13A.210 Tiering of administrative regulations.
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to reduce disproportionate impacts on certain classes of regulated entities, including
government or small business, or both, and to avoid regulating entities that do not
contribute significantly to the problem the administrative regulation was designed to
address. The tiers, however, shall be based upon reasonable criteria and uniformly
applied to an entire class. Administrative bodies shall use any number of tiers that
will solve most efficiently and effectively the problem the administrative regulation
addresses. A written statement shall be submitted to the Legislative Research
Commission explaining why tiering was or was not used. (2) Administrative bodies may use, but shall not be limited to, the following methods of tiering administrative regulations:
(a) Reduce or modify substantive regulatory requirements;
(b) Eliminate some requirements entirely;
(c) Simplify and reduce reporting and recordkeeping requirements;
(d) Provide exemptions from reporting and recordkeeping requirements;
(e) Reduce the frequency of inspections;
(f) Provide exemptions from inspections and other compliance activities;
(g) Delay compliance timetables;
(h) Reduce, modify, or waive fines or other penalties for noncompliance; and
(i) Address and alleviate special problems of individuals and small businesses in complying with an administrative regulation. (3) When tiering regulatory requirements, administrative bodies may use, but shall not be limited to, size and nonsize variables. Size variables include number of citizens,
number of employees, level of operating revenues, level of assets, and market
shares. Nonsize variables include degree of risk posed to humans, technological and
economic ability to comply, geographic locations, and level of federal funding. (4) When modifying tiers, administrative bodies shall monitor, but shall not be limited to, the following variables:
(a) Changing demographic characteristics;
(b) Changes in the composition of the work force;
(c) Changes in the inflation rate requiring revisions of dollar-denominated tiers;
(d) Changes in market concentration and segmentation;
(e) Advances in technology; and
(f) Changes in legislation. Effective: July 13, 2004
History: Amended 2004 Ky. Acts ch. 165, sec. 4, effective July 13, 2004. -- Amended 2003 Ky. Acts ch. 89, sec. 9, effective June 24, 2003. -- Amended 1990 Ky. Acts
ch. 516, sec. 21, effective July 13, 1990. -- Created 1984 Ky. Acts ch. 417, sec. 21,
effective April 13, 1984.