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APA Office
Maine's Administrative Procedure Act
Division of Elections and Commissions
101 State House Station, Augusta, ME 04333-0101
PHONE (207) 624-7650
FAX (207) 287-6545
e-mail
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a list of rule-making agencies, links to chapter titles, and the actual chapters
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State agencies: click here to reach a list of rule-making forms available online.
Maine State Rule-making
CONTENTS
How to obtain copies or lists of rules
How to obtain certified public law copies or certified rule copies
Summary (Introduction)
Quick Reference Guide
1. What is a rule
2. Rule-making
- The Planning phase
- A.P.A. Requirements
3. Emergency Rules
4. Required Rules
5. Citizen Petition for Rule-making
6. Electronic filing provisions (Chapter 800)
How to obtain copies or lists of rules
Our office provides certified copies of rules at the statutory rate of 75 cents
per photocopy and a $10.00 certification fee. We do not publish a weekly register..
Each rule-making agency provides copies of its rules on request, free or at
cost.
A private company, Weil Publishing (P.O. Box 1990, Augusta, ME 04332-1990,
phone (800) 977-WEIL or (207) 621-0029) publishes a well-regarded edition of
all current Maine rules, with frequent updates, called the Code of Maine
Rules. It is a value-added product with detailed indexing, among other features.
Photocopies from libraries which own this product, such as the State Law and
Legislative References Libraries ((207) 287-1600), can be readily obtained.
Weil Publishing also publishes monthly the Maine Government Register, which includes notices of agency rule-making, the annual regulatory agendas of the agencies (their plans for upcoming rules), Executive Orders of the Governor, Attorney General opinions, lists of public laws enacted, appointments to state office, notices on state contracts, Board of Environmental Protection orders and agendas and minutes, Land Use Regulation agendas and minutes, Public Utilities Commission orders and agendas, and information from the Labor Relations Board.
Certified copies are generally used before a Court to establish the accuracy and
authenticity of the documents presented. Our office will make copies of public
law and rules and rivet a certification page onto them with the necessary seal
and signature, upon request. Cost is $10 per certified document and 75 cents per
photocopied page.
Summary Introduction to Maine Rule-making
In response to a decades-long concern about regulatory activity, the federal government and many other states have adopted administrative procedure acts. The intent has been to improve public access to agency decision-making and to increase awareness of agency rules.
The Maine Administrative Procedure Act (A.P.A.), 5 MRSA sec. 8001 through 11008, was adopted at the First Session of the 108th Legislature, with some amendments since. It applies uniform requirements to state agencies with rule-making power, and sets minimum standards for agencies to follow in adopting and implementing rules.
Very generally, the A.P.A. establishes a uniform, comprehensive set of procedures covering:
- The administrative actions of state agencies, including rule-making, advisory rulings, adjudicatory proceedings, and licensing; and
- Judicial review of those actions.
The process (quick reference guide)
- Proposed rule
- Agency files 1 copy of the proposal package with the Secretary of State
by noon Tuesday of the week prior to newspaper publication date. The package
includes the Notice of Rule-making Proposal Form (MAPA-3), a Fact Sheet,
and the text of the proposed language.
- Agency files 20 copies of the Fact Sheet with the Executive Director of Legislative Council within a day or two after filing with Secretary of State.
- Adopted rule
- The adopted rule package as filed with the APA Office should contain
all of the following: Notice of Rule-making Adoption Form (MAPA-4); Cover
Sheet (MAPA-1) signed by the agency and the Assistant Attorney General;
two copies of the text of the adopted language (for a rule amendment,
these show deleted language crossed out and new language underlined, the
so-called "legislative format"); one copy of the same text on
diskette with deleted language and underlines removed (i.e., a "clean"
text) in electronic format; a Basis Statement; a Summary of Comments and
Responses (which must include names of commenters and affiliations); the
Fact Sheet; and the Checklist.
- The APA Office reviews the rule and stamps it as "Accepted for Filing", returning a stamped copy to the agency as a means of verifying the completion of the filing.
- The rule becomes effective no less than five days after the it is Accepted for Filing by the APA Office. (The agency may designate an effective date anytime after that.)
