INTERPRETIVE RULING AND POLICY STATEMENT NUMBER 87-2 (as amended by Interpretive Ruling and Policy Statement 03-2)
DEVELOPING AND REVIEWING GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS
I. Statement of Policy and Coverage
It is the policy of NCUA to ensure that its regulations:
-- impose only minimum required burdens on credit unions, consumers, and the
public;
-- are appropriate for the size of the financial institutions regulated by
NCUA;
-- are issued only after full public participation in the rule making process;
and
-- are clear and understandable.
II. Procedures for the Development of Regulations
1. Proposed Regulations
The Office of General Counsel (OGC) will oversee the development of regulations.
Input on regulations will be obtained from other NCUA offices when appropriate,
OGC will prepare a draft of the proposed regulation for submission to the NCUA
Board for approval. The proposed regulation will then be published in the Federal
Register and other appropriate publications,
2. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
When NCUA is required by 5 U.S.C. § 553, or any other law, to publish a
general notice of proposed rule making for any proposed regulation, NCUA will
prepare and make available for public comment an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis for any regulation that will have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. Credit unions having less than ten million
dollars in assets will be considered to be small entities. Such analysis will
describe the impact of the regulation upon small entities, and will be published
in the Federal Register at the time of general notice of proposed rule making
for the regulation. A copy of the analysis will be forwarded to the Chief Counsel
for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration (SBA). The content of the initial
regulatory flexibility analysis will be in accordance with the provisions of
5 U.S.C. § 603. In addition, NCUA staff will consult applicable U.S. Small
Business Administration guidance, including The Regulatory Flexibility Act:
An Implementation Guide for Federal Agencies, when interpreting and implementing
the requirements of the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
3. Compliance With the Paperwork Reduction Act
If a proposed regulation contains an information collection request such as
a recordkeeping or reporting requirement that, if adopted, will be imposed
upon
ten or more persons (including credit unions), the proposed regulation will
be sent to the office of Management and Budget (OMB) prior to publication in
the
Federal Register, OMB will then have 60 days after publication to comment on
the information collection request. If OMB thereafter disapproves of the information
collection request, the NCUA can override this by a majority vote and certify
such override to OMB in the manner described in 44 U.S.C. § 3507(c).
4. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
A final regulatory flexibility analysis will be prepared for all regulations
that required the publication of a general notice of proposed rule making and
that will have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The content of the final regulatory flexibility analysis will be
in conformance with 5 U.S.C. § 604. Initial and final regulatory flexibility
analyses need not be prepared if the Board certifies that a regulation will
not have a significant economic effect on a substantial number of small entities.
The certification will be published in the Federal Register with the final
rule,
along with a statement providing the factual basis for such certification.
A copy of the certification and statement will be provided to the Chief Counsel
for Advocacy of the SBA.
5. Final Rule
OGC will prepare a draft final regulation to be presented to the NCUA Board
for approval. Following Board approval, the final regulation will be published
in
the Federal Register and other appropriate publications.
III. Opportunity for Public Participation
A member of the public may recommend that NCUA develop a regulation or revise
an existing regulation. A number of methods will be used by NCUA to encourage
public participation in the development and review of regulations, including:
notifying the public of the status of regulations being reviewed and developed
through publication of the semiannual agenda; publication of advance notices
of proposed rule making with requests for public comment; the use of questionnaires
to solicit information; publication of articles; and by making copies of proposed
regulations available to the public.
When any regulation is promulgated which will have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities, the NCUA will assure that small
entities have been given an opportunity to participate in the rule making process
through
the types of methods listed in 5 U.S.C. § 609.
NCUA will continue to solicit public comment on proposed regulations as required
by 5 U.S.C. § 553. As a matter of policy, NCUA believes that the public
should be given at least 60 days to comment on a proposed regulation. If the
comment period is less than 60 days, or is extended beyond 60 days, NCUA will
publish a statement in the Federal Register explaining the change.
IV. Review of Existing Regulations
NCUA shall periodically update, clarify and simplify existing regulations and
eliminate redundant and unnecessary provisions. 5 U.S.C. § 610 requires
that regulations having a significant economic impact on a substantial number
of small entities will be reviewed every ten years, As a matter of policy,
NCUA will continue with its efforts to review all its existing regulations
every three
years. To accomplish a review every three years of all regulations, the Office
of General Counsel will maintain a rolling review schedule that identifies
one-third of existing regulations for review each year and will provide notice
to the public
of that portion of the regulations under review each year so the public may
have an opportunity to comment.
V. Semiannual Agenda
Twice each year, NCUA will adopt an agenda of proposed regulations that the
Agency has issued or expects to issue and currently effective regulations that
are under
NCUA review, Incorporated into the agenda, when necessary, will be the regulatory
flexibility agenda required by 5 U.S.C. § 602, Each semiannual agenda will
be voluntarily submitted to the Office of Management and Budget for inclusion
in the "Unified Agenda of Federal Regulations" published in the Federal
Register in April and October of each year.
The semiannual agenda will contain the following: a brief description of the
subject area being considered and a summary of the nature of any regulation
which NCUA expects to propose or promulgate; the objectives and legal basis
for the
issuance of the regulation; an approximate schedule for completing action on
any regulation for which NCUA has issued a general notice of proposed rulemaking;
and the name and number of an NCUA official knowledgeable with respect to each
agenda item. The agenda will identify any regulation that the NCUA expects
to have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
When there are proposed regulations listed in the agenda that will have such
an impact on small entities, NCUA will endeavor to provide notice of the agenda
to small entities in the manner set forth in 5 U.S.C. § 602(c). Where
the regulatory flexibility agenda is incorporated into the semiannual agenda,
the
latter will be transmitted to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA for
comment.