About | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline

1 1 (February 28, 2025)

handle is hein.crs/govessa0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 




Congressional Research Service
informing the legislative debate since 1914


0


                                                                                      Updated February 28, 2025

Federal Regional Commissions and Authorities: Operations


The federal regional commissions and authorities are ten
congressionally chartered, federal-state partnerships that
were developed to address economic distress in targeted
geographic regions. With congressional authorization, new
regional commissions could be created in areas of the
country not currently serviced. This In Focus addresses past
and anticipated future congressional interest into the issues
and processes involved in starting a federal regional
commission based on existing models.

Current Commissions and Authorities
As of February 2025, ten federal regional commissions
have been authorized by Congress. (Although some are
designated as authorities, this In Focus refers to all of
them collectively as commissions.) Six are currently
active, have received recent appropriations, and have a
Senate-confirmed federal co-chair (or equivalent) in place:
the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC); the Delta
Regional Authority (DRA); the Denali Commission; the
Northern Border Regional Commission (NBRC); the
Southeast Crescent Regional Commission (SCRC); and the
Southwest Border Regional Commission (SBRC). The
active commissions engage in economic development
activities in their service areas with funding from annual
congressional appropriations. Four are currently inactive:
the Mid-Atlantic Regional Commission (MARC), the
Northern Great Plains Regional Authority (NGPRA), the
Southern New England Regional Commission  (SNERC),
and the Great Lakes Authority (GLA). GLA is authorized
and has received appropriations, but has yet to convene its
members  or undertake core planning or investment
activities.

StructuraL Features

Common Structures
While the authorized federal regional commissions have
individual distinguishing features, they all include a
structure broadly modeled after the Appalachian Regional
Commission, which was established by Congress in 1965
(40 U.S.C. §§14101-14704). The commission structure is
comprised of a federal co-chair and the state governors of
member  states or their designated representative (of which
one serves as state co-chair). The commission is
supplemented by professional staff to carry out
organizational activities. While largely considered
independent federal agencies, most commission members
and staff are not federal employees. The main exception is
the federal co-chair, that co-chair's alternate, and that co-
chair's direct staff. However, a commission may adopt
certain federal personnel practices. For example, the ARC
pegs its salary grades to the Office of Personnel
Management's  General Schedule, and former federal
employees may remain in the federal retirement system.


Structural Exceptions
A new  federal regional commission may use a similar
structure to the one established for the ARC, which was
broadly replicated in the other commissions. However, this
basic structure has been adapted to the circumstances and
needs of the various regions in question. For example, the
ARC's  and DRA's authorizing statutes require state
governors to serve as ARC or DRA members, respectively,
and has no allowance for governors to designate a voting
representative (although an alternate may be allowed in
certain circumstances). By contrast, the other active
regional commissions allow for the member state governors
to appoint a designated representative to serve in their
stead.

As a single-state commission, the Denali Commission
features several structural exceptions. Alongside the federal
co-chair, the commission is comprised of the state governor
(who is state co-chair) as well as five other members: the
University of Alaska president; the Alaska Municipal
League president; the Alaska Federation of Natives
president; the Alaska State AFL-CIO president; and the
Associated General Contractors of Alaska president. The
Denali Commission's federal co-chair is appointed by the
U.S. Secretary of Commerce, while the federal co-chairs of
other commissions are appointed by the President and
require confirmation by the Senate. The Denali
Commission's inclusion of non-gubernatorial membership
is also a feature of the multi-state NGPRA. Though
inactive, the NGPRA consisted of the federal co-chair, the
state governors, as well as a Native American tribal co-
chair. The NGPRA  also used a 501(c)(3) organization as a
resource for implementation.

A new  federal regional commission may share the existing
commissions' basic structures while including features to
represent certain regional economic, social, cultural, or
historical characteristics. Such an approach could also be
adapted to programmatic intent; for example, emphases on
certain industries, types of economic development (such as
infrastructure or workforce development), or other policy
priorities, like energy transition or conservation.

Authorization and Estab shment
Process

Regiona   Consensus  and  Demand
While chartered by Congress, federal regional commissions
are rooted in the states and localities they represent. Prior to
their statutory creation, all federal regional commissions
were preceded by state, local, and/or congressional
expressions of support. The ARC, for example, was
founded in response to initiatives from Appalachian
regional governors. Those efforts led to presidential actions

What Is HeinOnline?

HeinOnline is a subscription-based resource containing thousands of academic and legal journals from inception; complete coverage of government documents such as U.S. Statutes at Large, U.S. Code, Federal Register, Code of Federal Regulations, U.S. Reports, and much more. Documents are image-based, fully searchable PDFs with the authority of print combined with the accessibility of a user-friendly and powerful database. For more information, request a quote or trial for your organization below.



Short-term subscription options include 24 hours, 48 hours, or 1 week to HeinOnline.

Already a HeinOnline Subscriber?

profiles profiles most