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Congressional advisory commissions are formal groups established to provide independent advice; to make recommendations for changes in public policy; to study or investigate a particular problem, issue, or event; or perform a dutyto commemorate an individual, group, or event. While no legal definition exists for what constitutes a "congressional commission,," in this report a congressional commission is defined as a multi-membermultimember independent entity that (1) is established by Congress, (2) exists temporarily, (3) serves in an advisory capacity, (4) is appointed in part or whole by Members of Congress, and (5) reports to Congress. These five characteristics differentiate a congressional commission from a presidential commission, an executive branch commission, or other bodies with "commission" in their names. Over 100150 congressional commissions have been established since 1989.
Throughout American history, Congress has found commissions to be useful entities in the legislative process. By establishing a commission, Congress can potentially provide a highly visible forum for important issues and assemble greater expertise than may be readily available within the legislature. Complex policy issues can be examined over a longer time period and in greater depth than may be practical for legislators. Finally, the non-partisannonpartisan or bipartisan character of most congressional commissions may make their findings and recommendations more politically acceptable, both in Congress and among the public. Critics argue that many congressional commissions are expensive, often formed to take difficult decisions out of the hands of Congress, and are mostly ignored when they report their findings and recommendations.
The temporary status of congressional commissions and short time period they are often given to complete their work product makesmake it important that legislators craft statutes creating congressional commissions with care. A wide variety of options are available, and legislators can tailor the composition, organization, and working arrangements of a commission, based on the particular goals of Congress. As a result, individual congressional commissions often have an organizational structure and powers quite different from one another.
This report provides an overview and analysis of congressional advisory commissions, information on the general statutory structure of a congressional commission, and a catalog of congressional commissions created since the 101st Congress.
Congressional commissions are formal groups established by Congress to provide independent advice, to make recommendations for changes in public policy, to study or investigate a particular problem or event, or perform a specific dutyto commemorate an individual, group, or event. Usually composed of policy experts chosen by Members of Congress and/or officials in the executive branch, commissions may hold hearings, conduct research, analyze data, investigate policy areas, or make field visits as they perform their duties. Most commissions complete their work by delivering their findings, recommendations, or advice in the form of a written report to Congress. Occasionally, legislation submitted by commissions will be given "fast track" authority in Congress.
Although no legal definition exists for what constitutes a "congressional commission," in this report, a congressional commission is defined as a multi-membermultimember independent entity that (1) is established by Congress, (2) exists temporarily, (3) serves in an advisory capacity, (4) is appointed in part or whole by Members of Congress, and (5) reports to Congress. These five characteristics effectively serve to differentiate a congressional commission from a presidential commission, an executive branch commission, or other bodies with "commission" in their names. Over 100150 congressional commissions have been established since 1989.
Throughout American history, Congress has found commissions to be useful tools in the legislative process,1 and legislators continue to use them today. By establishing a commission, Congress can potentially provide a highly visible forum for important issues and assemble greater expertise than may be readily available within the legislature. Complex policy issues can be examined over a longer time period and in greater depth than may be practical for legislators. Finally, the non-partisanThe nonpartisan or bipartisan character of most congressional commissions may make their findings and recommendations more politically acceptable, both in Congress and among the public.
Critics argue that many congressional commissions are established by legislators seeking "blame avoidance," and take difficult decisions out of the hands of Congress. Other observers have suggested that commissions are undemocratic, with their members neither electorally accountable to the public nor their meetings and decisionmaking processes public. Finally, some critics see commissions as financially inefficient, arguing that the costs of establishing a commission outweigh potential benefits, especially since their findings and recommendations may be ignored by CongressConversely, some have expressed concerns that congressional commissions can be expensive, are often formed to take difficult decisions out of the hands of Congress, and are mostly ignored when they report their findings and recommendations.
Congressional commissions can be categorized as either policy commissions, investigatory commissions, or commemorative commissions. Most congressional commissions are policy commissions, such asPolicy commissions generally study a particular public policy problem (e.g., the United States Commission on North American Energy Freedom),2 or investigate a particular event (e.g., the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States).3 Policy commissions typically report their findings to Congress along with recommendations for legislative or executive action. Commemorative,1 that study particular public policy problems and typically report their findings to Congress along with recommendations for legislative or executive action. Far fewer commissions are investigative commissions, such as the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States,2 that are established to examine past events. A small number of commissions are commemorative commissions, such as the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission,3 that plan, coordinate, and oversee4 are often tasked with planning, coordinating, and overseeing celebrations of people or events, often in conjunction with milestone anniversaries.