1. What is a rule?
The statutory definition (5 MRSA sec. 8002 sub-sec. 9) is important because it triggers the application of the rule-making procedures as described below. There are two parts to the definition of "rule". The first describes a "rule" in broadly inclusive terms:
"...the whole or any part of every regulation, standard, code, statement of policy, or other agency statement of general applicability, including the amendment, suspension or repeal of any prior rule, that is or is intended to be judicially enforceable and implements, interprets or makes specific the law administered by the agency, or describes the procedures or practices of the agency."
What an agency calls its pronouncements is not significant. It is the impact, not the terminology, which determines the existence of a rule. If the statement:
- applies generally to persons outside the agency;
- is intended to have the same legal force as a statute, so that compliance could be compelled; and
- implements the law administered by the agency or describes its procedures, then it is a rule. Since amendment, suspension or repeal of a rule may have as important an effect as the adoption of a new rule, these actions are also "rules" in the sense that the full provisions of the A.P.A. law apply.
The second part of the statutory definition is a series of exclusions designed to clarify the broader concept. The term "rule" does not include:
- Policies or memoranda concerning only the internal management of an agency and not judicially enforceable;
- Advisory rulings issued under sub-chapter III of the A.P.A law;
- Decisions issued in adjudicatory proceedings; or
- Any form, instruction or explanatory statement of policy which is not judicially enforceable, intended solely as advice to persons in determining, exercising or complying with their rights, duties, or privileges.
Consult a staff attorney or the Attorney General in cases where the status of agency statements is uncertain.
2. Rule-making
Rule-making includes all of the steps an agency must follow to give a rule
legal effect. The process begins when someone decides that a rule is needed. The
process is completed when, after the agency has properly performed all the intervening
steps, the Secretary accepts the rule for filing.
1. The Planning Phase
Prior to beginning the formal process established by the A.P.A., an agency should:
- Determine whether the Legislature has granted it authority to make such a rule;
- Consider carefully what it wants to accomplish by rule-making;
- Read the rule-making provisions of the A.P.A. and the electronic filing procedures noted below;
- Review existing rules to avoid duplication, and fit the new rule logically within the body of existing rules; and
- Draft the proposed new rule in the format established by the Secretary.
- Consult with the Attorney General's office to be sure that the proposed rule meets with its approval.
2. A.P.A. Requirements
Note: the following forms are available online in Adobe Acrobat (.PDF) format:
Subchapter II of the A.P.A. describes the steps an agency must take to adopt rules.
A. Notice of Proposed Rule
The Notice of Rule-making Proposal (from MAPA-3) must be published 17-24 days prior to the hearing, if one is scheduled (5 MRSA sec. 8053 sub-sec. 5). If no hearing is scheduled, you must allow at least 30 days from the publication date for the public to submit comments.
To accomplish this, you should submit to the Secretary of State 1 copy of
the following:
- Rule-making proposal form (MAPA-3);
- Copy of the rule text; and
- Copy of the fact sheet.
The Notice of Rule-making Proposal is published in the Bangor Daily News,
Kennebec Journal, Portland Press Herald, Lewiston Sun-Journal
and the Central Maine Morning Sentinel every Wednesday. All rule-making
notices must be received by the Secretary of State by noon Tuesday of the week
prior to the publication date.
After comments have been received and if the rule which the agency intends to adopt is substantially different from what was proposed, twenty copies of a revised fact sheet must be submitted to the Executive Director of the Legislative Council (sec. 8053-A). The agency solicits comments from the public on the proposed changes by publishing a notice in the Secretary of State's Rule-making ad and allowing a thirty day comment period (5 MRSA sec. 8052 sub-sec. 5 par. B). This new comment deadline also triggers new adoption (120 day) and new Attorney General review (150 day) deadlines.
Besides the consolidated newspaper publication, notice of proposed rule-making
must be given to the following at least 20 days before the hearing or before
the deadline for comments, if no hearing is scheduled (see 5 MRSA sec. 8053):
- Any person specified in the statute authorizing the rule-making;
- Any person who has filed within the past year a written request with the agency for notice of rule-making. Notice must be by mail to the last address provided to the agency by the person and should include copies of the proposal, if requested. The agency may charge a fee reasonably related to the cost of this service; and
- Any trade, industry, professional interest group or regional publication that the agency deems effective in reaching affected persons.
Copies of the proposed rule itself must be available for public distribution at least 20 days prior to the hearing or 20 days prior to the comment deadline, if no hearing is held.
