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Director says Utah rulemaking is delegated legislative power; office reviews about 1,000 rule actions a year
Summary
Mike Brashinsky, director of the Office of Administrative Rules, told the committee that rulemaking in Utah is a legislative delegation and described the office’s six-person staff, monthly publication duties and the growth of the Utah Administrative Code from roughly 4,000 pages in 1987 to about 7,100 pages today.
Mike Brashinsky, director of the Office of Administrative Rules, gave the committee an overview of the office’s role, staffing and work products and emphasized that administrative rulemaking operates under grants of authority from the Legislature.
“Rulemaking is a delegated legislative power from the legislature,” Brashinsky said. He told the committee that every agency that issues rules does so under statutory authority and that the Office of Administrative Rules reviews about 1,000 rulemaking…
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