The temporary status of congressional commissions and short time period they are often given to complete their work product makestheir often short time horizons make it important that legislators craft statutes creating congressional commissions construct statutes with care. Statutes establishing congressional policy commissions generally include language that states the mandate of the commission, provides a membership structure and appointment scheme, defines member compensation and other benefits, outlines the commission's duties and powers, authorizes funding, and sets a termination date for the commission.
A variety of options are available for each of these organizational choices. Legislators can tailor the composition, organization, and arrangements of a commission, based on particular goals. As a result, individual commissions often have organizational structures and powers quite different from one another.
In the past, confusion has arisen over whether particular entities are "congressional commissions." There are several reasons for this confusion. First, the term "congressional commission" is not defined by law; observers might disagree as to whether an individual entity should be characterized as such. Second, many different entities within the federal government have the word "commission" in their name, such as regulatory commissions, presidential advisory commissions, and advisory commissions established in executive agencies.6 Conversely, manysome congressional commissions do not have the word commission"commission" in their name; instead, they are designated as boards, advisory panels, advisory committees, task forces, or by other terms.
In this report, a congressional commission is defined as a multi-membermultimember independent entity that (1) is established by Congress, (2) exists temporarily, (3) serves in an advisory capacity, (4) is appointed in part or whole by Members of Congress, and (5) reports to Congress. This definition differentiates a congressional commission from a presidential commission, an executive branch commission, or other bodies with "commission" in their names, while including most entities that fulfill the role commonly perceived for commissions: studying policy problems and reporting findings to Congress.47 Each of these characteristics is discussed below.
Congressional commissions are established by Congress, usually by statute.5 Not all advisory commissions established by statuteCongress usually creates congressional commissions by statute.8 Not all statutorily established advisory commissions, however, are congressional commissions. Congress routinely establishes advisory commissions in themay also statutorily establish executive branch by statuteadvisory commissions. Conversely, not all federal advisory commissions serving the federal government are established by Congress. Commissions may be established in the executive branch by the President, department heads, or individual agencies.6The President, department heads, or individual agencies may also establish commissions under various authorities.9
Congressional commissions are also generally independent of Congress in function. This characteristic excludes commission-like entities established within Congress, such as congressional observer groups, working groups, and ad hoc commissions and advisory groups created by individual committees of Congress under their general authority to procure the "temporary services" of consultants to "make studies and advise the committee," pursuant to 2 U.S.C. §72a.710
Congressional commissions are established to perform specific tasksduties, with statutory termination dates linked to thetask completion of the tasks. This restriction excludes entities that typically serve an ongoing administrative purpose, do not have statutory termination dates, and do not produce reports, such as the House Office Building Commission811 or Senate Commission on Fine Art.912 Also excluded are entities that serve ongoing diplomatic or interparliamentary functions, such as the U.S. Group to the NATO Parliamentary Assembly,1013 or the Canada-United States Interparliamentary Group.1114 Finally, Congress has created a number of boards to oversee government entities, such as the United States Holocaust Memorial Council1215 and the John F. Kennedy Center Board of Trustees.1316 Although these entities could arguably be considered congressional commissions, their lifespan, purpose, and function differsdiffer from temporary congressional commissions.
Unlike regulatory commissions, congressional commissions are not typically granted administrative authority, and they usually lack the power to implement their findings or recommendations. Instead, advisory commissions typically produce reports that present their findings and offer recommendations for either legislative or executive action.
Congressional commissions provide that Members of Congress, particularly the leadership, be intimately involved in the appointment process, either through direct service on a commission, or by appointing or recommending candidates for membership.
17 Reporting RequirementsCongressional commissions are usually required to submit their reports to Congress, or to Congress and the President. Other advisory commissions, such as presidential or executive branch commissions, typically submit their reports only to the President or an agency head.
Types of Congressional Commissions Congressional commissions can generally be placed into one of two categories: policy commissions and commemorative commissions. Most congressional commissions are policy commissions, temporary bodies that study particular policy problems and report their findings to Congress or review a specific event. Other commissions are commemorative commissions,Congressional commissions are usually required to submit their reports to Congress, or to Congress and the President. Other advisory commissions, such as presidential or executive branch commissions, typically submit their reports only to the President or agency head.
