I have become increasingly baffled as to how these extremely important regulatory organizations operate, and I am very skeptical that this is the ideal way for them to operate.
I had initially assumed that these were basically government agencies, but they instead appear to basically independent organizations (I assume they are non-profits?) that we have delegated massive regulatory authority to. I am surprised that there hasn't been a legal controversy about the nondelegation doctrine with any of these groups.
I am not sure if it would be better if these were fully government agencies. But there absolutely should be more government oversight and input, including the ability for congress to reject or modify these codes or standards.
In recent years there has been an bipartisan rebellion in state legislatures against the US based "International Code Council" to make it cheaper to build housing. Many states legalized single stairway buildings, and CT & NC changed their codes so that triplexes and fourplexes under the IRC, which previously only governed single family homes and duplexes.
Ideally the federal government would be pushing for these kinds of changes so they can be adopted nationally. But it isn't clear to me if they actually have any oversight over the ICC and could make those changes.
I have become increasingly baffled as to how these extremely important regulatory organizations operate, and I am very skeptical that this is the ideal way for them to operate.
I had initially assumed that these were basically government agencies, but they instead appear to basically independent organizations (I assume they are non-profits?) that we have delegated massive regulatory authority to. I am surprised that there hasn't been a legal controversy about the nondelegation doctrine with any of these groups.
I am not sure if it would be better if these were fully government agencies. But there absolutely should be more government oversight and input, including the ability for congress to reject or modify these codes or standards.
In recent years there has been an bipartisan rebellion in state legislatures against the US based "International Code Council" to make it cheaper to build housing. Many states legalized single stairway buildings, and CT & NC changed their codes so that triplexes and fourplexes under the IRC, which previously only governed single family homes and duplexes.
Ideally the federal government would be pushing for these kinds of changes so they can be adopted nationally. But it isn't clear to me if they actually have any oversight over the ICC and could make those changes.
Yes!! These things can be incredibly opaque and -as you can see in this example- quite vulnerable regulatory capture.
Can CRISPR help us exhale propane? I'm sure that would only be beneficial and have no negative side effects