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September/October 2024 Common Sense

Page 13

GOVERNMENT AND NATIONAL AFFAIRS COMMITTEE

Chevron Deference Decision (Loper Bright Enterprises et al. v. Raimondo) Sue Emmer, JD

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he Supreme Court’s 6-3 decision overturning Chevron (Loper Bright Enterprises et al. v. Raimondo) will change the way agencies issue regulations and Congress considers legislation, including with respect to health policy, because courts no longer will defer to agencies’ statutory interpretation of ambiguous statutes. In the near term, this new legal reality may impact how the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) implements some key health policy issues such as the No Surprises Act. Several general trends likely will emerge in federal policymaking. Finally, policymakers have convened hearings and introduced legislation to address the change in legal doctrine. Specificity versus Generality. Instead of reaching a compromise between competing viewpoints by enacting general language and delegating regulatory authority to agencies in order to provide specifics, Congress may seek to enact more specific legislative provisions for agencies to implement. In health policy, this could mean fewer

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Congressional bills addressing needed reforms. For instance, S. 42781/H.R. 8325,2 the Physician and Patient Safety Act,3 currently would require the Secretary of Health and Human Services to issue final regulations within 18 months providing medical-staff-privileged physicians a fair hearing and appellate review through appropriate medical staff mechanisms before any termination, restriction, or reduction of the professional activity occurs. Post Loper, Congress may opt to provide greater statutory guidance to HHS regarding how to implement that standard. Legislative Micromanagement. As a result of Loper, Congress might intervene in areas historically left to agencies. In the health policy context, this could mean enactment of technical, narrow directives to HHS in areas that typically require substantive expertise. The dissent in Loper even mentions FDA and HHS regulations as examples of areas where agencies should (but no longer will) exercise expert judgment. Congress may seek to play that role.

The dissent in Loper even mentions FDA and HHS regulations as examples of areas where agencies should (but no longer will) exercise expert judgment. Congress may seek to play that role.”

Legislative History. Although conservative jurists rely exclusively on statutory text, rather than committee reports or other legislative history, Congress could try to influence future judicial interpretation of statutes by providing extra-statutory evidence of congressional intent, such as committee reports and floor statements. Greater Agency Participation in the Legislative Process. Federal agencies provide technical assistance to Members of Congress and staff, such as legislative drafting suggestions and other non-partisan input to improve bill text. Post Loper, agencies might use that process to provide more prescriptive, detailed legislative text aimed not only at more detailed legislation but sustainability in the courts. Changes in the Rulemaking Process. Agencies may develop longer and more detailed rules, with particular focus on the statutory basis for rulemaking, and could include more detailed preambles documenting statutory intent. Rulemaking may take agencies longer than in the past and require multiple new internal reviews. Likewise, agencies may publish more requests for information and seek greater stakeholder consensus in an effort to address legal challenges. Agencies may routinely issue RFIs before rules in the future. Recent post Loper activity illustrates some of these dynamics within Congress: Bill Introduction. On June 23, the ranking Republican on the Senate Health Education Labor and Pensions Committee Senator Bill Cassidy (R-LA) introduced the Upholding Standards of Accountability (USA) Act, which would give Congress more oversight over federal agencies. The bill would require the head of an agency to testify before a congressional committee within 30 days of Continued on page 20 >>

COMMON SENSE SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2024

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September/October 2024 Common Sense by American Academy of Emergency Medicine - Issuu