B. Public participation
The A.P.A. provides several opportunities for the public to participate in the state's rule-making process. When an agency proposes to adopt, amend, suspend or repeal a rule, interested persons must have a chance to submit comments for consideration.
Hearings
Interested persons may also submit comments at a public hearing. When required by other statutes or when requested by 5 persons, an agency must hold a hearing on its proposed rules (5 MRSA sec. 8052 sub-sec. 1). The A.P.A. itself does not otherwise require a hearing; however, an agency always may hold one if it wishes. Since public access and input are major goals of the law, a hearing may be a very useful method of informing and educating the public and for receiving public response.
Notice that the hearing will take place must be provided according to the procedures listed above.
A hearing can only be conducted by someone who is in a "major policy-influencing position" as listed in 5 MRSA c.71 (mainly commissioners, deputies, and bureau chiefs), or a designee who has responsibility over the subject matter to be discussed at the hearing (the designee provision, part of Public Law 1993, c.362, took effect October 13, 1993).
Although the A.P.A. does not have any requirements regarding the conduct of the hearing, the Secretary of State suggests the following:
- All persons conducting the hearing should identify themselves and give a brief description of their positions and responsibilities;
- The moderator should then give the background of the proposed rule, and state when the hearing was advertised and how (i.e., in which newspapers advertisements appeared, and which groups were notified by mail);
- The moderator should then explain the procedures to be followed in conducting the hearing:
- how long each person will have to speak, if any time limit is set at all--15 minutes would seem adequate in most instances;
- what the format will be and how individuals should pose their questions;
- The moderator may then begin, taking comments from:
- anyone opposing the rule;
- anyone approving of the rule;
- anyone else who neither opposes nor approves of the rule.
The moderator should have adequate knowledge and information available to be able to answer any and all questions that might arise. If a question is posed that no one present can answer, the department should send a written reply within a reasonable time after the hearing.
When a hearing is held, the A.P.A. requires the agency to accept comments for at least 10 days thereafter. Following the opportunity for hearing, an agency must consider available relevant information, including public comments, before adoption.
C. Adoption
After complying with notice and hearing requirements and after considering the
information available, an agency makes a formal decision on the proposed rule.
Adoption, if that is the decision, must be by official action of the agency,
and must take place within 120 days from the comment deadline (see 5 MRSA sec.
8052 sub-sec. 7.) The definition of adoption is the dated signature of the agency
representative at the certification statement in MAPA-1.
The comment deadline may be extended if notice is published in the state rule-making ad, before the expiration of the previous comment period (5 MRSA sec. 8052 sub-sec. 7). If you feel that you may have to extend the comment deadline, you should notify the Secretary of State as soon as possible so we can arrange to have the notice published in time. You might also consider allowing longer than a 10 day comment period after the hearing.
The A.P.A. requires an agency, at the time of adoption, to file with the Secretary
of State a written statement explaining the factual and policy basis for the
rule. When adopting a rule the agency shall also address all comments received
and state its rationale for adoption or failing to adopt suggested changes (5
MRSA sec. 8052 sub-sec. 5). The agency may consolidate similar comments instead
of addressing each one individually, but a provision of law (Public Law 1993,
c.446, affecting 5 MRSA sec. 8052 sub-sec. 5) requires the listing of the names
of persons whose comments were received and the organizations they represent,
along with summaries of their comments. A record of the vote of agency members
in rule-making decisions must be maintained by each agency and available for
public inspection (5 MRSA sec. 8056 sub-sec. 5).
D. Filing
Once an agency adopts a rule, the A.P.A. requires that the agency:
- Submit a copy to the Attorney General for approval as to form and legality -- such approval takes the form of a dated signature by an assistant attorney general; and
- File a certified copy with the Secretary of State in a prescribed form (5
MRSA sec. 8056 sub-sec. 1); this is MAPA-4, MAPA-1, the rule on paper (2 copies)
and in electronic form (1 copy), Basis Statement, Comments and Responses,
Fact Sheet, and Checklist.
Rules are not effective until an agency has complied with these provisions.
In addition, an agency must supply free or at cost, a copy of each rule adopted to anyone who has filed within the past year a written request for the agency's rules (5 MRSA sec. 8056 sub-sec. sec. 2,4). This requirement is intended to aid the general public and the legal community by providing greater access to current agency rules.
