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Unfunded mandate

An unfunded mandate is a statute or regulation that requires any entity to perform certain actions, with no money provided for fulfilling the requirements. This can be imposed on state or local government, as well as private individuals or organizations. The key distinction is that the statute or regulation is not accompanied by funding to fulfill the requirement[1]

An example in the United States, would be those federal mandates that induce "responsibility, action, procedure or anything else that is imposed by constitutional, administrative, executive, or judicial action" for state and local governments and/or the private sector.[2]

As of 1992, 172 federal mandates obliged state or local governments to fund programs to some extent.[3] Beginning with the Civil Rights Act of 1957 and the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as well as the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the United States federal government has designed laws that require state and local government spending to promote national goals.[4] During the 1970s, the national government promoted education, mental health, and environmental programs by implementing grant projects at a state and local level; the grants were so common that the federal assistance for these programs made up over a quarter of state and local budgets.[5] The rise in federal mandates led to more mandate regulation.[5] During the Reagan Administration, Executive Order 12291 and the State and Local Cost Estimate Act of 1981 were passed, which implemented a careful examination of the true costs of federal unfunded mandates.[6][7] More reform for federal mandates came in 1995 with the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA), which promoted a Congressional focus on the costs imposed onto intergovernmental entities and the private sector because of federal mandates.[8][9] Familiar examples of Federal Unfunded Mandates in the United States include the Americans with Disabilities Act and Medicaid.[3]

Background edit

An "intergovernmental mandate" generally refers to the responsibilities or activities that one level of government imposes on another by legislative, executive or judicial action.[10] According to the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), an intergovernmental mandate can take various forms:

  • An enforceable duty – this refers to any type of legislation, statute or regulation that either requires or proscribes an action of state or local governments, excluding actions imposed as conditions of receiving federal aid.[11]
  • Certain changes in large entitlement programs – this refers to instances when new conditions or reductions in large entitlement programs, providing $5 billion or more annually to state or local governments, are imposed by the federal government.[11]
  • A reduction in federal funding for an existing mandate – this refers to a reduction or elimination of federal funding authorized to cover the costs of an existing mandate.[11]

A 1993 study conducted by Price Waterhouse, sponsored by the National Association of Counties, determined that in fiscal year 1993 counties in the US spent $4.8 billion for twelve unfunded federal mandates.[12] Medicaid was one of these twelve unfunded mandates, and comprised the second largest item in state budgets, accounting for almost 13 percent of state general revenues in 1993.[13]

Mandates can be applied either vertically or horizontally.[14] Vertically applied mandates are directed by a level of government at a single department or program. Conversely, horizontally applied, or "crosscutting", mandates refer to mandates that affect various departments or programs.[15] For example, a mandate requiring county health departments to provide outpatient mental health programs would be considered a vertically applied mandate, whereas a requirement that all offices in a given jurisdiction to become handicap-accessible would be considered a horizontally applied mandate.[15]

History edit

Federal unfunded mandates can be traced back to the post-World War II years, when the federal government initiated national programs in education, mental health services, and environmental protection.[16] The method for implementing these projects at the state and local level was to involve state and local governments. In the 1970s, the federal government utilized grants as a way to increase state and local participation, which resulted in federal assistance constituting over 25 percent of state and local budgets.[5]

The first wave of major mandates occurred in the 1960s and 1970s, concerning civil rights, education, and the environment.[17] The arrival of the Reagan administration ostensibly undermined various federal mandate efforts, as the executive branch promised to decrease federal regulatory efforts.[17] For example, the passage of Executive Order 12291 required a cost-benefit analysis and an Office of Management and Budget clearance on proposed agency regulations, and the State and Local Cost Estimate Act of 1981 required the Congressional Budget Office to determine the state and local cost effects of proposed federal legislation moving through the Legislative Branch.[6] However, the U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations (ACIR) reported that, during the 1980s, more major intergovernmental regulatory programs were enacted than during the 1970s.[18]

According to a 1995 Brookings Institution report, in 1980 there were 36 laws that qualified as unfunded mandates. Despite opposition from the Reagan administration and George H. W. Bush administration, an additional 27 laws that could be categorized as unfunded mandates went into effect between 1982 and 1991.[19]

The U.S. Supreme Court has been involved in deciding the federal government's role in the U.S. governmental system based on constitutionality.[20] During the period between the New Deal era and the mid-1980s the Court generally utilized an expansive interpretation of the interstate commerce clause and the 14th Amendment to validate the growth of the federal government's involvement in domestic policymaking.[21] For example, the 1985 Supreme Court case Garcia v. San Antonio Metropolitan Transit Authority affirmed the ability for the federal government to directly regulate state and local governmental affairs.[22]

The increase of mandates in the 1980s and 1990s incited state and local protest.[23] In October 1993, state and local interest groups sponsored a National Unfunded Mandates Day, which involved press conferences and appeals to congressional delegations about mandate relief.[23] In early 1995, Congress passed unfunded mandate reform legislation.[24]

In 1992 the Court determined in various cases that the Constitution provides state and locality protections concerning unfunded mandate enactments.[25] For example, in the 1992 case New York v. United States, the Court struck down a federal law that regulated the disposal of low-level radioactive waste, which utilized the Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution to require states to dispose of the radioactive material.[25]

