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Regulatory Agenda

Twice a year, each agency publishes a comprehensive report that describes all the regulations it is working on or has recently finished. This is known as the Unified Agenda and is available from the Government Printing Office web site Exit Disclaimer. To learn more about the Unified Agenda, please visit our Regulations and Proposed Rules page, under the Semiannual Regulatory Agenda section.

You may click to past Regulatory Agenda documents of E.P.A. by clicking on the below links.

          May 2008 December 2007 April 2007
December 2006 April 2006 October 2005 May 2005 December 2004 May 2004 December 2003 May 2003
November 2002 May 2002 October 2001 May 2001 October 2000 May 2000 October 1999 April 1999
October 1998 April 1998 October 1997 May 1997 October 1996 May 1996 October 1995 May 1995

You can search the Regulatory Agenda for general EPA information, or for specific regulatory issues.

You may highlight the Year to choose the specific database or search for the terms within the year. Searching Instructions

Maximum Records Returned:

The search results are returned from the GPO search engine. For technical problems, please contact the GPO Access User Support Team by Internet e-mail at gpoaccess@gpo.gov; by telephone at 1-202-512-1530 or toll free at 1-888-293-6498; or by fax at 1-202-512-1262. The default number of search results returned is 40. The maximum you can retrieve is 200.

Search Terms:

Searching Instructions:

You can enter a simple search term, or design an advanced search query using specific syntax. To design an advanced query, you can enter one or more words and string them together into a phrase. To search for phrases, you must be careful to place them within quotation marks so that the search engine will not search each word as an individual term. An example of this :

"state implementation plans"

Without the quotation marks, the engine will search for each word individually. Next, to link together two or more search terms, you must use the specific link words such as ADJ (adjacent), AND, OR and NOT, and they must be in capital letters. An example of this is:

"state implementation plans" AND Idaho

You can also search all variations of a word with the truncation feature. By adding an asterisk (*) after the word stem, you will retrieve all variations of the word. An example of this is:

implement* will retrieve implementation, implements, implementing

 
 


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