This report attempts to identify all congressional commissions established between the 101st and 114th Congress. A large number of bills creating congressional commissions are introduced in Congress each session. During the 114th Congress, bills have been introduced that would have created more than 20 congressional commissions. Similar numbers of bills have been proposed in previous Congresses. Most of these bills proposing commissions are not enacted.
A database search was conducted using the Legislative Information System (LIS) for the 101st through 114th Congresses (1989-2016).14 Each piece of legislation returned was examined to determine if (1) the legislation contained a commission; and (2) if the commission was an ad hoc congressional commission. If the commission was judged to be an ad hoc congressional commission, the name, public law number, Statutes-at-Large citation, and date of enactment were recorded.
A total of 107 congressional commissions were identified through this search. Table 1 reports the number of commissions identified by the search in each Congress.
Congress |
Number |
Congress |
Number |
|||
101 (1989-1990) |
|
108 (2003-2004) |
| |||
102 (1991-1992) |
|
109 (2005-2006) |
| |||
103 (1993-1994) |
|
110 (2007-2008) |
| |||
104 (1995-1996) |
|
111 (2009-2010) |
| |||
105 (1997-1998) |
|
112 (2010-2012) |
| |||
106 (1999-2000) |
|
113 (2013-2014) |
| |||
107 (2001-2002) |
|
114 (2015-2016) |
| |||
|
|
|
Source: Database query of Congressional Legislative Information System (LIS), 101st to 114th Congress.
Two caveats accompany these results. As stated above, identifying congressional commissions involves making judgment calls about particular characteristics. Second, tracking provisions of law that create congressional commissions is an inherently inexact exercise. Although many such bodies are created in easily identifiable freestanding statutes, others are contained within the statutory language of lengthy omnibus legislation.15 Consequently, individual commissions may have been missed by the search algorithm.
Congressional commissions can be generally placed into one of three categories. Most congressional commissions are policy commissions, temporary bodies which study particular policy problems and report their findings to Congress. Less common are investigative commissions, which are similar in structure to policy commissions but tasked with reviewing specific events. Commemorative commissions are entities established to commemorate a person or event, often to mark an anniversary. Table 2 reports the total number and percentage of each type of commission identified in the LIS database search of the 101st through 114th Congresses.
Commission Type |
Total Number |
Percentage of All Commissions |
||
Policy |
|
| ||
Investigative |
|
| ||
Commemorative |
|
|
Source: CRS analysis of database query of Congressional Legislative Information System (LIS), 101st to 114th Congress.
The vast majority of congressional commissions Congress also creates commemorative commissions. These commissions most often commemorate an individual, group, or event. In some circumstances, commemorative commissions have also been tasked with the creation of national memorials in the District of Columbia. For more information on commemorative commissions, see CRS Report R41425, Commemorative Commissions: Overview, Structure, and Funding, by Jacob R. Straus., 79%, were are established to study, examine, investigate, or review a particular policy problem. During the 110th, 111th, 113th, and 114th Congresses, policy commissions were established to study a range of issues, including or event. For example, policy commissions have focused on the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction,18 motor fuel tax enforcement, surface transportation policy, defense policy, and the threat19 threats to the United States from Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) attacks,20 and the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.21
Commemorative Commissions
to the United States from Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) attacks.16
Investigative commissions, established for the purpose of reviewing specific events, are much less common than policy commissions. Only seven such bodies have been established by Congress during the past 22 years. Investigative commissions, however, such as the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States (the 9/11 commission), often receive substantial public attention. Investigative commissions are often granted broad powers, including the power to subpoena witnesses. Most recently, the Commission on Wartime Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Congressional Oversight Panel for the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act, and the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission were established during the 110th and 111th Congresses.17
Since 1989, Congress has created 15 commemorative congressional commissions. Six of the commissions were created to commemorate individuals18 and coincided with a milestone anniversary of their birth. Eight commissions were related to the commemoration of historical events and coincided with a milestone anniversary of the event.19 One commission—the Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial Commission—was created to oversee the development of a permanent national memorial.20
Throughout American history, Congress has found commissions to be useful tools in the legislative process. Commissions may be established to, among other things, to cope with increases in the scope and complexity of legislation, to forge consensus, to draft bills, to promote inter-party communication, to address issues that do not fall neatly within the jurisdictional boundaries of congressional committees, and to bring together recommendations.2122 These goals can be grouped into sixfive categories: expertise, issue and political complexity, consensus building, non-partisanshipnonpartisanship, solving collective action problems, and visibility.