Examples edit

Unfunded mandates are most commonly utilized in regulation of civil rights, anti-poverty programs and environmental protection programs.[26]

Clean Air Act edit

The Clean Air Act was passed in 1963 to support the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), established on December 2, 1970, in developing research programs looking into air pollution problems and solutions.[27] The EPA received authority to research air quality. The 1970 Amendments to the Clean Air Act established the National Ambient Air Quality Standards, authorized requirements for control of motor vehicle emissions, increased the federal enforcement authority but required states to implement plans to adhere to these standards.[28] The 1990 Amendments to the Clean Air Act of 1970 expanded and modified the National Ambient Air Quality Standards and expanded and modified enforcement authority.[27] The amendments increased the mandates on states to comply with the federal standards for air quality. States have had to write up State Implementation Plans, have them approved by the EPA and must also fund the implementation.[28]

The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 edit

The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 prohibits discrimination based on disability, requires existing public facilities to be made accessible, requires new facilities to comply with accessibility expectations, and requires that employers provide anything a disabled employee might need, such as a sign language interpreter.[29][30] Tax incentives encourage employers to hire people with disabilities.[31] State institutions and local employers are expected to pay for changes made to existing facilities and are responsible for making sure that new facilities are in compliance with the federal requirements under the ADA.[32]

Medicaid edit

Medicaid is a health program for low-income families and people with certain medical needs in the United States.[33] It is funded jointly by the federal and state governments, but implemented by states.[34] Federal funding covers a variable portion of at least half of Medicaid costs,[35] and states are expected to cover the remainder. This means that any federally mandated increase in Medicaid spending forces states to spend more.[36] However, as state participation in Medicaid is voluntary, it is not technically an unfunded mandate.[37]

EMTALA edit

EMTALA is the acronym for the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act passed by the United States Congress in 1986 to halt certain practices of patient dumping. The act requires hospitals accepting payment from Medicare to provide emergency treatment to any patient coming to their emergency department, regardless of their insurance coverage or ability to pay. Though hospitals could theoretically choose to not participate in Medicare placing them outside of EMTALA's scope, very few do not accept payments from Medicare causing EMTALA to apply to nearly all US hospitals.[38] Though EMTALA infers an obligation to provide certain emergency care, the statute does not contain any provision regarding funding or financing of said emergency care. EMTALA could therefore be characterized as an unfunded mandate.[39]

The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 edit

The 2001 No Child Left Behind Act was passed in response to widespread concern about the quality of public education in America.[40] The act was meant to decrease the gap between students who were performing very well and students who were performing poorly.[40] The act required schools receiving federal funding to administer statewide standardized tests to students at the end of each year. If students did not show improvement from year to year on these tests, their schools were asked to work to improve the quality of the education by hiring highly qualified teachers and by tutoring struggling students.[41] To continue receiving Federal grants, states had to develop plans that demonstrated their steps to improve the quality of education in their schools.[41] The No Child Left Behind Act mandated that states fund the improvements in their schools and provide the appropriate training for less qualified teachers.[42] Federally mandated K-12 education is also a (mostly) unfunded mandate.

Criticism edit

Critics argue that unfunded mandates are inefficient and are an unfair imposition of the national government on the smaller governments.[43][44] While many scholars do not object to the goals of the mandates, the way they are enforced and written are criticized for their ineffectiveness.[45][46][47] State and local governments do not always disagree with the spirit of the mandate, but they sometimes object to the high costs they must bear to carry out the objectives.[45]

The debate on unfunded federal mandates is visible in cases such as New York v. United States, mentioned above.[45] In School District of Pontiac, Michigan v. Duncan, the plaintiffs alleged that the school district need not comply with the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 because the federal government did not provide them sufficient funding; the court concluded that insufficient federal funds were not a valid reason to not comply with a federal mandate.[48]

Unfunded Mandates Reform Act edit

Purpose edit

The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA) was approved by the 104th Congress on March 22, 1995, and became effective October 5, 1995, during the Clinton administration.[49] It is public law 104-4.[49] The official legislation summarizes the bill as being: "An Act: To curb the practice of imposing unfunded Federal mandates on States and local governments; [...] and to ensure that the Federal Government pays the costs incurred by those governments in complying with certain requirements under Federal statutes and regulations, and for other purposes."[49]

UMRA was enacted to avoid imposing mandates, when said mandates did not include federal funding to help the SLTG (State, Local, and Tribal Governments)[clarification needed] carry out the goals of the mandate.[50] It also allowed the Congressional Budget Office to estimate the cost of mandates to SLTGs and to the private sector, and allows federal agencies issuing mandates to estimate the costs of mandates to the entities that said mandates regulate.[51]

Application edit

Most of the act's provisions apply to proposed and final rules for which a notice of the proposed rule was published, and that include a Federal mandate that could result in the expenditure of funds by SLTGs or the private sector of or in excess of $100 million in any given year.[52] If a mandate meets these conditions, a written statement must be provided that includes the legal authority for the rule, a cost-benefit assessment, a description of the macroeconomic effects that the mandate will likely have, and a summary of concerns from the SLTG and how they were addressed.[53] An agency enforcing the mandate must also choose the least-costly option that still achieves the goals of the mandate, as well as consult with elected officials of the SLTG to allow for their input on the implementation of the mandate and its goals.[54] Section 203 of UMRA is a bit more extensive in that it applies to all regulatory requirements that significantly affect small governments, and requires federal agencies to provide notice of the requirements to the government(s), enable the officials of the government(s) to provide their input on the mandate, and inform and educate the government(s) on the requirements for implementation of the mandate.[55]

