1 / 67

The Texas Administrative Code and Code of Federal Regulations

The Texas Administrative Code and Code of Federal Regulations. Administrative Policy Writing Spring 2012. Administrative Policy Writing Spring 2012. Introduction Why are we talking about citing to agency regulations? Why do we need to know this? Answer :

ora
Download Presentation

The Texas Administrative Code and Code of Federal Regulations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Texas Administrative Code and Code of Federal Regulations • Administrative Policy Writing • Spring 2012

  2. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Introduction • Why are we talking about citing to agency regulations? • Why do we need to know this? • Answer: • Government documents frequently discuss and cite regulations. • If you want to be able to read, write, and understand government documents, you must be able to decipher rule citations. • This also applies to professional and technical writers who must cite to regulations in various technical documents. • As you will see, it is actually pretty easy. Believe it or not, you don’t have to be a lawyer to read regulations. • Before we get into citing rules, let’s look at a couple of government communications. You will see what I mean.

  3. We will learn how to write a citation like this.

  4. Or this.

  5. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 First a REVIEW • Remember, we are talking about agency regulations. Citing statutes is another important topic for government writing. • But we just don’t have time for it! • The Texas secretary of state is responsible for publishing the adopted regulations of state agencies in the Texas Administrative Code. • The Administrative Code is the collection of rules that are currently in effect.

  6. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 First a REVIEW • Valid agency rules have the force of law. • The Texas Administrative Code is a “code” – meaning a systematically arranged collection or compendium of statutes, rules, or regulations. • When an agency or regulated industry cites agency rules, the citation is to the Administrative Code.

  7. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 First a REVIEW • Federal regulation are organized in a similar fashion. • The regulations adopted by federal agencies are published in the Code of Federal Regulations (“CFR”) • Like the TAC, the CFR is available online.

  8. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Citation • Just like other professions, government writers have certain conventions for citing texts. • (Just like APA style or MLA style.) • There is no one “correct” way to cite the rules. • In fact, there is a clear lack of uniformity in the way government agencies and businesses cite rules in the Code.

  9. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 • What follows is an overview of the parts of the TAC and how rules are most typically cited by businesses and governmental bodies. • My goals for this unit: • I want you to be able to navigate the TAC on your own and find rules by looking at a citation. • And write a basic citation to the TAC: the kind you might find in a letter or other government document.

  10. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 The parts of a rule citation 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 330.9(a). Subsection (a) Chapter 330 Section 9 Abbreviations Title number 30 This symbol means “section”

  11. This is a rule on the management of municipal solid waste.

  12. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Code Abbreviation • The abbreviation “Tex. Admin. Code” is the most commonly used in citation. • However, you will also see agencies simply write “TAC.” • Thus, the previous citation could also be written as • 30 TAC § 330.9(a). • A citation to the CFR is similar.

  13. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Code Abbreviation 8 C.F.R. § 207.1(a) Title number 8 Notice the periods Instead of chapter, this is part 207 This is section 1 and subsection (a)

  14. This is a federal rule on the requirements for seeking entry into the country as a refugee.

  15. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Title • For the remainder of this class, we are going to focus on navigating the TAC. • Let’s go to the TAC online: http://www.sos.state.tx.us/tac/ • The first division of the Administrative Code is into titles. • Each title covers a particular subject-matter. • So, for example, title 22 contains rules adopted by various examining boards (Nursing Board, Vet Board, etc.) • The title number appears first in a citation: • 22 Tex. Admin. Code.

  16. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012

  17. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Parts • The Code is further divided into a number of parts appearing under each title. • For example, see how title 22 has parts numbered 1, 3, 5, 7, and so on. • What happened to 2, 4, and 6? • These might be placeholders for future rules or rules that were withdrawn from the Code. • The part numbers under each title do not appear in a citation to the Code. But they are useful when looking for a rule.

