Monthly Archives: April 2006

I Say ‘Toh-ma-tow,’ You Say ‘Huh?’

Over at ‘Inside Higher Ed’ (a publication with an increasingly odd identity itself), Jewish in Polynesia describes the problem (eh?) of the absence of familiar stereotypes.

Posted in Readings | 1 Comment

Seacoast Anti-Pollution League v. Costle Overruled

Seacoast Anti-Pollution League v. Costle, 572 F.2d 872 (1st Cir. 1978), long one of the perennials of administrative law teaching, is no more. It seems that late last month the First Circuit overruled Seacoast in Dominion Energy Brayton Point, LLC v. Johnson, 2006 U.S. App. Lexis 8205, 2006 WL 820405 (1st Cir., March 30).

Seacost is famous for holding that the words “public hearing” in a statute triggered formal adjudication under sec. 554 of the APA. The idea was that if the issues were sufficiently important, Congress should be understood to have assumed that the agency should use the cumbersome full-dress procedures of an on-the-record adjudication. This was not as strange as it may sound to modern ears, as it followed the influential Attorney General’s Manual on the APA.

Other circuits, however, took a different tack, especially after the landmark case of Chevron v. United States. Those courts held that unless Congress explicitly instructed the agency to hold a “formal” hearing (most commonly by saying that the hearing should be “on the record”) the agency could in most cases choose to proceed by the less onerous, although still quite formalized, “informal” rulemaking process.

That makes the Ninth Circuit the sole remaining outlier, based on Marathon Oil Co. v. EPA, 564 F.2d 1263 (9th Cir. 1977). That rule is probably doomed too.

Posted in Administrative Law | 1 Comment

Dept. of Improbable Mashups

Coincidence or sign of the times?

Something about the moment is spurring Bush-Beatles mashups.
I am the Decider (Koo-Koo-Ka-Choo) and Imagine. Both recommended.

Posted in Kultcha | Comments Off on Dept. of Improbable Mashups

Is There a Text In This Blog?

Stanley Fish has a blog behind the New York Times paywall.

Posted in Blogs | Comments Off on Is There a Text In This Blog?

J. Edgar Would Be Proud

J. Edgar Hoover would be proud,

TPM Muckraker: This morning’s newspapers are ablaze with the outrageous news that the FBI was trying to get its hands on over 200 boxes of files once belonging to legendary investigative journalist Jack Anderson.

What the papers didn’t report was the truly ugly extent to which the bureau has gone to achieve their goal — such as manipulating Anderson’s elderly widow to sign a document she apparently didn’t understand.

The rest of us should be ashamed.

Might I add that the administration’s novel legal theory here is that it is illegal for any of us to possess a classified document.

How long until we see the first sting operations against reporters in which a “source” offers to pass them secret documents and then the FBI swoops down on them?

Posted in Law: Free Speech, National Security | Comments Off on J. Edgar Would Be Proud

ORGWare: What Tomorrow’s Campaigns Need Today

If I ever have to run a political campaign, I want one of these ORGWare things that Brit Blaser is building.

Posted in Politics: US | Comments Off on ORGWare: What Tomorrow’s Campaigns Need Today