Test Drive Our New Site! We have some improvements in the works that we're excited for you to experience. Click here to try our new, faster, mobile friendly beta site. We will be maintaining our current version of the site thru the end of 2024, so you can switch back as our improvements continue.
Legislation Quick Search
04/19/2024 10:56 PM
Pennsylvania House of Representatives
https://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/Legis/CSM/showMemoPublic.cfm?chamber=H&SPick=20190&cosponId=28123
Share:
Home / House Co-Sponsorship Memoranda

House Co-Sponsorship Memoranda

Subscribe to PaLegis Notifications
NEW!

Subscribe to receive notifications of new Co-Sponsorship Memos circulated

By Member | By Date | Keyword Search


House of Representatives
Session of 2019 - 2020 Regular Session

MEMORANDUM

Posted: January 30, 2019 03:30 PM
From: Representative Greg Rothman
To: All House members
Subject: Economically Significant Regulation (Previously HB911)
 
Since the Great Recession, the Commonwealth has averaged an annual growth rate of approximately 1.5%. This trend was seen again with the increase in Pennsylvania's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) being an anemic 1.8% over the last fiscal year. The reason for this weak growth rate has been, in part due to the growing regulatory cost imposed by both state and federal government. The aggregate cost imposed by growing regulations, as demonstrated in a study by the Mercatus Center, was found to be a .8% reduction in economic growth.

In order to address the costs associated with new regulations on our economy, I plan to re-introduce legislation which amends the Regulatory Review Act by requiring any economically significant regulation to be approved by the General Assembly. This legislation is modeled after the Congressional Review Act of 1996 (CRA) which allows Congress to negate any regulation which has and economic impact of $100 million after 60 days review.

Under this legislation, any regulation which has a fiscal impact of $1 million on the economy must be approved my majority vote in both the Senate and the House. Should either the Senate or the House reject the regulation, the agency will be barred from implementing the regulation.

Please join me and co-sponsor this effort to reduce the impact of over-regulation on our economy.

Previous Co-sponsors: KEEFER, PHILLIPS-HILL, GROVE, PICKETT, BAKER, MACKENZIE, WARD, BLOOM, KAUFFMAN, TALLMAN, IRVIN, A. HARRIS, GABLER, SAYLOR, SIMMONS, DUSH, ZIMMERMAN, JAMES, EVANKOVICH and SACCONE



Introduced as HB507