UMRA allows the United States Congress to decline unfunded federal mandates within legislation if such mandates are estimated to cost more than the threshold amounts estimated by the Congressional Budget Office.[51] UMRA does not apply to "conditions of federal assistance; duties stemming from participation in voluntary federal programs; rules issued by independent regulatory agencies; rules issued without a general notice of proposed rulemaking; and rules and legislative provisions that cover individual constitutional rights, discrimination, emergency assistance, grant accounting and auditing procedures, national security, treaty obligations, and certain elements of Social Security".[51]

Effectiveness edit

Ever since UMRA was proposed, it has remained unclear, how effective the legislation actually is at limiting the burdens imposed by unfunded mandates on SLTGs, and whether or not unfunded mandates need to be limited so strictly.[51] Proponents of the Act argue that UMRA is needed to limit legislation that imposes obligations on SLTGs and that creates higher costs and less efficiency, while opponents argue that sometimes federal unfunded mandates are necessary to achieve a national goal that state and local governments don't fund voluntarily.[51] Opponents also question the effectiveness of the bill due to the aforementioned restrictions.[51]

2015 Unfunded Mandates and Information Transparency Act edit

The Act was written to amend UMRA by having the CBO compare the authorized level of funding in legislation to the costs of carrying out any changes. It was done by also amending the Congressional Budget Act of 1974. The bill was introduced by Republican North Carolina Representative Virginia Foxx and passed by the House on February 4, 2015.

Foxx had authored a previous version of this bill, which also passed the house, as H.R. 899 (113th Congress) in February 2014.[56] The bill would allow private companies and trade associations to look at proposed rules before they are announced to the public. The concern is that private companies could weaken upgrades to public protections.[citation needed]

