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1 Paperwork Reduction Act 1 (2012)

handle is hein.usfed/ppwra0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 



               ADMINISTRATIVE CONFERENCE OF TIE UNITED STATES




           Administrative Conference Recommendation 2012-4


                           Paperwork Reduction Act

                                Adopted  June 15, 2012


       The  Paperwork  Reduction  Act  (PRA), enacted  in 1980  and  revised upon   its

reauthorization in 1986 and 1995, created the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs

(OIRA) within the Office of Management  and Budget (OMB)  to oversee information policy

within the executive branch. The Act requires, among other things, that agencies secure OMB

approval before collecting information from the public. Since 1995, this has meant that

agencies must put a proposed information collection request out for public comment for 60

days before finalizing it and submitting it for OIRA's approval.' An additional 30-day comment

period is opened while OMB reviews the request.2 One of the statute's goals is to reduce the

burden on the public of agency information requests. The burden of such requests on small

businesses was of particular concern to Congress in drafting and revising the Act. OMB review

also ensures that agencies employ solid methodologies in designing information collections,

particularly those seeking to gather statistical data. Another, broader goal of the PRA was to

encourage  agencies to implement a life-cycle approach to information management. This

means  that, from the initial stage in which information is collected from the public, agencies

must give thought to how the information will be used, disseminated, stored, and disposed of

throughout the entire process.




I See 44 U.S.C. § 3506(c)(2).

2 See id. § 3507(b).

 See OFFICE OF MGMT. & BUDGET, EXEC. OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT, OMB CIRCULAR A-130, MANAGEMENT OF FEDERAL
INFORMATION RESOURCES §§ 6(i), (j), (0) (1996).


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