New e-rulemaking site facilitates participation

A joint project of the Transportation Department and Cornell University focuses on maximizing informed discussion of proposed federal rules.

Cynthia Farina would be the first to acknowledge that it is difficult to get members of the public engaged in a meaningful way in federal rulemaking. The topics are complex and technical, and people generally have limited time to review and analyze them.

More on e-rulemaking

E-rulemaking gets a fresh push

As a law professor at Cornell University and a principal researcher for the Cornell e-Rulemaking Initiative, Farina leads the Regulation Room e-rulemaking project being conducted online in cooperation with the Transportation Department.

One of the lessons she has learned is that using cool new technologies is not enough to draw people to visit a website and comment on proposed rules they might have a stake in, she said. Initiatives must also be designed to target specific audiences affected by the rules, she added.

In Regulation Room, proposed rules are chosen carefully for discussion. The focus is on selecting proposals that could have a major effect on stakeholders who are not likely to be aware of the proposals and not likely to comment on them on their own, Farina said.

The project has generated discussions on five proposals to date. By far the most popular was a debate on DOT’s upcoming regulations on airline passengers’ rights, including whether peanuts should no longer be served on airplanes out of consideration for people with peanut allergies. That rulemaking discussion generated more than 24,000 visits to the website.

Traffic on Regulation Room has varied from the thousands who participated in the air passenger rights discussion to the few hundred who weighed in on a proposal to require truckers to carry onboard recorders.

The latest discussion focuses on an advance notice of a DOT proposal to require that air travel websites and kiosks be accessible to people with disabilities.

Here are some other lessons Farina has learned.

  • Make outreach an essential part of your plan. Setting up a website for public discussion is just the beginning. Outreach has been crucial for making stakeholders aware of Regulation Room and motivating them to visit and participate, Farina said. Her group uses social networks, blogs and other tools to get the message out. Team members visit blogs and Facebook pages where discussions are being held on related topics and post comments directing people to Regulation Room to view the latest proposed rule.
  • Help people analyze the proposals. Most people do not have the time to read a 60-page notice of proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register. E-rulemaking projects should provide help in analyzing the proposed rule, such as outlining key points, explaining difficult details and pointing to areas where the proposal might affect stakeholders. “If you want participants to be informed, you have to provide the information,” Farina said.
  • Provide guidance for making effective comments. Regulation Room has moderators who can answer questions and clarify information. If visitors come to Regulation Room angry about a proposal but unsure of all the issues involved, they might also receive assistance in moving beyond their anger to address the pertinent issues, Farina said.

NEXT STORY: E-rulemaking gets a fresh push