After filing with the Secretary of State, a notice of rule adoption is published
by the Secretary in the weekly consolidated newspaper ad (5 MRSA sec. 8056 sub-sec.
1 par. D). The text submitted by the agency on MAPA-4, Notice of Rule Adoption,
is used for the notice. Agencies will be billed periodically for their pro
rata share of the publication expense.
E. Provisional Adoption of Major Substantive Rules
Public Law 1995, c.463 introduced a new element into the rule-making process, that of legislative review of major substantive rules. Provisions of the new law require that the Legislature, when assigning rule-making authority to state agencies, differentiate between minor technical rules and major substantive rules. Minor technical chapters proceed through the process described here. Major substantive chapters, when they reach the adoption stage as described above, are labelled as "Provisionally Adopted" and sent to the Legislature for Committee and final review, including a legislative hearing.
The introduction of legislative review will be a gradual development as the
Legislature rewrites the rule-making authority provisions for each of the various
agencies.
F. Agency responsibility
The A.P.A. does not relieve an agency of any requirement imposed by other statutes to provide more detailed notice, to hold a public hearing or to file with or gain approval from other designated persons. Each agency must be aware of such additional requirements.
3. Emergency Rules
In emergencies, compliance with the A.P.A. requirements of notice and hearing prior to adoption might result in a dangerous delay, preventing the rules from having the necessary effect. The provisions of 5 MRSA sec. 8054 allow an agency to modify those requirements to avoid an immediate threat to public health, safety and welfare, but only to the minimum extent necessary.
Emergency rules are subject to the filing requirement of 5 MRSA sec. 8056. They may be effective for 90 days or less and must include a statement of findings of the adopting agency describing the emergency. These findings are subject to judicial review to insure that this exception to the A.P.A. is used only for actual emergencies (5 MRSA sec. 8054 sub-sec. 2). Within 10 days from the adoption of the emergency rule, twenty copies of a fact sheet must be sent to the Executive Director of the Legislative Council (Stn. 115).
4. Required Rules
In addition to its substantive rules, each agency is required by 5 MRSA sec. 8051 to also adopt rules of practice governing the conduct of adjudicatory proceedings, licensing proceedings and the rendering of advisory rulings by the agency, unless such rules are provided by statute. They indicate what one needs to know in order to present a case before the agency or to obtain an advisory opinion. Rules of practice must be adopted and filed in the same manner as other rules.
5. Citizen Petition for Rule-making
Anyone may petition an agency to adopt or change a rule. When a petition is submitted by 150 or more registered voters of the State, the agency must begin rule-making proceedings within 60 days. The circulator must verify the petitions before a Notary Public and the appropriate registrar(s) of voters must certify that the signatures are of registered voters. It is the responsibility of the petitioners to insure that the requirements are met. An agency need not accept an incomplete or defective petition. The individual should obtain blank copies of the petition forms from the agency. You may also contact the Secretary of State for copies of the standard forms.
When fewer than 150 registered voters petition, the agency has an option. Within 60 days, it must either respond in writing, denying the request and stating its reasons for denial; or initiate rule-making proceedings to consider the proposed change.
6. Electronic Filing Provisions
Agencies must follow the provisions of 29-250 Chapter 800, the Secretary of State's rule on electronic filing. The text follows:
29-250
Department of the Secretary of State
Bureau of Corporations, Elections and Commissions
Division of Rules, Commissions and Notaries
Chapter 800: Procedures for the Electronic Filing of Rules
Summary: Through Public Law 1991 chapter 554, the Maine Legislature mandated the Secretary of State to establish procedures and criteria for the filing of rules in electronic text format. A massive conversion project was undertaken throughout state government in the Fall of 1995. This rule establishes procedures and criteria for the electronic filing of rules.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
SECTION 1. ELECTRONIC FILING
SECTION 2. RULE-MAKING PROCEDURES
1. Principles
A. Repeal and replace
B. Non-substantive changes
2. Rule proposals
A. Submissions to the Executive Director
B. Filing with the Secretary of State: The proposal package
(1) Electronic file
(2) Paper forms
C. Public comment
3. Rule adoptions
A. Certification statement
B. Filing with the Secretary of State: The adoption package
(1) Electronic file
(2) Paper forms
C. Duties of the Secretary of State
D. Duties of the agency
SECTION 3. FORMAT AND STRUCTURE
1. Electronic submission
A. Delivery
B. File (word processing) format
C. Filename conventions
D. Preferred text format
(1) Chapters not yet in preferred format
(2) Page orientation
(3) Fonts
(4) Margins
(5) TAB's and INDENT's
(6) Underlines and strikeouts
(7) Special features
(8) Cross-references
(9) Page numbers
(10) Graphics
E. Virus checking
2. Rule structure
SECTION 4:ONGOING CLEAN-UP OF RULES
SECTION 5:TRANSITION
SECTION 6:DISTRIBUTION OF MACHINE READABLE RULES BY THE SECRETARY OF STATE
- SECTION 1. ELECTRONIC FILING
- Agencies promulgating rules under the Maine Administrative Procedure Act
(APA) must file new and amended rules in electronic text format with the APA
Office of the Secretary of State.
