FR Taking Longer to Publish Lengthy, Complex Documents Due to Pandemic
The government's repository of regulatory actions and comment deadlines is experiencing delays publishing complex rules due to the COVID-19 pandemic and an “unusually” large number of documents submitted this year, said Katerina Horska, Office of the Federal Register legal affairs and policy director. The Federal Register typically publishes rules within three days of receiving items, but some “can take more than a month,” she emailed us Wednesday. “Given the unusually high volume of documents submitted since the beginning of this year, compounded with the number of emergency documents related to COVID-19 submitted over the past several months, lengthy and more complex documents are taking longer to publish.” The FTC is among communications agencies affected. Horska said FR staff processes documents “on a first-in, first-out system as much as possible,” but that process may be interrupted by emergency documents for the pandemic and the time it takes to work with agencies on edits. For “complex” documents that aren't designated as emergencies, “the backlog has only extended the usual processing time,” she noted. "The FTC has experienced delays of three to four weeks on rulemaking documents (proposed rules, final rules)," emailed a commission representative Thursday. "There have been no delays on notices." NTIA hasn't experienced slowdowns with its FR documents, most of which at that agency are routine and not of a regulatory nature, a rep said. The FCC declined to comment.