Memorandum on Bill 12-458, the"Omnibus Regulatory Reform Amendment Act of 1997"December 18, 1997, andLetter to Councilmember Harold BrazilDecember 15, 1997

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Updated: 02:09 pm UTC, 14/10/2024

Memorandum to all CouncilmemberLetter to Councilmember Harold Brazil

 

December 18, 1997

MEMORANDUM

TO. All Councilmembers

FR: Tersh Boasberg, Chairman, and Phil Mendelson, Trustee

RE: Bill 12-458, the "Omnibus Regulatory Reform Amendment Act of 1997"

The Committee of 100 is appalled to have learned that First Reading on the omnibus
regulatory reform bill — all 13 titles of it — is scheduled for tomorrow. To enable
this, there will be a committee mark-up at 1 0:00am. As of 5:00pm the proposed committee
print is not available.

We cannot state strongly enough how completely inappropriate it is for the Council to
proceed on the entire bill, tomorrow, when no one has seen the print and there have been
no hearings except by Councilmember Thomas on the Environmental Policy Act (Title 7). The
proposition that it will be adequate for the public to comment on the engrossed version
between Christmas Eve and New Year’s is an insult.

This sudden legislative schedule bespeaks contempt for public participation. While
there have been hearings on general issues of regulatory reform, it is a simple fact that
there has been no forum on the specific legislative proposals now drafted. Much of it is
new and different.

The committee chairman who is pushing so hard to steamroll this bill, wrote publicly
only last Sunday that "The omnibus bill is a work in progress, with ample time and
room for revision before its enactment." That was a lie. It invites disrespect on the
Council as an institution.

The rush to act jeopardizes what little authority is left to local officials to effect
true reform. Revising the law does not, in and of itself, mean improvement. Rather, it is
the substance of the revisions that counts. To achieve this, foremost, there must be
public scrutiny. Without a public hearing there will be little difference between the
Council’s approach and that of the Financial Control Board and Emergency School Board of
Trustees: the vote may be public but the participation is not.

Regulatory reform is too complex for this. No value is gained in being hasty. No value
is gained by waiving the rules and shutting out the public. No value is gained by
abridging the deliberative process. There must be public bearings before Council
action.

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December 15, 1997

The Hon. Harold Brazil, Chairman

Committee on Consumer & Regulatory Affairs

Council of the District of Columbia

441 4th Street, N.W. Room 701

Washington DC 20001

Dear Councilmember Brazil:

RE: Bill 12-458 (Regulatory Reform)

As I am writing, the proposed committee print of Bill 12-458, the ‘Omnibus Regulatory
Reform Amendment Act of 1997," is still unavailable even though mark-up of the bill
is planned for today. The Committee of 100 on the Federal City reiterates its request
that this bill
not be marked-up today, and that there be public
hearings before any mark-up.

Further, your Friday afternoon memo seeking a waiver of Council rules so that the bill
may be considered on first reading by the Council tomorrow, flies in the face of your
article in yesterday’s Washington Post that "The omnibus bill is a work in progress,
with ample time and room for revision before its enactment."

Bill 12-4S8 seeks to revise a very complex web of legislation. It took almost two
months just to draft the bill, even after the Business Regulatory Reform Commission had
made its recommendations. Yet there have been only 12 business days since the 120-page
bill was introduced — not even enough time for staff to prepare a proposed committee
print let alone give adequate public notice.

Although there were hearings in the fall on general issues of regulatory reform, it is
imperative that the public now be allowed to comment on the specific legislative proposals
as drafted. The draft serves to focus debate — on the proposals included, issues omitted,
and on unintended consequences. Indeed, there is much that is new in Bill 12-458 and,
contrary to your December 12th memo, these new proposals have not been the subject
of any public comment.

For instance, Title I ("Business Licensing") would not only
create two license categories where there are now 129, but it would:

  • abolish restrictions on massage establishments;
  • repeal all qualification requirements for taxicab drivers and other operators of
    vehicles for hire;
  • remove various consumer protections such as those governing door-to-door salesmen,
  • reduce the government’s ability to stop second hand dealers fencing stolen goods; and
  • eliminate numerous other requirements contained in the general license law that pertain
    to specific types of businesses and that are designed to protect the public.