- SECTION 2. RULE-MAKING PROCEDURES
-
- Principles
- A. Repeal and replace
- Rather than amend small parts of a chapter, agencies are encouraged
to repeal and replace the entire chapter. Many potential errors are
avoided by working with the entire chapter.
- B. Non-substantive changes
- If the only changes to a rule already on file in electronic text
format involve renumbering and minor corrections -- that is, there
are no substantive changes to the rule's text -- the corrections can
be accomplished administratively at any time by the APA Office without
engaging in the proposal and adoption process. Non-substantive changes
include, but are not limited to: headnotes and the correction of spelling,
format, and numbering; and the updating of agency names, addresses
and phone numbers, and statutory and other legal references.
- Rule proposals
- A. Submissions to the Executive Director
- The submissions of 20 copies of the rule-making Fact Sheet to the
Executive Director of the Legislative Council, as described in the
Administrative Procedure Act, is a separate activity performed by
the agency and not the APA Office.
- B. Filing with the Secretary of State: The proposal package
- The proposal package must contain:
- (1) Electronic file
APA Office Note: under current law, the filing of the text of the rule proposal in any format is optional. The forms in (2) are mandatory.
- The proposal submission will consist of a single file in electronic
text format, containing the text of the proposal.
Complete repeal and replace of the entire chapter is preferred,
but if the agency wants to restrict its action to only part
of a rule, it may submit only the full section or sections of
the rule that are being amended, with changes clearly marked
using underlines for added language, and strikeouts for language
to be deleted.
If submitted on diskette, the diskette should be clearly labeled
with the agency's name, rule chapter number and title, and date.
- (2) Paper forms
- (a) The Fact Sheet.
(b) A signed MAPA-3 form, Notice of Rulemaking Proposal. This
signed copy is used for billing, through the state's MFASIS
system, the agency's pro-rated cost of the newspaper ad.
- C. Public comment
- The agency must follow all the provisions of the Administrative
Procedure Act regarding a public comment period and hearing provisions.
In addition, the APA Office may post the rule proposal for public
access through electronic means at its discretion.
- Rule adoptions
Rule adoptions are processed in the following manner:
- A. Certification statement
- The certification statement, signed by the rule-making authority
on the MAPA-1 form, will read: "I, (name of official empowered to
adopt rules), hereby certify that the electronic text identified as
follows:
Filename.Extension Size Date Time
(the appropriate information)
is a true copy of the rule(s) described above. I further certify
that all portions of this rule are adopted in compliance with the
requirements of the Maine Administrative Procedure Act. (Name of
agency, official's signature, date of signature)."
(APA Office Note: the certification statement just described
has proven to be cumbersome. The agency should substitute: "I,
(name of official empowered to adopt rules), hereby certify that
the attached text is a true copy of the rule(s) described above.
I further certify that all portions of this rule are adopted in
compliance with the requirements of the Maine Administrative Procedure
Act. (Name of agency, official's signature, date of signature."))
B. Filing with the Secretary of State: The adoption package
(APA Office Note: this paragraph will be amended shortly as
shown.)
- In submitting the final version of an amended rule, the agency must
submit an electronic copy of the chapter or section
as it existed
before the proposal, annotated with changes surviving from the original
proposal, from public comment, and from legislative action if any.
Deleted language is indicated by strikeout. Added language is indicated
by underlines. in "clean copy" format, with strikeout text
and underlines removed.