Notes edit

  1. ^ . BusinessDictionary.com. Archived from the original on 2012-07-12. Retrieved 2012-06-30.
  2. ^ Catherine H. Lovell, Max Neiman, Robert Kneisel, Adam Rose, and Charles Tobin (June 1979). Federal and State Mandating on Local Governments: Report to the National Science Foundation. Riverside, CA: University of California, p. 32
  3. ^ a b Dilger, Robert J., and Richard S. Beth. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act: History, Impact, and Issues. Publication no. 7-5700. Congressional Research Service, 2012. Print.<https://fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/R40957.pdf>
  4. ^ "America's Historical Documents". National Archives. 2016-01-25. Retrieved 2023-02-17.
  5. ^ a b c Salamon, Lester M., and Michael S. Lund. Beyond Privatization: The Tools of Government Action. Washington, D.C.: Urban Institute, 1989.
  6. ^ a b Public law 97-108.
  7. ^ United States. Cong. House. House Committee on Rules. Statement. By Alice M. Rivlin. H. Doc. Congressional Budget Office, 1981. Print.
  8. ^ Anderson, Stacy, and Russell Constantine. Unfunded Mandates. Briefing Paper No. 7. Harvard Law School Federal Budget Policy Seminar, 3 May 2005. Web. 8 Apr. 2012. <http://www.law.harvard.edu/faculty/hjackson/UnfundedMandates_7.pdf>
  9. ^ United States. Environmental Protection Agency. Summary of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act. Print.
  10. ^ Lex, Leo. "Intergovernmental Mandates in Federal Legislation," CBO Economic and Budget Issue Brief, (July: 2009).
  11. ^ a b c Congressional Budget Office. "Identifying Intergovernmental Mandates," Economic and Budget Issue Brief. Jan 2005. 2.
  12. ^ Price Waterhouse letter to the Honorable Barbara Sheen Todd, National Association of Counties, 25 October 1993.
  13. ^ Johnston, Jocelyn. "The Medicaid Mandates of the 1980s: An Intergovernmental Perspective," Public Budgeting and Finance (Spring, 1997), 3–34.
  14. ^ Herzfeld, Daniel. "Accountability and the Nondelegation of Unfunded Mandates: A Public Choice Analysis of the Supreme Court's Tenth Amendment Federalism Jurisprudence," George Mason Law Review. 419. (1998–1999)
  15. ^ a b Lovell, Chatherine and Tobin, Charles. "The Mandate Issue," Public Administration Review, Vol. 41, No. 3 (May–June, 1981). 318–31.
  16. ^ Smith, Tom W. 1990. "Liberal and Conservative Trends in the United States since World War II." Public Opinion Quarterly 54:479–50
  17. ^ a b Presidential Task Force on Regulatory Relief. 1982. Reagan administration achievements in regulatory relief for state and local governments: A progress report. Washington, D.C.
  18. ^ Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations, Federal Regulation of State and Local Governments: The Mixed Record of the 1980s, A-126 (Washington, DC: ACIR, 1993).
  19. ^ Dilulio, John and Don Kettl, Fine Print: The Contract with America, Devolution, and the Administrative Realities of American Federalism (Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution, 1995), p. 41.
  20. ^ "A Brief Overview of the Supreme Court" (PDF). United States Supreme Court. Retrieved 2009-12-31.
  21. ^ Lawson, Gary. "The Rise and Rise of the Administrative State". Harvard Law Review. 1237–41 (1994).
  22. ^ Garcia v. San Antonio Metropolitan Transit Authority, 105 S. Ct. 1005 (1985).
  23. ^ a b Gullo, Theresa A. and Janet M. Kelly, "Federal Unfunded Mandate Reform: A First-Year Retrospective", Public Administration Review, Vol. 58, (Sept. 1998). 380.
  24. ^ Public Law 104-4, 109 Stat. 48.
  25. ^ a b New York v. United States, 505 U.S. 144 (1992).
  26. ^ Lowi, Theodore J., Benjamin Ginsberg, Kenneth A. Shepsle, and Stephen Ansolabehere. "Federalism and the Separation of Powers." American Government Power and Purpose. 11th ed. New York: W W Norton & Co, 2010. 59-60.
  27. ^ a b "History| Clean Air Act | US EPA." EPA. Environmental Protection Agency. Web. 17 Apr. 2012. <. Archived from the original on 2012-05-02. Retrieved 2012-05-07.>.
  28. ^ a b Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. § 110 (1970).
  29. ^ Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990. Pub. L. 101-336. § 102 (1990).
  30. ^ Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990. Pub. L. 101-336 § 226 (1990).
  31. ^ "Tax Incentives for Improving Accessibility." ADA Tax Incentives Packet. Web. 17 Apr. 2012. <http://www.ada.gov/archive/taxpack.htm>.
  32. ^ "Facts About the Americans with Disabilities Act." US EEOC Home Page. 9 Sept. 2008. Web. 5 Mar. 2012.
  33. ^ "Medicaid in New York State." Medicaid. Mar. 2012. Web. 5 Mar. 2012. <http://www.health.ny.gov/health_care/medicaid/>.
  34. ^ "Financing & Reimbursement | Medicaid.gov." Medicaid.gov. Web. 5 Mar. 2012. <http://www.medicaid.gov/Medicaid-CHIP-Program-Information/By-Topics/Financing-and-Reimbursement/Financing-and-Reimbursement.html>.
  35. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-04-08.
  36. ^ Sack, Kevin; Pear, Robert (2009-07-19). "Governors Fear Medicaid Costs in Health Plan". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-02-17.
  37. ^ Smith, Kevin B.; Greenblatt, Alan (2013). Governing States and Localities. CQ Press. p. 481. ISBN 978-1483301730.
  38. ^ Schaffner, Dana E. (28 September 2005). "EMTALA: All Bark and No Bite" (PDF). University of Illinois Law Review. 2005 (4): 1024–1033.
  39. ^ Monico, Edward (June 2010). "Is EMTALA That Bad?". Virtual Mentor (AMA Journal of Ethics). 12 (6): 471–475. doi:10.1001/virtualmentor.2010.12.6.hlaw1-1006. PMID 23158449.
  40. ^ a b No Child Left Behind Act, 20 U.S.C. § 1001 (2001).
  41. ^ a b No Child Left Behind Act, 20 U.S.C. § 1111 (2001).
  42. ^ No Child Left Behind Act, 20 U.S.C. § 1003 (2001).
  43. ^ St. George, James R. "Unfunded Mandates: Balancing State and National Needs." Brookings Review Apr. 1995.[1][dead link]
  44. ^ Hacker, Will. "Village to Fight Against Unfunded U.S. Mandates." Chicago Tribune 15 Oct. 1993. Print.
  45. ^ a b c Wellman, Nola. Unfunded Mandates Reduce Efficiency; Local Control Improves Effectiveness. Print.[ISBN missing]
  46. ^ Cockriel, Thomas. "House Subcommittee Holds Hearing on the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995" Penn Law. 25 Feb. 2011. Web. 08 Apr. 2012. http://www.law.upenn.edu/blogs/regblog/2011/02/house-subcommittee-holds-hearing-on-the-unfunded-mandates-reform-act-of-1995.html.
  47. ^ "Unfunded Mandates." Citizens' Committee for an Effective Constitution. New Roosevelt Foundation, Inc. Web. 08 Apr. 2012. <http://effectiveny.org/issue-summary/Unfunded-Mandates>.
  48. ^ Talbert, Kent. "No Child Left Behind Act: Not an "Unfunded Mandate"" Court Cases : Education Law Review : Elementary & Secondary School Legislation, Charter Schools & Unfunded Mandate: Kent Talbert & Rober Eitel Lawyer & Attorney. Talbert & Eitel, 21 June 2010. Web. 08 Apr. 2012. http://www.educationlawreview.com/k-12-education/court-cases/.
  49. ^ a b c S. 1, 104th Cong., U.S. G.P.O. 25 (1995) (enacted). Print.
  50. ^ "Summary of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act." EPA. Environmental Protection Agency. Web. 09 Apr. 2012. <http://www.epa.gov/lawsregs/laws/umra.html>.
  51. ^ a b c d e f Dilger, Robert J., and Richard S. Beth. "Unfunded Mandate Reform Act: History, Impact, and Issues." CRS Report for Congress (2011). Web.
  52. ^ S. 1, 104th Cong., U.S. G.P.O. 25 (1995) (enacted). Print. Section 424(b)(1).
  53. ^ S. 1, 104th Cong., U.S. G.P.O. 25 (1995) (enacted). Print. Section 424(a)(2)(C).
  54. ^ S. 1, 104th Cong., U.S. G.P.O. 25 (1995) (enacted). Print. Section 204(a).
  55. ^ S. 1, 104th Cong., U.S. G.P.O. 25 (1995) (enacted). Print. Section 203(a).
  56. ^ "H.R. 50: Unfunded Mandates Information and Transparency Act of 2015". GovTrack. Retrieved 9 February 2015.