  18. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012

  19. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Chapters • The next level of division is the chapter. So every part of the Code contains one or more chapter. • See, for example, 30 Tex. Admin. Code Chapter 330. • Each chapter deals with a more specific subject-matter: • Title 30 includes environmental rules. • Part 1 includes rules of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality • Chapter 330 includes environmental rules dealing with municipal solid waste (i.e. garbage)

  20. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012

  21. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Chapters continued • Sometimes a writer wants to cite to an entire chapter rather than a particular rule when they want to discuss a whole set of regulations contained in that chapter. This is done as follows: • 30 Tex. Admin. Code Chapter 330 or • 30 TAC Chapter 330. • Otherwise, the chapter number is the next part of the cite to a particular rule. • The chapter appears after a section number symbol (§). You can find it in Microsoft Word under the Insert/Symbol. • However, the section symbol is often omitted. • So far we have 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 330

  22. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Subchapters • The next level of division is the subchapter. So chapters usually have one or more subchapters. These are identified using capital letters. • So title 30, chapter 330 has subchapters A, B, C, and so on. • Each subchapter deals with yet another more specific subject matter. • For example: • title 30: environmental rules • chapter 330: solid waste • subchapter Y: medical waste management • Do you see how the code is organized to narrow down from general to specific?

  23. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012

  24. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Subchapters continued • Like titles, subchapters do not appear in standard rule citations, but are sometimes cited as a whole: • “TCEQ rules relating to the management of medical waste are contained in 30 Tex. Admin. Code Chapter 330, Subchapter Y.”

  25. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Sections • Finally, we reach sections. Every chapter is divided into one or more sections. These sections are individual rules. • The sections are numbers, usually in numerical order (but as rules are adopted and removed, the numbering may develop holes). • For example, 30 Tex. Admin. Code Chapter 330, Subchapter A begins with Section 1. The next section is 3. • The section number is attached to the chapter after a period. • The citation only includes the • title, chapter, and section: • 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 330.1.

  26. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Subsections • Most sections are divided into subsections. (However, some sections are short enough to have no subsections.) • But most rules contain many subsections. • Subsections are lower-case letters: (a), (b), (c), etc. • If you are citing to a particular subsection, you simply add the subsection on the string of chapter and section: • 330.9(a) means subsection (a) of section 9 of chapter 330. • Subsections usually specify different requirements or scenarios regulated by a particular rule.

  27. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Subsections We’re looking at section 143 of chapter 1 subsections (a) and (b)

  28. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Multiple subsections • Often, writers want to cite to multiple subsections of a particular section. • So how do you do that? • The most common way to do this is to use a dash: • 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 330.9(a)-(d). • Citations to multiple, non-sequential subsections can be written as follows: • 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 330.9(a), (d), and (f).

  29. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Paragraphs and beyond • Beyond subsections? • The organization of rules goes beyond subsections, sometimes way beyond when there is a particularly complicated rule. • The next level is called the paragraph. So each subsection may be divided into paragraphs. • Used if a particular subsection itself has multiple requirements or scenarios. • The TAC switches between letters and numbers (like an outline). So if subsections are letters (a, b, c), then the paragraphs would be numbers (1, 2, 3). • The next level would be capital letters (A, B, C) then roman numerals (i, ii, iii) (Subparagraph and clause).

  30. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Note how “recklessness” contains several paragraphs: (1), (2), and (3) under subsection (b).

  31. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Putting it all together! • The organization of the TAC: • Titles • Parts • Chapters • Subchapters • Sections • Subsections • Paragraphs • 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 330.9(a)(1)

  32. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Practice Finding a Citation • Locate this citation: 22 Tex. Admin. Code § 203.39(a). • Notice how you have to perform a little process of elimination when you don’t know the context. • Which part is this rule in? • You can’t tell from the citation. • So just click around until you find it. • What does it say?

  33. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Practice Finding a Citation • One more. This time with some context. • This is a rule of the Texas Lottery Commission. • Specifically regarding the instant game rules. • 16 TAC § 401.302(b)(1) • What does it say?

