Search Results for keywords:"guidance documents"

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Search Results: keywords:"guidance documents"

  • Type:Rule
    Citation:86 FR 250
    Reading Time:about 22 minutes

    The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) has issued a final rule to implement Executive Order 13891, which is focused on improving agency guidance documents. This rule outlines how USAID will create, review, and issue guidance documents, ensuring they are non-binding and written clearly. It also establishes procedures for public access and comments on draft guidance documents. The rule aims to enhance transparency and accountability, with no new reporting requirements or significant economic impact expected.

    Simple Explanation

    USAID has made a new rule to make sure they write helpful and clear guidebooks for how they work, which people can also comment on; these guides are just advice, not strict rules everyone must follow.

  • Type:Rule
    Citation:86 FR 1279
    Reading Time:about 14 minutes

    The Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) has issued a final rule establishing procedures for creating guidance documents per Executive Order 13891. This rule mandates how CEQ will define, develop, and issue these documents, ensuring they are accessible to the public through an online database. It allows the public to request changes to these documents and specifies the process for significant guidance documents needing public comment. The rule underscores CEQ's internal practices without imposing new obligations on the public or other governmental bodies.

    Simple Explanation

    The Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) made new rules for how they give advice on the environment. These rules help people see the advice online, ask for changes, and say what they think if the advice is really important, but they don't make people do anything new.

  • Type:Rule
    Citation:90 FR 6804
    Reading Time:about 6 minutes

    The Department of Justice has finalized a rule that removes certain regulations related to guidance documents, which were introduced in 2020 following Executive Order 13891. This step follows President Biden's Executive Order 13992, which revoked the earlier order to allow more flexibility in agency guidance. The Department found the old regulations unnecessary and burdensome, as they discouraged helpful guidance and required additional resource allocation to determine if documents were subject to these regulations. The Attorney General has issued a new memorandum to address the development and use of guidance documents, reflecting these updated policies.

    Simple Explanation

    The Department of Justice has decided to stop using some complicated rules, from 2020, that said how they could use their guides. They found these rules were making things harder and not very helpful, so now they're making it simpler to give good advice.