External links edit

  • The U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations' Website
  • The U.S. General Services Administration Description of UMRA
  • Executive Order 12291--Federal regulation
  • State and Local Cost Estimate Act of 1981, H.R. 1465
  • The Americans with Disabilities Act Website
  • Clean Air Act Description

unfunded, mandate, examples, perspective, this, article, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, article, discuss, issue, talk, page, create, article, appropriate, october, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, unfunded, mandate, stat. The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message An unfunded mandate is a statute or regulation that requires any entity to perform certain actions with no money provided for fulfilling the requirements This can be imposed on state or local government as well as private individuals or organizations The key distinction is that the statute or regulation is not accompanied by funding to fulfill the requirement 1 An example in the United States would be those federal mandates that induce responsibility action procedure or anything else that is imposed by constitutional administrative executive or judicial action for state and local governments and or the private sector 2 As of 1992 172 federal mandates obliged state or local governments to fund programs to some extent 3 Beginning with the Civil Rights Act of 1957 and the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as well as the Voting Rights Act of 1965 the United States federal government has designed laws that require state and local government spending to promote national goals 4 During the 1970s the national government promoted education mental health and environmental programs by implementing grant projects at a state and local level the grants were so common that the federal assistance for these programs made up over a quarter of state and local budgets 5 The rise in federal mandates led to more mandate regulation 5 During the Reagan Administration Executive Order 12291 and the State and Local Cost Estimate Act of 1981 were passed which implemented a careful examination of the true costs of federal unfunded mandates 6 7 More reform for federal mandates came in 1995 with the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act UMRA which promoted a Congressional focus on the costs imposed onto intergovernmental entities and the private sector because of federal mandates 8 9 Familiar examples of Federal Unfunded Mandates in the United States include the Americans with Disabilities Act and Medicaid 3 Contents 1 Background 2 History 3 Examples 3 1 Clean Air Act 3 2 The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 3 3 Medicaid 3 4 EMTALA 3 5 The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 4 Criticism 5 Unfunded Mandates Reform Act 5 1 Purpose 5 2 Application 5 3 Effectiveness 6 2015 Unfunded Mandates and Information Transparency Act 7 Notes 8 External linksBackground editAn intergovernmental mandate generally refers to the responsibilities or activities that one level of government imposes on another by legislative executive or judicial action 10 According to the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 UMRA an intergovernmental mandate can take various forms An enforceable duty this refers to any type of legislation statute or regulation that either requires or proscribes an action of state or local governments excluding actions imposed as conditions of receiving federal aid 11 Certain changes in large entitlement programs this refers to instances when new conditions or reductions in large entitlement programs providing 5 billion or more annually to state or local governments are imposed by the federal government 11 A reduction in federal funding for an existing mandate this refers to a reduction or elimination of federal funding authorized to cover the costs of an existing mandate 11 A 1993 study conducted by Price Waterhouse sponsored by the National Association of Counties determined that in fiscal year 1993 counties in the US spent 4 8 billion for twelve unfunded federal mandates 12 Medicaid was one of these twelve unfunded mandates and comprised the second largest item in state budgets accounting for almost 13 percent of state general revenues in 1993 13 Mandates can be applied either vertically or horizontally 14 Vertically applied mandates are directed by a level of government at a single department or program Conversely horizontally applied or crosscutting mandates refer to mandates that affect various departments or programs 15 For example a mandate requiring county health departments to provide outpatient mental health programs would be considered a vertically applied mandate whereas a requirement that all offices in a given jurisdiction to become handicap accessible would be considered a horizontally applied mandate 15 History editFederal unfunded mandates can be traced back to the post World War II years when the federal government initiated national programs in education mental health services and environmental protection 16 The method for implementing these projects at the state and local level was to involve state and local governments In the 1970s the federal government utilized grants as a way to increase state and local participation which resulted in federal assistance constituting over 25 percent of state and local budgets 5 The first wave of major mandates occurred in the 1960s and 1970s concerning civil rights education and the environment 17 The arrival of the Reagan administration ostensibly undermined various federal mandate efforts as the executive branch promised to decrease federal regulatory efforts 17 For example the passage of Executive Order 12291 required a cost benefit analysis and an Office of Management and Budget clearance on proposed agency regulations and the State and Local Cost Estimate Act of 1981 required the Congressional Budget Office to determine the state and local cost effects of proposed federal legislation moving through the Legislative Branch 6 However the U S Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations ACIR reported that during the 1980s more major intergovernmental