Code of Federal Regulations
Code of Federal Regulations Cover
Language: English
Publication details
Publisher: Office of the Federal Register (United States)
Frequency: Annually
License: Public domain
Indexing
ISSN: 1946-4975
Links
Journal homepage: http://www.archives.gov/federal-register/cfr/about.html
Online access: http://www.ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/ECFR?page=browse
The Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) is
the codification of the general and permanent rules and regulations "sometimes
called administrative law" published in the Federal Register by the executive departments and agencies of the
federal government of the United
States. The CFR is divided into 50 titles
that represent broad areas subject to federal regulation.
The CFR annual edition is the codification of the general
and permanent rules published by the Office of the Federal Register "part
of the National Archives and Records Administration" and the Government
Publishing Office. In addition to this annual edition, the CFR is published in
an unofficial format online on the Electronic CFR website, which is updated
daily.
Background
Under the nondelegation
doctrine, federal agencies are authorized to promulgate regulations "rulemaking"
by "enabling legislation". The process of rulemaking is governed by
the Administrative Procedure Act "APA": generally, the APA requires a
process that includes publication of the proposed rules in a notice of proposed
rulemaking "NPRM", a period for comments and participation in the
decisionmaking, and adoption and publication of the final rule, via the Federal Register.
Publication procedure
The rules and regulations are first promulgated or published
in the Federal Register. The CFR is
structured into 50 subject matter titles. Agencies are assigned chapters within
these titles. The titles are broken down into chapters, parts, sections and
paragraphs. For example, 42 CFR 260.11(a)(1) would be read as "title 42,
part 260, section 11, paragraph (a)(1)."
While new regulations are continually becoming effective,
the printed volumes of the CFR are issued once each calendar year, on this
schedule:
- Titles 1–16 are updated as of January 1
- Titles 17–27 are updated as of April 1
- Titles 28–41 are updated as of July 1
- Titles 42–50 are updated as of October 1
The Office of the Federal Register also keeps an unofficial,
online version of the CFR, the e-CFR, which is normally updated within two days
after changes that have been published in the Federal Register become effective. The Parallel Table of
Authorities and Rules lists rulemaking authority for regulations codified in the
CFR.
List of CFR titles
A few volumes of the CFR at a law library "titles 12–26"
Code of Federal Regulations, seen at the Mid-Manhattan
Library. Editions of Title 3, on the President, are kept on archive. Notice
that for the first year of each new presidency, the volume is thicker.
The CFR is divided into 50 titles that represent broad
subject areas:
- Title 1: General Provisions
- Title 2: Grants and Agreements
- Title 3: The President
- Title 4: Accounts
- Title 5: Administrative Personnel
- Title 6: Domestic Security
- Title 7: Agriculture
- Title 8: Aliens and Nationality
- Title 9: Animals and Animal Products
- Title 10: Energy
- Title 11: Federal Elections
- Title 12: Banks and Banking
- Title 13: Business Credit and Assistance
- Title 14: Aeronautics and Space "also known as the Federal Aviation Regulations"
- Title 15: Commerce and Foreign Trade
- Title 16: Commercial Practices
- Title 17: Commodity and Securities Exchanges
- Title 18: Conservation of Power and Water Resources
- Title 19: Customs Duties
- Title 20: Employees' Benefits
- Title 21: Food and Drugs
- Title 22: Foreign Relations
- Title 23: Highways
- Title 24: Housing and Urban Development
- Title 25: Indians
- Title 26: Internal Revenue "also known as the Treasury Regulations"
- Title 27: Alcohol, Tobacco Products and Firearms
- Title 28: Judicial Administration
- Title 29: Labor
- Title 30: Mineral Resources
- Title 31: Money and Finance: Treasury
- Title 32: National Defense
- Title 33: Navigation and Navigable Waters
- Title 34: Education
- Title 35: Reserved "formerly Panama Canal"
- Title 36: Parks, Forests, and Public Property
- Title 37: Patents, Trademarks, and Copyrights
- Title 38: Pensions, Bonuses, and Veterans' Relief
- Title 39: Postal Service
- Title 40: Protection of Environment
- Title 41: Public Contracts and Property Management
- Title 42: Public Health
- Title 43: Public Lands: Interior
- Title 44: Emergency Management and Assistance
- Title 45: Public Welfare
- Title 46: Shipping
- Title 47: Telecommunication
- Title 48: Federal Acquisition Regulations System
- Title 49: Transportation
- Title 50: Wildlife and Fisheries
History
The Federal Register Act originally provided for a complete
compilation of all existing regulations promulgated prior to the first
publication of the Federal Register,
but was amended in 1937 to provide a codification of all regulations every five
years. The first edition of the CFR was published in 1938. Beginning in 1963
for some titles and for all titles in 1967, the Office of the Federal Register
began publishing yearly revisions, and beginning in 1972 published revisions in
staggered quarters.
On 11 March 2014, Rep. Darrell Issa introduced the Federal
Register Modernization Act "H.R. 4195; 113th Congress", a bill that
would revise requirements for the filing of documents with the Office of the
Federal Register for inclusion in the Federal
Register and for the publication of the Code
of Federal Regulations to reflect the changed publication requirement in
which they would be available online but would not be required to be printed.
The American Association of Law Libraries "AALL" strongly opposed the
bill, arguing that the bill undermines citizens' right to be informed by making
it more difficult for citizens to find their government's regulations.
According to AALL, a survey they conducted "revealed that members of the
public, librarians, researchers, students, attorneys, and small business owners
continue to rely on the print" version of the Federal Register. AALL also argued that the lack of print versions
of the Federal Register and CFR would
mean the 15 percent of Americans who don't use the internet would lose their
access to that material. The House voted on July 14, 2014 to pass the bill
386-0.
Revised: 08 March 2016



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