Congress may choose to establish a commission when legislators and their staffs do not currently have sufficient knowledge or expertise in a complex policy area,23 or when an issue area is sufficiently complex that engaging noncongressional experts could aid in policy development.24.22 By assembling experts with backgrounds in particular policy areas to focus on a specific mission, legislators might efficiently obtain insight into complex public policy problems.23
Complex policy issues may cause time management challenges for Congress. Legislators often keep busy schedules and may not have time to deal with intricate or technical policy problems, particularly if the issues require consistent attention over a period of time.24 A25 Further, a commission can devote itself to a particular issue full- time, and can focus on an individual problem without distraction.2526
Complex policy issues may also create institutional problems because they do not fall neatly within the jurisdiction of any particular committee in Congress.2627 By virtue of their ad hoc status, commissions may circumvent such issues. Similarly, a commission may allow particular legislation or policy solutions to bypass the traditional development process in Congress, potentially removing some of the impediments inherent in a decentralized legislature.27
Legislators seeking policy changes or requesting a congressional investigation may be confronted by an array of political interests. The normal legislative or oversight process may sometimes suffer politically from charges of partisanship.29 By contrast, the nonpartisan may be confronted by an array of political interests, some in favor of proposed changes and some against. When these interests clash, the resulting legislation may encounter gridlock in the highly structured political institution of the modern Congress.28 By creating a commission, Congress can place policy debates in a potentially more flexible environment, where congressional and public attention can be developed over time.29
Solutions to policy problems produced within the normal legislative process may also suffer politically from charges of partisanship.30 Similar charges may be made against investigations conducted by Congress.31 The non-partisan or bipartisan character of most congressional commissions may make their findings and recommendations less susceptible to such charges and more politically acceptable to diverse viewpoints. The bipartisan or nonpartisan arrangement can potentially give their recommendations strongresult in further credibility, both in Congress and among the public, even when dealing with divisive issues of public policy.32 .30
Commissions may also give political factionscompeting viewpoints space to negotiate compromises in good faith, bypassing the short-term tactical political maneuvers that may accompany public negotiations in a congressional markup or oversight session.31.33 Similarly, because commission members are often not elected, they may be better suited to suggestingsuggest unpopular, but arguably necessary, policy solutions.34
A commission may allow legislators to solve collective action problems, situations in which all legislators individually seek to protect the interests of their own district, despite widespread agreement that the collective result of such interests is something none of them preferprefers. Legislators can use a commission to jointly "tie their hands" in such circumstances, allowing general consensus about a particular policy solution to avoid being impeded by individual concerns about the effect or implementation of the solution.35
For example, in 1988 Congress established the Base Closure and Realignment Commission (BRAC) as a politically and geographically neutral body to make independent decisions about closures of military bases.3634 The list of bases slated for closure by the commission was required to be either accepted or rejected as a whole by Congress, bypassing internal congressional politics over which individual bases would be closed, and protecting individual Members from political charges that they didn't "save" their district's base.37
By establishing a commission, Congress can often provide a highly visible forum for important issues that might otherwise receive scant attention from the public.3836 Commissions often are composed of notable public figures, allowing personal prestige to be transferred to policy solutions.3937 Meetings and press releases from a commission may receive significantly more attention in the media than corresponding information coming directly from members of congressional committees. Upon completion of a commission's work product, public attention may be temporarily focused on a topic that otherwise would receive scant attention, thus increasing the probability of congressional action within the policy area.40
Congressional commissions have been criticized by both political and scholarly observers. These criticisms chiefly fall into three groups. First, critics often charge that commissions are an "abdication of responsibility" on the part of legislators.4139 Second, commissions are criticized for being undemocratic, replacing elected legislators with appointed decisionmakers. Third, critics also argue that commissions are financially inefficient; they are expensive and their findings often ignored by Congress.