regulatory programs were enacted than during the 1970s 18 According to a 1995 Brookings Institution report in 1980 there were 36 laws that qualified as unfunded mandates Despite opposition from the Reagan administration and George H W Bush administration an additional 27 laws that could be categorized as unfunded mandates went into effect between 1982 and 1991 19 The U S Supreme Court has been involved in deciding the federal government s role in the U S governmental system based on constitutionality 20 During the period between the New Deal era and the mid 1980s the Court generally utilized an expansive interpretation of the interstate commerce clause and the 14th Amendment to validate the growth of the federal government s involvement in domestic policymaking 21 For example the 1985 Supreme Court case Garcia v San Antonio Metropolitan Transit Authority affirmed the ability for the federal government to directly regulate state and local governmental affairs 22 The increase of mandates in the 1980s and 1990s incited state and local protest 23 In October 1993 state and local interest groups sponsored a National Unfunded Mandates Day which involved press conferences and appeals to congressional delegations about mandate relief 23 In early 1995 Congress passed unfunded mandate reform legislation 24 In 1992 the Court determined in various cases that the Constitution provides state and locality protections concerning unfunded mandate enactments 25 For example in the 1992 case New York v United States the Court struck down a federal law that regulated the disposal of low level radioactive waste which utilized the Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution to require states to dispose of the radioactive material 25 Examples editUnfunded mandates are most commonly utilized in regulation of civil rights anti poverty programs and environmental protection programs 26 Clean Air Act edit The Clean Air Act was passed in 1963 to support the United States Environmental Protection Agency EPA established on December 2 1970 in developing research programs looking into air pollution problems and solutions 27 The EPA received authority to research air quality The 1970 Amendments to the Clean Air Act established the National Ambient Air Quality Standards authorized requirements for control of motor vehicle emissions increased the federal enforcement authority but required states to implement plans to adhere to these standards 28 The 1990 Amendments to the Clean Air Act of 1970 expanded and modified the National Ambient Air Quality Standards and expanded and modified enforcement authority 27 The amendments increased the mandates on states to comply with the federal standards for air quality States have had to write up State Implementation Plans have them approved by the EPA and must also fund the implementation 28 The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 edit The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 prohibits discrimination based on disability requires existing public facilities to be made accessible requires new facilities to comply with accessibility expectations and requires that employers provide anything a disabled employee might need such as a sign language interpreter 29 30 Tax incentives encourage employers to hire people with disabilities 31 State institutions and local employers are expected to pay for changes made to existing facilities and are responsible for making sure that new facilities are in compliance with the federal requirements under the ADA 32 Medicaid edit Medicaid is a health program for low income families and people with certain medical needs in the United States 33 It is funded jointly by the federal and state governments but implemented by states 34 Federal funding covers a variable portion of at least half of Medicaid costs 35 and states are expected to cover the remainder This means that any federally mandated increase in Medicaid spending forces states to spend more 36 However as state participation in Medicaid is voluntary it is not technically an unfunded mandate 37 EMTALA edit EMTALA is the acronym for the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act passed by the United States Congress in 1986 to halt certain practices of patient dumping The act requires hospitals accepting payment from Medicare to provide emergency treatment to any patient coming to their emergency department regardless of their insurance coverage or ability to pay Though hospitals could theoretically choose to not participate in Medicare placing them outside of EMTALA s scope very few do not accept payments from Medicare causing EMTALA to apply to nearly all US hospitals 38 Though EMTALA infers an obligation to provide certain emergency care the statute does not contain any provision regarding funding or financing of said emergency care EMTALA could therefore be characterized as an unfunded mandate 39 The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 edit The 2001 No Child Left Behind Act was passed in response to widespread concern about the quality of public education in America 40 The act was meant to decrease the gap between students who were performing very well and students who were performing poorly 40 The act required schools receiving federal funding to administer statewide standardized tests to students at the end of each year If students did not show improvement from year to year on these tests their schools were asked to work to improve the quality of the education by hiring highly qualified teachers and by tutoring struggling students 41 To continue receiving Federal grants states had to develop plans that demonstrated their steps to improve the quality of education in their schools 41 The No Child Left Behind Act mandated that states fund the improvements in their schools and provide the appropriate training for less qualified teachers 42 Federally mandated K 12 education is also a mostly unfunded mandate Criticism editCritics argue that unfunded mandates are inefficient and are an unfair imposition of the national government on the smaller governments 43 44 While many scholars do not object to the goals of the mandates the way they are enforced and written are