Although your article in yesterday’s Washington Post states that the
bill would "abolish dozens of defunct boards and commissions," Title III
("Board and Commissions") fails to delete the statutory authority of any of
the 44 boards and commissions identified by the Business Regulatory Reform Commission as
being defunct Moreover, it proposes to abolish only some of the functioning boards
recommended for elimination, and it does nothing whatsoever about merging another
39 boards as recommended by the BRRC. Of greatest concern to the Committee of 100,
however, is the bill’s provision to abolish the Board for the Condemnation of Insanitary
Buildings, which is contrary to the BRRC’s recommendations. These variations and
new proposals must be subjected to public comment.

Title Ill would also change the appointment process for boards and
commissions. There is no public awareness of this: that all appointments would
require Council review even where confirmation is not now required. Without a
public hearing to discuss this, we cannot understand how this proposal expedites the
regulatory functions of government.

We are especially troubled that the approach to building and land
regulation (Title IV) is to set up yet another task force; the proposals for change are
well known already. And it is disappointing that there is a clear orientation toward the
development community dominating the task force, with no acknowledgment of planning
professionals or the qualification of numerous citizens with regard to zoning and land
use. These proposals, too, have not been submitted to the public for comment.

Further about Title IV, the Committee of 100 remains opposed to the
proposed changes to the Historic Landmark and Historic District Protection Act of 1978. We
do not see how adding contested case requirements to HPRB proceedings facilitates the
expeditious handling of cases under this law’ although we are open to reconsidering our
position after hearing public testimony. And the Committee of 100 opposes the idea of
effecting street closings by resolution when time after time legislated conditions have
been necessary.

The inclusion of Title Vll ("Environmental Regulation") not
only provokes opposition to the bill but does nothing — nothing at all — for the small
businesses throughout the city struggling to survive. The District’s environmental policy
act applies only to large, usually speculative projects and, as you know, provides for
exemptions. Indeed, during the eight years in which the law has been in effect, only one
EIS has been prepared, for the proposed Georgetown Cogenerator.

On this single, unnecessary section of the bill there will be a public
hearing. However, you have announced mark-up prior to that. The hearing would be an
excellent opportunity to obtain, finally, an explanation of how DCEPA is `’duplicative of
other federal and District laws" and of how a typical EIS could cost $350,000.
Mark-up must wait.

There are other provisions of the bill (e.g., repeal of the Franchising
Act of 1988, intended to protect what are essentially small businesses, and the proposed
new regulation of fraternal benefit societies) which also were not part of the Business
Regulatory Reform Commission’s report. In short, there is much that is new in Bill 12-458,
contrary to the December 12th waiver request, and that necessitates public hearing.

When the Committee of 100 testified September 29th on the BRRC report,
we concluded that:

"The four most important reforms you can implement are (1)
consolidate the location of all permit approval offices; (2) automate the regulatory
process with an integrated interagency and intra-agency system; (3) adequately fund the
government’s regulatory offices; and
(4) strengthen enforcement. These four reforms
dwarf all the others made by the Regulatory Reform Commission."

Our conclusion was consonant with the BRRC’s own findings.
Unfortunately, though, Bill 12-458 largely ignores these critical needs. The bill fails to
mandate any relocation of offices; it fails to mandate any technology upgrades or even
require planning for them; it fails to fund any aspect of the regulatory process —
especially with regard to inspection/enforcement/adjudication — except the licensing
process itself; and it fails to offer any reforms to strengthen enforcement.

With regard to enforcement, the DCRA Office of Compliance has asked for
authority to issue civil infraction notices for unlicensed activities, to cancel
certificates of occupancy where there is a clear violation, to close a business operating
without a certificate of occupancy, and to increase the deterrent value of fines.
Meaningful enforcement is essential, and provisions like these must be added to the bill.

The effort to rush Bill 12-458 without public hearing or regard for
public comment lowers the esteem of the Council. Regulatory reform is too complex for
this; no value is gained by abridging the deliberative process. No value is gained by
racing to beat the Financial Control Board on this issue. We will be just as critical if
the Control Board seeks to impose "reform," as you fear next month, by fiat.

In conclusion, the Committee of 100: (1) opposes mark-up of Bill 12-458
on December 15th; (2) urges public hearing on Bill 12-458 before mark-up; and (3) supports
consideration of the bill’s components as referred to the different committees.

Sincerely,

Phil Mendelson

Trustee

cc: All Councilmembers

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