Hatch Applauds House Passage of SCRUB Act
"The SCRUB Act will provide a commonsense and practical means to reduce the unnecessary costs of existing regulations”
Washington, D.C.—This afternoon, the U.S. House of Representatives passed on a bipartisan basis the Searching for and Cutting Regulations that are Unnecessarily Burdensome, or SCRUB, Act—major legislation aimed at reducing the burden posed by federal regulations. Senator Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, the senior Republican in the United States Senate and the lead sponsor of the bill in the Senate, praised the House’s vote and called on the Senate to follow suit.
“Federal regulations impose a crushing burden our economy,” Hatch said. “Excessive and often unnecessary rules imposed by Washington bureaucrats strain family budgets and create conditions where small businesses struggle to create jobs. Every President since Jimmy Carter has agreed on the need to review our existing regulations to ensure they are efficient and are no more intrusive and burdensome than necessary. The SCRUB Act turns this longstanding bipartisan priority into a reality by taking the responsibility of reviewing old rules away from the bureaucrats who keep failing at that task. I applaud today’s bipartisan vote in House of Representatives passing this crucial measure, and I will continue to lead the fight in the Senate to ensure its speedy passage."
According to the Competitive Enterprise Institute, federal regulations today impose a burden of $1.88 trillion dollars on the economy. That figure equates to roughly $15,000 per household and more than corporate and individual income taxes combined. The Code of Federal Regulations is now more than 175,000 pages long and contains more than 200 volumes. And according to a study by the American Action Forum, the Obama administration’s efforts to review existing regulations resulted in the addition of more than $23 billion dollars in costs on the economy and nearly 9 million hours of paperwork.
The SCRUB Act:
Senator Hatch has played a key role in every major regulatory reform effort for the past 38 years, including as an original cosponsor of the 1981 Regulatory Reform Act and as an author of the 1995 Comprehensive Regulatory Reform Act while serving as Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. His past proposals that address the problem of regulatory accumulation include the original Regulatory Accountability Act of 1993, which included a number of mechanisms for implementing retrospective review similar to those in the SCRUB Act.
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