Bill

Bill > S1691


NJ S1691

NJ S1691
Revises "Administrative Procedure Act" concerning socio-economic impact statements for proposed rule-making.


summary

Introduced
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill revises the "Administrative Procedure Act," P.L.1968, c.410 (C.52:14B-1 et seq.) (APA) to add specific requirements for the socio-economic impact statement required as part of the rule-making process. The APA, enacted in 1968, establishes the procedures that agencies in the Executive branch of State government must follow when exercising their authority to adopt rules and regulations. This bill expands the requirements for the description of the expected socio-economic impact of a proposed rule-making by requiring State agencies to obtain, for inclusion in the publication of the rule proposal in the New Jersey Register, a socio-economic impact description of the proposed rule from the regulated community. Under this bill, a State agency, prior to submitting a proposed rule to the Office of Administrative Law (OAL) for publication in the New Jersey Register, would be required to contact one representative of the segment of the public proposed to be regulated by the rule (i.e., the regulated community), provide that representative with a written copy of the proposed rule, and provide the opportunity for the representative to prepare a description of the socio-economic impact of the proposed rule. The agency would select the regulated community representative from among those interested persons associated with the segment of the public proposed to be regulated by the rule who have provided substantial written submissions to the agency on previous rules proposals on similar subject matter. Upon receipt of the socio-economic impact description of the proposed rule, the agency would be required to include, in full, that description in the proposed rule submitted to the OAL for publication in the New Jersey Register. The bill provides that the OAL may require payment by the regulated community representative preparing the socio-economic impact description in an amount sufficient to cover the proportional costs of printing and distributing the New Jersey Register attributable to the publication of that description. An agency would not be required to include a socio-economic impact description prepared by a representative of the regulated community if the agency finds that the proposed rule would impose an insignificant impact, either because the scope of the regulation is minimal, or there is an extreme unlikelihood that the regulation would evoke a socio-economic impact. In this case, the agency's finding and an indication of the basis for its finding are required to be included in the notice of a proposed rule published by OAL.

AI Summary

This bill amends the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), which outlines the procedures state agencies must follow when creating rules and regulations, by adding new requirements for socio-economic impact statements. Specifically, before proposing a rule, state agencies must now contact a representative from the group that will be regulated by the rule, provide them with a copy of the proposed rule, and give them the chance to prepare a description of the rule's socio-economic impact, including its effect on job creation and retention. Agencies will select this representative from individuals who have previously submitted significant written comments on similar rule proposals. The agency must then include this description in full when publishing the proposed rule in the New Jersey Register, though the Office of Administrative Law may charge the representative for the cost of printing and distributing this information. However, agencies are exempt from this requirement if they determine the proposed rule will have an insignificant impact due to its minimal scope or a very low likelihood of causing any socio-economic effects, in which case they must state their finding and the reason for it in the rule proposal notice.

Committee Categories

Government Affairs

Sponsors (1)

Last Action

Introduced in the Senate, Referred to Senate Legislative Oversight Committee (on 01/13/2026)

bill text


bill summary

Loading...

bill summary

Loading...

bill summary

Loading...