EXPERTS Act of 2025
Summary
What This Bill Does
The EXPERTS Act is a broad administrative-law transparency package. It begins from the premise that Congress often delegates regulatory discretion to agencies and that courts should not invalidate agency rules merely because Congress did not address a precise future problem or because a rule has broad significance. The operative sections require interested persons submitting scientific, economic, or technical studies in rulemakings to disclose funding sources, sponsors, reviewer influence, and financial relationships. Agencies must post submitted studies and research on public dockets and websites when disclosure is not exempt, disclose conflicts such as at least 10 percent funding from regulated entities, and may disregard submissions that fail required disclosures. Agencies must disclose material changes between draft rules sent for centralized OIRA review and proposed or final rules, including whether changes came from OIRA, another agency, or another federal official. Agencies withdrawing regulatory actions must publish detailed explanations and identify whether OIRA, another agency, or another federal official influenced the withdrawal. The bill expands negotiated rulemaking to include Federal, State, local, and Tribal governments, creates consequences for public companies that submit false information to agencies, establishes an OMB Office of the Public Advocate to improve public participation and help underserved communities engage in rulemaking, requires public-awareness work for rulemakings, sets petition-response procedures, and directs cost-benefit analysis to account for public benefits including nonquantifiable, long-term, indirect, distributional, and equity effects.
Who Benefits and How
Members of the public benefit from docket access to studies, conflicts, interagency changes, withdrawn-rule explanations, and public participation support. Consumer and civic advocacy organizations benefit from the Office of the Public Advocate, expanded rulemaking outreach, and better petition procedures. State, local, and Tribal governments benefit from explicit inclusion in negotiated rulemaking structures. Federal regulatory agencies benefit from clearer authority to disregard submissions that omit required conflict disclosures. Communities with limited English proficiency and disadvantaged or underrepresented communities benefit from participation support and outreach duties.
Who Bears the Burden and How
Corporations, trade associations, and other interested persons funding rulemaking research must disclose funding, sponsors, reviewer influence, and financial relationships. Federal agencies must post studies, identify conflicts, document OIRA and interagency changes, explain withdrawn rules, manage petitions, and expand public outreach. Public companies face potential consequences if they submit false information in rulemaking materials. OMB must establish and supervise an Office of the Public Advocate. Regulated industries lose some ability to rely on undisclosed sponsored studies or procedural opacity when challenging or influencing rules.
Key Provisions
- Requires conflict-of-interest disclosures for scientific, economic, and technical studies submitted in rulemakings.
- Requires agencies to post submitted studies and disclose regulated-entity conflicts on dockets, websites, and the Federal Register.
- Requires disclosure of OIRA, interagency, and federal-official changes to proposed and final rules.
- Requires public explanations when agencies withdraw regulatory actions.
- Expands negotiated rulemaking participation for Federal, State, local, and Tribal governments.
- Establishes an OMB Office of the Public Advocate for rulemaking participation.
- Requires agency public-awareness work and deadlines for public petitions.
- Requires cost-benefit analysis to count public, distributional, long-term, and nonquantifiable benefits.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Rewrites federal rulemaking procedure to require conflict disclosures for studies used in rulemakings, public posting of research and conflicts, disclosure of OIRA and interagency changes, explanations for withdrawn rules, expanded negotiated rulemaking, penalties for public companies submitting false information, an OMB Office of the Public Advocate, public-awareness duties, petition deadlines, and cost-benefit analysis that counts public and distributional benefits.
Key Policy Areas
Administrative Procedure, Rulemaking Transparency, OMB, Regulatory Review
Primary Purpose
Rewrites federal rulemaking procedure to require conflict disclosures for studies used in rulemakings, public posting of research and conflicts, disclosure of OIRA and interagency changes, explanations for withdrawn rules, expanded negotiated rulemaking, penalties for public companies submitting false information, an OMB Office of the Public Advocate, public-awareness duties, petition deadlines, and cost-benefit analysis that counts public and distributional benefits.
Policy Domains
Substantive provisions
Identified Gains
- Members of the public
- Consumer advocacy organizations
- Civic organizations
- State governments
- Local governments
- Tribal governments
- Disadvantaged communities
- Non-English speaking communities
Identified Costs
- Corporations funding rulemaking research
- Industry trade associations
- Research institutions receiving regulated-entity funding
- Federal agencies conducting rulemaking
- Office of Management and Budget
- Public companies submitting rulemaking information
- Regulated industries challenging agency rules
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
In CommitteeMs. Jayapal (for herself, Ms. Adams, Mr. Amo, Ms. Ansari, …
Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary, and in addition …
Introduced in House
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Disadvantaged and underrepresented communities, General public and citizen activists, General public and civic organizations
Federal agencies conducting rulemaking, Federal agencies issuing rules, Federal agencies receiving petitions
Positive-direction: Federal regulatory agencies, Tribal governments
Negative-direction: Federal agencies conducting rulemaking, Federal agencies issuing rules, Federal agencies receiving petitions, Federal agencies receiving research submissions, Federal budget (funding required for new office), Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget
All entities subject to federal rulemaking, Corporations and entities funding research on regulations, Corporations and organizations funding research for regulatory submissions
Civic and advocacy organizations, Community-based organizations, Consumer advocacy groups
Industry groups and trade associations, Industry trade associations
State and local governments, State, local, and tribal governments
Publicly-traded corporations required to file SEC annual reports
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology