HOME
ABOUT US
OUR ISSUES
Federal Budget
Information & Access
Nonprofit Advocacy
Regulatory Policy
DudleyWatch
Unmet Needs
Paralysis by Analysis
White House Interventions
Special Interests v. Public Interest
National Solutions for National Needs
In Congress
In the Courts
Public Participation
The Bush Record
Reports & Analyses
RegWatch
Resource Center
PRESS ROOM
ACTION CENTER
PUBLICATIONS
THE WATCHER
OUR BLOGS
SIGN UP
Receive news, updates, and alerts!
DONATE
Help support our work
OTHER SITES
FedSpending.org
RTK NET
NPAction
Working Group on Community Right-to-Know
Citizens for Sensible Safeguards
Open the Government
"[P]eople acting in a group can accomplish things which no individual acting alone could even hope to bring about." - FDR
News & Analysis | REG•WATCH Blog | Press Room
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Today, the White House issued a memo to the heads of federal agencies regarding risk assessments — a process by which agencies identify and evaluate risks such as toxic exposure or structural failure. Susan Dudley, head of OMB's Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, and Sharon Hays, a senior official in the Office of Science and Technology Policy, issued the memo. The memo takes existing principles from a 1995 White House memo and includes additional text in order to place the Bush White House spin on each item.
In January, the National Research Council (NRC), a National Academy of Science, urged the White House to abandon its previous effort to manage federal risk assessments — the much-maligned "Proposed Risk Assessment Bulletin." The bulletin proposed scientifically questionable standards which would have governed the risk assessment process of all federal agencies.
Although the memo is an improvement on the proposed bulletin, and although — because it is not mandatory — it will not necessarily have a big impact on agency practices, the memo still marks an attempt by the White House to micromanage agency actions. One way the memo does this is by reaffirming existing OMB policies which diminish agency discretion.
Like the proposed bulletin before it, the memo fails to identify a problem it seeks to correct. Federal agencies are full of individuals with vast expertise and experience. If there is some major problem with the conduct of risk assessments, Reg•Watch hasn't heard about it. The White House would be better off leaving expert discretion where it belongs — with the experts.
Latest Entries by Theme
All Themes
Enforcement
About This Blog
Rollbacks
Safety
Industry Influence
Cost-Benefit Analysis
Publications
Consumer Issues
Environment
Public Health
Oversight
In the White House
Most Recent Entries for RegWatch
Advice on Plastics Chemical Marred by Scandal Again
Industry Ties Bind FDA Advisors
Right Whale Protection Rule Finally Here
Industry Pressuring EPA to Weaken Lead Rule
EPA Won't Keep Rocket Fuel out of Water
Roof Strength Rule Delayed Again
Bush Taking Credit for Whale Rule He Delayed
What Should the U.S. Do about China's Bad Milk?
Did OMB Block Asbestos Cleanup in Montana Town?
Whale Protection Rule Clears White House, 573 Days Later
Archived Entries for Cost-Benefit Analysis
July
June
March
February
January
December, 2007
November, 2007
October, 2007
September, 2007
August, 2007
July, 2007
June, 2007
May, 2007
April, 2007
March, 2007
February, 2007
January, 2007
September, 2006
August, 2006
June, 2006
April, 2006
March, 2006
February, 2006
January, 2006
December, 2005
November, 2005
September, 2005
August, 2005
July, 2005
March, 2005
November, 2004
September, 2004