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Ohio law calls for regulatory reduction (2022)

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State governments have taken a variety of actions that impact the administrative state at the state level. These actions may address aspects of the regulatory process—such as rulemaking and regulatory review—or interactions between the administrative state and other branches of state government, including judicial deference.

The following news event demonstrates a noteworthy response to administrative practices made by state governments. Click here to view a full list of noteworthy state approaches to address the administrative state.

Ohio law calls for regulatory reduction (2022)

Ohio Governor Mike DeWine (R) on March 10, 2022, signed legislation to extend the state’s 2-for-1 regulatory requirement through 2025 and require state agencies to reduce their regulations by 30 percent.[1][2]

Ohio lawmakers first required state administrative agencies to cut two regulations for each new regulation issued as part of the state’s two-year budget in 2019.[1] The requirement aimed to codify the intent of President Donald Trump’s (R) Executive Order 13771, which required federal administrative agencies to eliminate two old regulations in order to promulgate a new regulation. Senate Bill 9—the 2022 legislation—extends the 2-for-1 regulatory requirement through June 30, 2025.[1]

Senate Bill 9 also requires state agencies to reduce their regulations by 30 percent by June 30, 2025, among other provisions. An agency that does not meet this mandate must continue to follow the 2-for-1 regulatory requirement beyond the stipulated deadline.[1]

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