  34. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Practice Writing a Citation • Suppose you are a employee of the Nursing Board. • A licensed nurse has written the Board requesting information on Nurse First Assistant Program that allows nurses to assist in surgery. • The following rule contains the Board’s requirements on qualifying for this program. • How would you cite to the requirement concerning the first assistant educational program in a letter responding to the nurse?

  35. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 One more for the road • The Department of Public Safety (DPS) has adopted regulations on concealed handgun licenses issued by the Department. • Those regulations include certain Proficiency Requirements in 37 Tex. Admin. Code § 6.11. • How would you cite to the requirement that a student must score at least 70% on the written examination and shooting proficiency examination in order to establish proficiency?

  36. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Homework • Complete the Rule Citation Exercise. (Due Mar. 10) • Complete the Texas Register Project Part II. (Due Mar. 10)

  37. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Overview of the Texas Administrative Code Part II: Citing Agency Rules in Context

  38. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Citation in academic work versus government writing • In other classes you may have learned that you must provide a citation as a matter of academic honesty when you are quoting or otherwise using someone else’s ideas in your own work. • This is citation in the context of academic work. Its purpose is to give credit to the author of the ideas being used. • An acknowledgement that you are using someone else’s ideas and incorporating them into your own.

  39. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 Citation in academic work versus government writing • Professional and governmental writing have different purposes. • Last week we said that when a state agency writes a letter to a regulated entity, it will often cite to its rules. • But the purpose is not to give credit to the author of the rules for those ideas. • Rather, it is to establish the authority for the proposition cited. • In other words, a citation in this context is a way of saying “this is the law” not “this is someone else’s idea.”

  40. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 What part of a rule do you cite? • When citing to an agency rule or statute, you have to decide what specific text you are referring to. • Sometimes a writer wants to refer to an entire regulatory program, like the rules on medical waste, as a whole. • However, when government writers cite to the TAC, they are usually citing to a specific requirement within a rule that is relevant to the matter at issue. • Generally speaking, you should write a citation that takes the reader to the specific subsection or paragraph of the rule that contains the text you are citing.

  41. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 • Based on the rule below, what would you cite for the proposition that a dentist must obtain an anesthesia permit to perform general anesthesia?

  42. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 What part of a rule do you cite? • A dentist must obtain an anesthesia permit to perform general anesthesia. 22 Tex. Admin. Code § 110.2(a)(5). • Note: See how the citation shows the authority for the statement. It is a way of saying “I’m not just making this up!”

  43. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 How do you cite a rule in a sentence? • Typically, a citation acts as its own sentence following the sentence it cites. Each sentence has its own period. • When you write a citation within the text under APA or MLA style, you make it part of the same sentence. • Notice the difference: • Bluebook: TCEQ rules require that owners and operators of underground storage tanks register their tanks with the commission. 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 334.7(a)(2). • APA: The American Physiological Association style is a difficult citation format for first-time learners (Jones, 1998, p. 199). • MLA: Romantic poetry is characterized by the "spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings" (Wordsworth 263).

  44. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 How do you cite a rule in a sentence? • However, you can also cite a rule in the text of a sentence: • But this can make the sentence more cluttered. • Speaking of cluttered, government writers sometimes move the cites into footnotes.

  45. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 What does a citation to the rules mean? • When you cite to a rule, you are telling the reader that what appears before the citation is either exactly what a rule says or is an accurate paraphrase. • A citation is improper if it contains extra information or inferences that are not part of the cited text. • This is especially important when a document is applying a rule to a specific situation (rather than just referencing it). • Should always be clear what the specific facts and what the rule is. • Government writers pay serious attention to citations. They are not an after-thought.

  46. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 An Example

  47. Administrative Policy WritingSpring 2012 An Example • First notice this is a letter applying a rule to a specific situation. But it mixes up the rule and the facts. • If we look up Section 144 in the TAC, does it say this particular architect’s license is up for renewal? • Of course not. • This sentence is an improper citation. • The writer was being lazy – skipping over an inference: • The rule says that licenses are up for renewal ever five years. • Your license is five years old. • Therefore, your license will be up for renewal.

More Related