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Statutory authority

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Statutory authority refers to the powers and duties assigned to a government official or agency through a law passed byCongress or a state legislature. It is also known as astatutory grant of authority. At the federal level,Congress creates and authorizes agencies to administer government programs and enforce the law. Through statutory grants of authority from Congress, departments and agencies of the federal government obtain the authority to issue legally bindingrules and resolve disputes throughadjudication.[1][2]

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Background

See also:Enabling statute andorganic statute

Statutory grants of authority enacted by Congress authorize or require federal agencies to issue legally binding rules and administer government programs. These statutes often include general directives on a particular area of policy, allowing the relevant agency to determine the substantive and procedural details of how a statute or program is administered. Some statutes require that an agency issue regulations on a particular subject, while others leave enforcement decisions to the agency in question. Laws known asorganic statutes create and authorize government entities, whileenabling statutes confer new powers or permit something that was previously prohibited or not expressly authorized.[1][2]

When an agency rule is published in theCode of Federal Regulations, a reference to the statutory authority under which the agency issued the rule is typically included. Theseauthority notes list specific sections of the relevant law and may provide multiple citations from different sources to the same law.[1] TheParallel Table of Authorities and Rules (PTOA) lists the statutory grants of authority under which regulationscodified in theCode of Federal Regulations were issued.[3]

See also

External links

Footnotes

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Administrative Procedure ActAntiquities ActCivil Service Reform ActClayton Antitrust ActCommunications Act of 1934Congressional Review ActElectronic Freedom of Information ActFederal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938Federal Housekeeping StatuteFederal Reserve ActFederal Trade Commission Act of 1914Freedom of Information ActGovernment in the Sunshine ActIndependent Offices Appropriations Act of 1952Information Quality ActInterstate Commerce ActNational Labor Relations ActPaperwork Reduction ActPendleton ActPrivacy Act of 1974Regulatory Flexibility ActREINS ActREINS Act (Wisconsin)Securities Act of 1933Securities Exchange Act of 1934Sherman Antitrust ActSmall Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness ActTruth in Regulating ActUnfunded Mandates Reform Act
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Terms
Adjudication (administrative state)Administrative judgeAdministrative lawAdministrative law judgeAdministrative stateArbitrary-or-capricious testAuer deferenceBarrier to entryBootleggers and BaptistsChevron deference (doctrine)Civil servantCivil serviceCode of Federal RegulationsCodify (administrative state)Comment periodCompliance costsCongressional RecordCoordination (administrative state)Deference (administrative state)Direct and indirect costs (administrative state)Enabling statuteEx parte communication (administrative state)Executive agencyFederal lawFederal RegisterFederalismFinal ruleFormal rulemakingFormalism (law)Functionalism (law)Guidance (administrative state)Hybrid rulemakingIncorporation by referenceIndependent federal agencyInformal rulemakingJoint resolution of disapproval (administrative state)Major ruleNegotiated rulemakingNondelegation doctrineOIRA prompt letterOrganic statutePragmatism (law)Precautionary principlePromulgateProposed rulePublication rulemakingRegulatory budgetRegulatory captureRegulatory dark matterRegulatory impact analysisRegulatory policy officerRegulatory reform officerRegulatory reviewRent seekingRetrospective regulatory reviewRisk assessment (administrative state)RulemakingSeparation of powersSignificant regulatory actionSkidmore deferenceStatutory authoritySubstantive law and procedural lawSue and settleSunset provisionUnified Agenda of Federal Regulatory and Deregulatory ActionsUnited States CodeUnited States Statutes at Large
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