(The Center Square) – A group of four proposed Wisconsin laws dubbed the Red Tape Reset would reduce regulations in state statute and lead to increase the state’s gross domestic product.
The proposed laws include regulatory sunsetting, regulatory budgeting, a one rule per scope statement and a proposal challenging the validity of administrative rules.
Both Americans for Prosperity – Wisconsin and the Wisconsin Institute of Law and Liberty announced support for the proposals Wednesday.
A recent WILL study estimates that a 20% reduction in regulatory restrictions in the state would increase Wisconsin’s economy by $23 billion by 2037.
“Wisconsin is the 13th most regulated state in the nation, and it risks falling behind neighboring states if reforms are not implemented,” said Patrick A. McLaughlin, a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University and a Visiting Research Fellow at the Pacific Legal Foundation who worked with WILL on the report. In this report we highlight the true economic costs of red tape and how systematic regulatory reform not only increases GDP growth but also fosters innovation, creates jobs, and enhances competitiveness.”
Wisconsin currently has 165,000 restrictions in state law.
The sunsetting bill would require all chapters of administrative code to be reviewed, updated or allowed to expire every seven years and does not allow restrictions to continue indefinitely.
“By requiring regular review and offering opportunities for public input, this reform creates a more modern, responsive, and balanced regulatory framework,” said Rep. Adam Neylon, R-Pewaukee.
The budgeting bill requires any new administrative code regulation with an economic impact to be offset by the repeal or revision of existing regulations of equal or greater impact.
“We want to grow the size of Wisconsin’s economy – not its rulebook,” said Sen. Julian Bradley, R-New Berlin. “This bill aims to reduce red tape, increase efficiency, and create a better environment for innovation and entrepreneurship.”
The single scope bill blocks allowing agencies to use a single scope statement to create multiple regulations over time.
The challenge bill would require courts to award attorney fees and costs to plaintiffs who successfully challenge unlawful administrative rules.
“While the Court eliminated the Chevron Doctrine that gave bureaucratic acts a presumption of constitutionality, victims of unconstitutional regulatory domination still oftentimes face an insurmountable battle for their rights due to process costs,” Sen. Eric Wimberger, R-Oconto, said in a statement. “Bureaucracies know that litigating motions, trials, and appeals are expensive, and a defendant may just comply or settle as an economic decision even though they are right in the law.
“LRB 0568 will make Wisconsinites more confident in the law, since demanding rights won’t bankrupt them and bureaucracies will face a penalty if they refuse to respect Constitutional Rights.”