Critics of commissions argue that they are primarily created by legislators specifically for "blame avoidance."4240 In this view, Congress uses commissions to distance itself from risky decisions when confronted with controversial issues. By creating a commission, legislators can take credit for addressing a topic of controversy without having to take a substantive position on the topic. If the commission's work is ultimately popular, legislators can take credit for the work. If the commission's work product is unpopular, legislators can shift responsibility to the commission itself.43
A second concern about commissions is that they are not democratic. This criticism takes three forms. First, commissions may be unrepresentative of the general population; the members of most commissions are not elected and may not reflect the variety of popular opinion on an issue.4442 Second, commissions lack popular accountability. Unlike Members of Congress, commission members are often insulated from the electoral pressures of popular opinion. Finally, commissions may not operate in public; unlike Congress, their meetings, hearings, and investigations may be held in private.45
A third criticism of commissions is that they have high costs and low returns. Congressional commission costs vary widely, ranging from several hundred thousand dollars to over $10 million. Coupled with this objection is the problem of congressional response to the work of a commission; in most cases, Congress is under no obligation to act, or even respond to the work of a commission. If legislators disagree with the results or recommendations of a commission's work, they may simply ignore it. In addition, there is no guarantee that any commission will produce a balanced product; commission members may have their own agendas, biases, and pressures. Or they may simply produce a mediocre work product.4644 Finally, advisory boards create economic and legislative inefficiency if they function as patronage devices, with Members of Congress using commission positions to pay off political debts.47
Statutes establishing congressional policyadvisory commissions generally include language that states the mandate of the commission, provides a membership structure and appointment scheme, defines member compensation and other benefits, outlines the commission's duties and powers, authorizes funding, and sets a termination date for the commission.
A wide variety of options are available for each of these organizational choices. Legislators can tailor the composition, organization, and working arrangements of a commission, based on the particular goals of Congress. As a result, individual congressional commissions often have an organizational structure and powers quite different from one another.
A commission's establishment is generally prescribed in a brief introductory paragraph. The proposed Commission on Catastrophic Disaster Risk and Insurance was established with a single sentence:
There is established a bipartisan Commission on Catastrophic Disaster Risk and Insurance.48
In some instances, the establishment clause will identify the commission as "established in the legislative branch." This can often resolve confusion as to whether certain executive branch personnel and ethics laws apply to employees of the commission. For commissions not specifically established in the legislative or executive branch, the manner in which the members of the commission are appointed may determine the commission's legal status.49 A commission with a majority of appointments made by the President may be treated as an executive branch entity for certain purposes; if a majority of appointments are made by Members of Congress, it may be treated as a legislative branch entity.
A bill creating a commission will sometimes provide congressional "findings" identifying the conditions justifying the creation of the panel. The bill proposing the Commission on Catastrophic Disaster Risk and Insurance includes seven specific findings related to hurricane damage and the federal government's role in catastrophe management. In other cases, legislation creating a congressional commission may simply include a short "purpose" section describing the justification for the creation of the commission, in lieu of "findings."
This section provides an overview of certain features commonly found in commission statutes. For a more detailed and comprehensive description of legislative language and features that are often included in congressional advisory commission statutes, see CRS Report R45328, Designing Congressional Commissions: Background and Considerations for Congress, by William T. Egar. When creating a new advisory commission, several potential membership structures might be considered. These could include the number of commissioners and who should appoint the members. Congressional commissions use a wide variety of membership schemes and appointment structures. The statutory schemeprovide the scope of a commission's mission, its structure, and its rules of procedures. Legislators can tailor the composition, organization, and working arrangements of a commission, based on the particular goals of Congress. As a result, individual congressional commissions often have an organizational structure and powers quite different from one another.46
schemeframework is to have selected leaders, again often with balance between the parties, recommend members, who may or may not be Members of Congress, for appointment to a commission. These leaders may act either in parallel or jointly, and the recommendation may be made either to other congressional leaders, such as the Speaker of the House and President pro tempore of the Senate, or to the President.
Table 3 presents commission appointment data from the 101st to 114th Congress. For each appointing body, the table reports the percentage of commissions to which appointments are made, the total number of appointments made, and the percentage of total appointments made. As shown in the table, the legislative branch has statutorily taken part in the appointment of 100% of congressional commissions, and the executive branch and other sources have statutorily taken part in the appointment 77% of congressional commissions.
Appointing Body |
Percentage of Commissions |
Total Number of Appointments |
Percentage of Total Appointees |
||||
Speaker |
|
|
| ||||
President Pro Tempore |
|
|
| ||||
Senate Majority Leader |
|
|
| ||||
House Minority Leader |
|
|
| ||||
Senate Minority Leader |
|
|
| ||||
Committees |
|
|
| ||||
Total, Legislative Branch |
|
|
| ||||
President |
|
|
| ||||
|
|
|
| ||||
Total, Other Sources |
|
|
|
Source: CRS analysis of database query of Congressional Legislative Information System (LIS), 101st to 114th Congress.
a. Figures do not sum total due to rounding.
b. Includes agency and department heads, Supreme Court Members, state and local officials, and private citizens.
