We see the headlines more and more often: 34 million cars outfitted with dangerously defective airbags have been recalled; passenger trains and oil trains have derailed, putting commuters and communities at risk; nail salon workers are being exposed to dangerous conditions and abusive employers.
What these stories have in common is a regulatory process that is too slow and too captured by industry to protect Americans, said Amit Narang, regulatory policy advocate, Public Citizen’s Congress Watch Division.
Instead of attacking regulations, Congress should be creating committees to investigate why regulations are so slow to be issued and so poorly enforced, Narang said.
However, a group of U.S. senators led by U.S. Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., is calling for a new committee to review and recommend eliminating federal safeguards. The proposed committee could delay rules under consideration for up to one year while it reviews them, provide recommendations for a process to automatically sunset rules and recommend final rules for repeal with a resolution of disapproval – all with subpoena power.
“This is exactly the wrong solution at exactly the wrong time,” he said. “The last thing Congress should be doing is creating more delays for new health, safety, consumer, and environmental rules by holding up new rules and forcing agencies to move even slower.”
The breadth and scope of this committee is vast, encompassing everything from food safety to toy safety to protections from predatory lending and everything in between, Narang said, adding, “the opportunities for mischief against commonsense and popular public protections are endless.”




