Open Policy Discussion

Regulatory Reform

by | Feb 5, 2025 | Business and Competition, Economic Opportunity

Except in the case of emergency of health or safety, California should issue no new regulations without conducting an analysis that California needs to exceed whatever federal standards exist in the relevant issue, and whether the cost of California doing so, including the cost in lost jobs, is outweighed by the benefits to California.

California should undertake a rolling sunset of all existing regulations that have been in force for more than 25 years, covering roughly 20% of all these regulations every year. The regulations would automatically expire, unless the state agency affirmatively and specifically re-promulgates each one, having passed the tests required in the immediately preceding paragraph.

All new regulations should carry an automatic sunset within 10 years. If they are valuable, they can be re-promulgated – but based on evidence relevant to the current time, not the past.


0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Posts

SDAA

SDAA: Self Driving Auto Assoc: covers all Full Service Drive cars A-Z' Link to Auto Club, DMV,...

read more

Abundance

Have you read Abundance by Klein and Thompson? I think the vision it lays out is compelling. They...

read more