There follows a description of the entire adoption package, both
paper and electronic items that must be filed.
- (1) Electronic file
- The adopted rule, a single file containing the text of the rule
or amended portion of the rule. A copy goes directly into the
read-only Historical File.
- (2) Paper forms
- (a) One signed paper copy of the MAPA-4 form, Notice of Rulemaking
Adoption. This signed copy is used for billing through the state's
MFASIS system, the agency's pro-rated cost of the newspaper ad.
(b) Two signed paper copies of the MAPA-1 cover sheet form.
One is returned to the agency with a copy of the filed rule.
(c) Two copies of the Basis Statement.
(d) Two copies of the Comments and Responses -- comments from
the public, whether through a hearing or mail, FAX, e-mail,
phone, or personal contact, and responses by the agency.
(e) Two copies of the Fact Sheet.
(f) Two copies of the Checklist.
- C. Duties of the Secretary of State
- The APA Office must return an electronic copy of the adopted chapter,
incorporating any amendments, to the agency as its officially adopted
rule identified by filename, file size, and file date. The APA Office
must also return one of the signed paper MAPA-1 adoption forms stamped
and dated "Accepted for Filing." Any non-substantive change by the
Secretary of State affecting the size, date and time of the file will
be described for the agency's information.
- D. Duties of the agency
- The agency must carefully proofread the printed copy and, within
thirty (30) working days of the date "Accepted for Filing" on the
MAPA-1 form returned to the agency, notify the APA Office of any errors
or omissions in the text.
- SECTION 3. FORMAT AND STRUCTURE
- Agencies must use consistent formats and a consistent structure throughout
the text of a rule.
- Electronic submission
- A. Delivery
- The delivery of electronic text information to the Secretary of
State must be in a manner approved by the APA Office.
- B. File (word processing) format
- Agencies must use a word processing file format approved by the
APA Office. This may be ASCII if no other compatibility can be found.
- (APA Office Note: the following item will be deleted in an amendment
to be filed shortly.)
C. Filename conventions
Each file submitted under this chapter must have a filename that
consists of the agency's unit number and the chapter number of the
rule being submitted, separated by the letter "C." For example, the
Secretary of State is Unit 250, and its chapter 11 would be: 250C011.
- D. Preferred text format
-
- (1) Chapters not yet in preferred format
- When existing rules do not meet all the formatting requirements
described below, the agency should comply with them when next
repealing and replacing the chapter. When amending a chapter that
is not in the preferred format, the agency should either place
the entire chapter into the preferred format and repeal and replace
it, or submit the amendment in the chapter's existing format and
numbering conventions and make the complete replacement at a later
time, as soon as it can. The APA Office may, at any time, rearrange
a rule's formatting through its power to make non-substantive
changes with agency notification.
- (2) Page orientation
- All submissions should be designed for printing on 8 1/2 x 11
inch pages, portrait orientation.
- (3) Fonts
- The basic text font may be any 12 point font or a 10 character
per inch fixed font such as Courier 10.
- (4) Margins
- Margins must be 1 inch all around or more.
- (5) TAB's and INDENT's
- Rules use an indented block format. [Indent]s rather than [Tab]s
should be used. Stops for the [Indent]s using the Courier 10 font
are 1.6, 2.2, 2.8, 3.4, 4.0, 4.7 -- every .6 of an inch except
for the last one (which allows (viii), the longest subdivision
we consider likely). This rule uses those settings. (NOTE: Actually
it only comes close in this HTML-formatted version; see the word
processing file under the Secretary of State's rule page for a
properly formatted copy.) Sub-section 1, for example, would involve
the following keystrokes from the margin (using WordPerfect for
this and other examples):
[Indent]1.[Indent]text.
Note that the text itself is indented beyond its numbered
heading.
- (6) Underlines and strikeouts
- Underlines and strikeouts must only be used to show changes
in text between the rule currently on file, and the amended rule.
If the agency's word processor is incapable of generating underlines
or strikeouts, the agency must use another clearly visible technique
on the paper copy, such as highlighting, with the approval of
the APA Office.
- (7) Special features
- Other character-related features, such as changes in font, redlining,
double underlining, bold and italics, may be used for the cosmetic
appearance of the printed version of a rule, but only if their
removal through of a conversion process would not damage the logic
and meaning of the rule. Superscript and subscript should be used
only if absolutely necessary.