criticized for their ineffectiveness 45 46 47 State and local governments do not always disagree with the spirit of the mandate but they sometimes object to the high costs they must bear to carry out the objectives 45 The debate on unfunded federal mandates is visible in cases such as New York v United States mentioned above 45 In School District of Pontiac Michigan v Duncan the plaintiffs alleged that the school district need not comply with the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 because the federal government did not provide them sufficient funding the court concluded that insufficient federal funds were not a valid reason to not comply with a federal mandate 48 Unfunded Mandates Reform Act editMain article Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 Purpose edit The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act UMRA was approved by the 104th Congress on March 22 1995 and became effective October 5 1995 during the Clinton administration 49 It is public law 104 4 49 The official legislation summarizes the bill as being An Act To curb the practice of imposing unfunded Federal mandates on States and local governments and to ensure that the Federal Government pays the costs incurred by those governments in complying with certain requirements under Federal statutes and regulations and for other purposes 49 UMRA was enacted to avoid imposing mandates when said mandates did not include federal funding to help the SLTG State Local and Tribal Governments clarification needed carry out the goals of the mandate 50 It also allowed the Congressional Budget Office to estimate the cost of mandates to SLTGs and to the private sector and allows federal agencies issuing mandates to estimate the costs of mandates to the entities that said mandates regulate 51 Application edit Most of the act s provisions apply to proposed and final rules for which a notice of the proposed rule was published and that include a Federal mandate that could result in the expenditure of funds by SLTGs or the private sector of or in excess of 100 million in any given year 52 If a mandate meets these conditions a written statement must be provided that includes the legal authority for the rule a cost benefit assessment a description of the macroeconomic effects that the mandate will likely have and a summary of concerns from the SLTG and how they were addressed 53 An agency enforcing the mandate must also choose the least costly option that still achieves the goals of the mandate as well as consult with elected officials of the SLTG to allow for their input on the implementation of the mandate and its goals 54 Section 203 of UMRA is a bit more extensive in that it applies to all regulatory requirements that significantly affect small governments and requires federal agencies to provide notice of the requirements to the government s enable the officials of the government s to provide their input on the mandate and inform and educate the government s on the requirements for implementation of the mandate 55 UMRA allows the United States Congress to decline unfunded federal mandates within legislation if such mandates are estimated to cost more than the threshold amounts estimated by the Congressional Budget Office 51 UMRA does not apply to conditions of federal assistance duties stemming from participation in voluntary federal programs rules issued by independent regulatory agencies rules issued without a general notice of proposed rulemaking and rules and legislative provisions that cover individual constitutional rights discrimination emergency assistance grant accounting and auditing procedures national security treaty obligations and certain elements of Social Security 51 Effectiveness edit Ever since UMRA was proposed it has remained unclear how effective the legislation actually is at limiting the burdens imposed by unfunded mandates on SLTGs and whether or not unfunded mandates need to be limited so strictly 51 Proponents of the Act argue that UMRA is needed to limit legislation that imposes obligations on SLTGs and that creates higher costs and less efficiency while opponents argue that sometimes federal unfunded mandates are necessary to achieve a national goal that state and local governments don t fund voluntarily 51 Opponents also question the effectiveness of the bill due to the aforementioned restrictions 51 2015 Unfunded Mandates and Information Transparency Act editThe Act was written to amend UMRA by having the CBO compare the authorized level of funding in legislation to the costs of carrying out any changes It was done by also amending the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 The bill was introduced by Republican North Carolina Representative Virginia Foxx and passed by the House on February 4 2015 Foxx had authored a previous version of this bill which also passed the house as H R 899 113th Congress in February 2014 56 The bill would allow private companies and trade associations to look at proposed rules before they are announced to the public The concern is that private companies could weaken upgrades to public protections citation needed Notes edit Unfunded mandate BusinessDictionary com Archived from the original on 2012 07 12 Retrieved 2012 06 30 Catherine H Lovell Max Neiman Robert Kneisel Adam Rose and Charles Tobin June 1979 Federal and State Mandating on Local Governments Report to the National Science Foundation Riverside CA University of California p 32 a b Dilger Robert J and Richard S Beth Unfunded Mandates Reform Act History Impact and Issues Publication no 7 5700 Congressional Research Service 2012 Print lt https fas org sgp crs misc R40957 pdf gt America s Historical Documents National Archives 2016 01 25 Retrieved 2023 02 17 a b c Salamon Lester M and Michael S Lund Beyond Privatization The Tools of Government Action Washington D C Urban Institute 1989 a b Public law 97 108 United States Cong House House Committee on Rules Statement By Alice M Rivlin H Doc Congressional Budget Office 1981 Print Anderson Stacy and Russell Constantine Unfunded Mandates Briefing Paper No 7 Harvard Law School Federal Budget Policy Seminar 3 May 2005 Web 8 Apr 2012 lt http www law harvard edu faculty hjackson