
The rules are treated by the courts as being as legally binding as statutory law, provided the regulations are a reasonable interpretation of the underlying statutes. This "reasonable interpretation" test or Chevron doctrine was articulated by the U.S. Supreme Court in a unanimous decision (6 voting, 3 recused) involving a challenge to new Clean Air Act regulations promulgated by the Reagan administration in 1981. See Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.[1]
For example, if Congress enacted a law that simply stated that there are not to be "excessive" levels of mercury in any significant body of water in the United States (but defined things no further), an entity designated, as part of the law, to enforce it (probably the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)) could define in a scientific way what an excessive level of mercury is, as well as what constitutes a significant body of water. The Agency's definitions and its plan of enforcement for what Congress intended (along with listed penalties for violation coming from Congress unless Congress specified otherwise) will all go into the CFR.
Also, enabling legislation can be passed by Congress which gives a federal non-Congressional entity wide latitude in creating rules (law of bases). For example, the EPA could be designated by Congress to promulgate rules "that control harmful pollutants"; the Agency could then promulgate broad rules (including definitions and enforcement provisions), in the absence of existing specific laws, to control lead emissions, radon emissions, pesticide emissions, and so forth. Such rules, including any definitions and enforcement provisions created by Congress or the Agency, will all go into the CFR.
It is important to understand that the CFR itself is written by lawyers for interpretation by lawyers and judges, and like statutes, must be carefully drafted in highly technical language to have effective broad application, yet limit the availability of loopholes. Unfortunately, the vast majority of employees of the federal government are not lawyers, and it would ask too much to force them to directly read, interpret, and apply the convoluted content of the CFR on a daily basis. Therefore, nearly all federal agencies have in-house counsel draft one or more internal manuals in plain English which set out daily internal operating procedures in very simple language that any layperson can follow. While such manuals do not really have the force of law, they are often the law as far as most employees and customers of such agencies are concerned, unless and until a dissatisfied customer of an agency appeals to a supervisor who does understand the CFR and the U.S.C. (or eventually sues the agency in court).
Oddly, despite the informality of such manuals, the U.S. Supreme Court has occasionally cited them as authority when confronted with situations not precisely addressed by the U.S.C. or the CFR.[2]
Publication of administrative law
The rules and regulations are first promulgated or published in the Federal Register. Each is given a CFR citation, such as 42 CFR 260.11(a)(1), that can be cited immediately, without waiting for a page number from the physical copy. The aforementioned citation would be read, "title 42, part 260, section 11, paragraph (a)(1)."
NARA also keeps an online version of the CFR, the e-CFR, that is normally updated two days after changes to the regulations, that have been published in the Federal Register, become effective.
While new regulations are continually becoming effective, the printed volumes of the CFR are issued once each calendar year, on this schedule:
- Titles 1–16 are updated on January 1
- Titles 17–27 are updated on April 1
- Titles 28–41 are updated on July 1
- Titles 42–50 are updated on October 1
List of regulation titles
- Title 1: General Provisions
- Title 2: Grants and Agreements
- Title 3: The President
- Title 4: Accounts
- Title 5: Administrative Personnel
- Title 6: Homeland Security
- Title 7: Agriculture
- Title 8: Aliens and Nationality
- Title 9: Animals and Animal Products
- Title 10: Energy
- Title 11: Federal Elections
- Title 12: Banks and Banking
- Title 13: Business Credit and Assistance
- Title 14: Aeronautics and Space (also known as the Federal Aviation Regulations, administered by the Federal Aviation Administration)
- Title 15: Commerce and Foreign Trade
- Title 16: Commercial Practices
- Title 17: Commodity and Securities Exchanges
- Title 18: Conservation of Power and Water Resources
- Title 19: Customs Duties
- Title 20: Employees' Benefits
- Title 21: Food and Drugs (administered by the US Food and Drug Administration and the US Drug Enforcement Administration)
- Title 22: Foreign Relations
- Title 23: Highways
- Title 24: Housing and Urban Development
- Title 25: Indians
- Title 26: Internal Revenue
- Title 27: Alcohol, Tobacco Products and Firearms
- Title 28: Judicial Administration
- Title 29: Labor
- Title 30: Mineral Resources
- Title 31: Money and Finance: Treasury
- Title 32: National Defense
- Title 33: Navigation and Navigable Waters
- Title 34: Education
- Title 35: Reserved (formerly Panama Canal)
- Title 36: Parks, Forests, and Public Property
- Title 37: Patents, Trademarks, and Copyrights
- Title 38: Pensions, Bonuses, and Veterans' Relief
- Title 39: Postal Service
- Title 40: Protection of Environment (administered by the United States Environmental Protection Agency)
- Title 41: Public Contracts and Property Management
- Title 42: Public Health
- Title 43: Public Lands: Interior
- Title 44: Emergency Management and Assistance
- Title 45: Public Welfare
- Title 46: Shipping
- Title 47: Telecommunication (also known as the "FCC Rules", administered by the Federal Communications Commission)
- Title 48: Federal Acquisition Regulations System
- Title 49: Transportation
- Title 50: Wildlife and Fisheries
Notes
- ^ 467 U.S. 837 (1984).
- ^ See, e.g., Wash. State Dept of Soc. & Health Servs. v. Guardianship Estate of Keffeler, 537 U.S. 371 (2003) (citing to Social Security Administration's Programs Operations Manual System).
External links
- Available CFR Titles on GPO Access
- Code of Federal Regulations (e-CFR)
- History of federal regulation from OMB.
- A Research Guide to the Federal Register and Code of Federal Regulations
- CFR index and search (cross-referenced to U.S. Code) from LII-Cornell Law School
- Federal regulations: The laws behind the acts from About.com
- Photos showing all volumes on shelves proving that one complete set occupies over 25 feet of shelf space