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Too many regulations
At Rep. McMorris Rodgers’ public forum in Davenport, too many regulations was the major concern. A local bureaucrat expressed frustration with micromanaging from Washington, D.C., interfering with efficiency and effectiveness in delivering services.
Public officials cited examples of unfunded mandates. A small business owner (me) complained about the daunting task of trying to create just one new job without getting sideways with some obscure rule. Did you know we have federal regulations defining an acceptable trash receptacle for a hired goat herder camping out in a field?
According to Investor’s Business Daily, “the number of pages in the Federal Register – where all new rules must be published and which serves as proxy of regulatory activity – jumped 18 percent in 2010.” Regulatory agency budgets have grown by 16 percent since 2008 at a time when the overall economy grew 5 percent and employment at regulatory agencies has grown by 13 percent while private-sector jobs shrank by 5.6 percent.
In fairness to President Obama, this trend started years ago. The danger is the exponential acceleration and a president in denial about the problem. Before we can solve it we must admit it exists. Regulatory overload is real. McMorris Rodgers gets it.
Sue Lani W. Madsen
Edwall, Wash.