UnfundedMandates 7 pdf gt United States Environmental Protection Agency Summary of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act Print Lex Leo Intergovernmental Mandates in Federal Legislation CBO Economic and Budget Issue Brief July 2009 a b c Congressional Budget Office Identifying Intergovernmental Mandates Economic and Budget Issue Brief Jan 2005 2 Price Waterhouse letter to the Honorable Barbara Sheen Todd National Association of Counties 25 October 1993 Johnston Jocelyn The Medicaid Mandates of the 1980s An Intergovernmental Perspective Public Budgeting and Finance Spring 1997 3 34 Herzfeld Daniel Accountability and the Nondelegation of Unfunded Mandates A Public Choice Analysis of the Supreme Court s Tenth Amendment Federalism Jurisprudence George Mason Law Review 419 1998 1999 a b Lovell Chatherine and Tobin Charles The Mandate Issue Public Administration Review Vol 41 No 3 May June 1981 318 31 Smith Tom W 1990 Liberal and Conservative Trends in the United States since World War II Public Opinion Quarterly 54 479 50 a b Presidential Task Force on Regulatory Relief 1982 Reagan administration achievements in regulatory relief for state and local governments A progress report Washington D C Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations Federal Regulation of State and Local Governments The Mixed Record of the 1980s A 126 Washington DC ACIR 1993 Dilulio John and Don Kettl Fine Print The Contract with America Devolution and the Administrative Realities of American Federalism Washington D C Brookings Institution 1995 p 41 A Brief Overview of the Supreme Court PDF United States Supreme Court Retrieved 2009 12 31 Lawson Gary The Rise and Rise of the Administrative State Harvard Law Review 1237 41 1994 Garcia v San Antonio Metropolitan Transit Authority 105 S Ct 1005 1985 a b Gullo Theresa A and Janet M Kelly Federal Unfunded Mandate Reform A First Year Retrospective Public Administration Review Vol 58 Sept 1998 380 Public Law 104 4 109 Stat 48 a b New York v United States 505 U S 144 1992 Lowi Theodore J Benjamin Ginsberg Kenneth A Shepsle and Stephen Ansolabehere Federalism and the Separation of Powers American Government Power and Purpose 11th ed New York W W Norton amp Co 2010 59 60 a b History Clean Air Act US EPA EPA Environmental Protection Agency Web 17 Apr 2012 lt History Clean Air Act US EPA Archived from the original on 2012 05 02 Retrieved 2012 05 07 gt a b Clean Air Act 42 U S C 110 1970 Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990 Pub L 101 336 102 1990 Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990 Pub L 101 336 226 1990 Tax Incentives for Improving Accessibility ADA Tax Incentives Packet Web 17 Apr 2012 lt http www ada gov archive taxpack htm gt Facts About the Americans with Disabilities Act US EEOC Home Page 9 Sept 2008 Web 5 Mar 2012 Medicaid in New York State Medicaid Mar 2012 Web 5 Mar 2012 lt http www health ny gov health care medicaid gt Financing amp Reimbursement Medicaid gov Medicaid gov Web 5 Mar 2012 lt http www medicaid gov Medicaid CHIP Program Information By Topics Financing and Reimbursement Financing and Reimbursement html gt Medicaid Financing How the FMAP Formula Works and Why It Falls Short PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 04 08 Sack Kevin Pear Robert 2009 07 19 Governors Fear Medicaid Costs in Health Plan The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 02 17 Smith Kevin B Greenblatt Alan 2013 Governing States and Localities CQ Press p 481 ISBN 978 1483301730 Schaffner Dana E 28 September 2005 EMTALA All Bark and No Bite PDF University of Illinois Law Review 2005 4 1024 1033 Monico Edward June 2010 Is EMTALA That Bad Virtual Mentor AMA Journal of Ethics 12 6 471 475 doi 10 1001 virtualmentor 2010 12 6 hlaw1 1006 PMID 23158449 a b No Child Left Behind Act 20 U S C 1001 2001 a b No Child Left Behind Act 20 U S C 1111 2001 No Child Left Behind Act 20 U S C 1003 2001 St George James R Unfunded Mandates Balancing State and National Needs Brookings Review Apr 1995 1 dead link Hacker Will Village to Fight Against Unfunded U S Mandates Chicago Tribune 15 Oct 1993 Print a b c Wellman Nola Unfunded Mandates Reduce Efficiency Local Control Improves Effectiveness Print ISBN missing Cockriel Thomas House Subcommittee Holds Hearing on the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 Penn Law 25 Feb 2011 Web 08 Apr 2012 http www law upenn edu blogs regblog 2011 02 house subcommittee holds hearing on the unfunded mandates reform act of 1995 html Unfunded Mandates Citizens Committee for an Effective Constitution New Roosevelt Foundation Inc Web 08 Apr 2012 lt http effectiveny org issue summary Unfunded Mandates gt Talbert Kent No Child Left Behind Act Not an Unfunded Mandate Court Cases Education Law Review Elementary amp Secondary School Legislation Charter Schools amp Unfunded Mandate Kent Talbert amp Rober Eitel Lawyer amp Attorney Talbert amp Eitel 21 June 2010 Web 08 Apr 2012 http www educationlawreview com k 12 education court cases a b c S 1 104th Cong U S G P O 25 1995 enacted Print Summary of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act EPA Environmental Protection Agency Web 09 Apr 2012 lt http www epa gov lawsregs laws umra html gt a b c d e f Dilger Robert J and Richard S Beth Unfunded Mandate Reform Act History Impact and Issues CRS Report for Congress 2011 Web S 1 104th Cong U S G P O 25 1995 enacted Print Section 424 b 1 S 1 104th Cong U S G P O 25 1995 enacted Print Section 424 a 2 C S 1 104th Cong U S G P O 25 1995 enacted Print Section 204 a S 1 104th Cong U S G P O 25 1995 enacted Print Section 203 a H R 50 Unfunded Mandates Information and Transparency Act of 2015 GovTrack Retrieved 9 February 2015 External links editThe U S Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations Website The U S General Services Administration Description of UMRA Executive Order 12291 Federal regulation State and Local Cost Estimate Act of 1981 H R 1465 The Americans with Disabilities Act Website Clean Air Act Description Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Unfunded mandate amp oldid 1200953591, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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