federalist society – Arkansas Center for Research in Economics /acre 每日大赛网站 Thu, 30 Apr 2026 21:10:56 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.1 ACRE Alum Momand Discusses How Citizens Can Improve Regulations /acre/2018/04/06/acre-alum-momand-discusses-how-citizens-can-improve-regulations/ /acre/2018/04/06/acre-alum-momand-discusses-how-citizens-can-improve-regulations/#respond Fri, 06 Apr 2018 21:36:38 +0000 /acre/?p=2107 By Caleb Taylor

Federal regulators do read the comments, but are you submitting any?

Former ACRE Research Fellow and 每日大赛网站 Schedler Honors College alum Maleka Momand was a guest at the 鈥檚 Regulatory Transparency Teleforum,, on March 21st to discuss the federal 鈥渘otice and comment rulemaking process鈥 under the Administrative Procedure Act. Federal commenting gives private individuals the opportunity to submit their opinion in favor or in opposition to a federal agency on a proposed rule or regulation before it is implemented.

Momand is currently the CEO and Co-Founder of , a technology platform for government to evaluate and manage regulatory policy. She formerly served as President of , a non-profit in Silicon Valley that researches ways to improve regulatory processes at the state and federal levels.

Momand said:

鈥淢ost people don鈥檛 even know that you can comment on regulations.鈥

Momand is the co-author of an Argive report published in June, 2017 about how to make the federal rulemaking website more user-friendly. The report notes that federal comments are often submitted by interest groups which tend to favor 鈥渓arge incumbent interests鈥 instead of 鈥渟mall or start-up businesses.鈥

Momand said:

“Feedback can be distorted when interest groups or other parties trick the system by having thousands of individuals submit a carbon copy comment. It really adds a lot of noise to the document and it is difficult to filter through what has already been submitted versus what is new.”

In the Argive report, Momand and her co-authors suggest that Regulations.gov add 鈥渄ynamic features that encourage user participation鈥 in order to increase the share of non-interest group respondents.

Momand said that federal commenting is a 鈥渉uge check on agency rulemaking鈥 that is 鈥渙ften underutilized and overlooked鈥 by citizens.

You can listen to the between Momand; Donald Kochan, Chapman University School of Law Professor; and Devon Westhill, Director of the Regulatory Transparency Project at The Federalist Society.

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