- (8) Cross-references
- References by numbered citation to statute or other rules within
the text of a particular rule should be avoided. This is because
an amendment or repeal of the outlying law or rule would interfere
with the citation's accuracy. Instead, the rule might refer to
the general area of law or regulatory function.
- (9) Page numbers
- References to page numbers should be avoided, because electronic
reformatting often changes page numbering. Page numbers should
exist only for the short-term convenience of the user. Tables
of contents and indices are better written as citing sections,
sub-sections, etc., rather than page numbers.
- (10) Graphics
- If graphical attachments are absolutely necessary, they should
come with the rule as attendant files in TIFF format, or another
format by mutual agreement of the agency and the APA Office.
- E. Virus checking
- The agency must scan outgoing diskettes and files for viruses and
eliminate any found.
- Rule structure
When people think of a "rule," they generally are thinking of a chapter.
Chapter numbers are assigned by the APA Office in consultation with
the agency. A chapter should be a relatively small body of regulation
on a specific topic. Agencies are better served by adopting a number
of smaller chapters, than by adopting one massive chapter which attempts
to cover all areas of agency responsibility. Smaller chapters are more
easily amended, processed, and replaced without affecting other ones;
they also lend themselves to more cost-effective distribution.
Rule structure must follow A Guide of the Rulemaking Process for State
Agencies, published by the APA Office. The next authoritative source
is the Maine Legislative Drafting Manual, published by the Revisor of
Statutes. The hierarchy of headings should follow this pattern:
CHAPTER (1,2...)A "rule" is a complete chapter; this is the overall title of your rule.
(SUB-CHAPTERS or PARTS might be allowed in exceptional cases; please consult the APA Officer.)
SECTION (1, 2...)Spell out "SECTION" in caps.; don't use .
Sub-section (1, 2...)Numbers and letters stand alone from here.
Paragraph (A, B...)
Subparagraph ((1), (2)...)
Division ((a), (b)...)
Subdivision ((i)...)
Within a rule (chapter), this number scheme would be used like this, from
the margin:
SECTION 1.
1.
A.
(1)
(a)
(i)
Hybrid numbering such as SECTION 1-A (which would fall between 1 and 2)
or paragraph A-1 should be avoided; it would be better to renumber the
entire chapter.
Section numbers are sequential throughout the rule. All other numbers
revert to the first number in their sequence when the next higher number
(heading) changes. For example:
SECTION 1.
1.
2.
3.
SECTION 2.
1.
A.
B.
C.
2.
A.
B.
SECTION 3.
1.
2.
If any rule existing at the time that this chapter takes effect does not
conform to the standard structure, the agency should to adopt this structure
when the rule is next repealed and replaced.
A separate paragraph or note must be indented the same as the section,
etc. under which it falls. Agencies should avoid the placing of finer
subdivisions between unnumbered paragraphs of a larger subdivision.
- SECTION 4: ONGOING CLEAN-UP OF RULES
- The APA Office will examine electronic text copies of rules in its Current
File as time permits. If it makes non-substantive changes as a result of that
examination, the APA Office will send the corrected version of the rule to
the agency and note its action in the Historical File.
- SECTION 5: TRANSITION
- Although the intent is full conversion of all rules into electronic text
format, rules may be accepted by the APA Office, at its discretion, in either
paper or electronic formats as long as the rules are otherwise in compliance
with the Administrative Procedure Act.
- SECTION 6: DISTRIBUTION OF MACHINE READABLE RULES BY THE SECRETARY OF STATE
- The Secretary of State may not make available to the public any rule in
machine readable form prior to its formal adoption under the procedures established
in this chapter.
The Secretary of State may make available to the public any rule or group
of rules through the World-Wide Web or other publicly-accessible medium.
STATUTORY AUTHORITY: 5 MRSA Section 8056 sub-Section 8
EFFECTIVE DATE (EMERGENCY VERSION): October 20, 1995
EFFECTIVE DATE: April 23, 1996
EFFECTIVE DATE (ELECTRONIC CONVERSION): April 28, 1996
If you need any forms or have any questions on the operation of the Administrative
Procedure Act, feel free to call Administrative Rules Coordinator Don Wismer at
(207) 624-7647.