Some statutory provisions may have the effect of limiting the degree of autonomy a Member has in appointing or making recommendations for commission membership. For example, statutory language may require the appointing official to select members who are specifically qualified by virtue of their education, knowledge, training, experience, expertise, distinguished service, or recognized eminence in a particular field or fields.50
Statutes creating congressional commissions often include deadlines for leaders making appointments. Such deadlines can range from several weeks to several months. For example, the deadline for appointments to the Antitrust Modernization Commission51 was 60 days after the enactment of the act. The deadline for appointment to the Commission on Wartime Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan was 120 days from the date of enactment. The deadline for appointment to the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States was December 15, 2002, 18 days after enactment of the act.
Most statutorily created congressional commissions do not compensate their members, except to reimburse members for expenses directly related to their service, such as travel costs.
For example, Section 201(i) of the statute establishing the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom52 reads
(i) Funding.—Members of the Commission shall be allowed travel expenses, including per diem in lieu of subsistence, at rates authorized for employees under subchapter I of chapter 57 of title 5, United States Code, while away from their homes or regular places of business in the performance of services for the Commission.
Among congressional commissions that compensate their members, the level of compensation is almost always specified statutorily, and is typically set in accordance with one of the federal pay scales, prorated to the number of days of service. The most common level of compensation is the daily equivalent of Level IV of the Executive Schedule (EX), which has a basic annual rate of pay of $160,30053 in 2016.54 For example, the statute establishing the Antitrust Modernization Commission states
(a) Pay.—
(1) Nongovernment employees.—Each member of the Commission who is not otherwise employed by a government shall be entitled to receive the daily equivalent of the annual rate of basic pay payable for level IV of the Executive Schedule under section 5315 of title 5 United States Code, as in effect from time to time, for each day (including travel time) during which such member is engaged in the actual performance of duties of the Commission.
(2) Government employees.—A member of the Commission who is an officer or employee of a government shall serve without additional pay (or benefits in the nature of compensation) for service as a member of the Commission.
(b) Travel Expenses.—Members of the Commission shall receive travel expenses, including per diem in lieu of subsistence, in accordance with subchapter I of chapter 57 of title 5, United States Code.55
As shown in Table 4, approximately three-quarters of commissions created in the past 20 years have not paid members beyond reimbursement. The remaining commissions have paid members at the daily equivalent of level IV of the Executive Schedule.
Compensation Level |
Total Number of Commissions |
Percentage of All Commissions |
||
Reimbursement only |
|
| ||
Daily equivalent of Level IV of the Executive Schedule |
|
| ||
Daily equivalent of Level I of the Executive Schedule |
|
|
Source: CRS analysis of database query of Congressional Legislative Information System (LIS), 101st to 114th Congress.
Congressional commissions are usually statutorily directed to carry out specific tasks. One of the primary functions of most congressional commissions is to produce a final report for Congress outlining their activities, findings, and legislative recommendations.47 These reports can be sent to Congress generally, to specific congressional committees, to the President, to executive agencies, or to a combination of entities. Recommendations contained in a commission report are only advisory. The potential implementation of such recommendations is dependent upon future congressional or executive branch action. Most commissions submit their work product to both Congress and the President. A smaller number submit their work to Congress only, and others have submitted their work to both Congress and a specified executive branch agency. The report's destination might matter for the type of future action taken on a topic. If a report is sent to both Congress and the President, potential exists for either legislative or executive action in that policy area. If a report is sent to only one entity. that might reduce the likelihood that other actors might address a particular concern. Most commissions are given statutory deadlines for the submission of their final report. The deadline for the submission of final reports varies from commission to commission. Some commissions, such as the National Commission on the Cost of Higher Education,48 have been given less than six months to submit their final report for Congress. Other commissions, such as the Antitrust Modernization Commission,49 have been given three or more years to complete their work product. Congressional commission costs vary widely, and have been funded in a variety of ways. Overall expenses for any individual commission are dependent on a variety of factors, including whether commissioners are paid, the number of potential staff and their pay levels, and the duration of the commission. Many commissions have few or no full-time staff; others employ large numbers, such as the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States,50 which had a full-time paid staff of 80. Additionally, some commissions provide compensation to members; others only reimburse members for travel expenses. Many commissions finish their work and terminate within a year of creation; in other cases, work may not be completed for several years. Secondary factors that can affect commission costs include the number of commissioners, how often the commission meets or holds hearings, and the number and size of publications the commission produces. For a more detailed analysis of commission funding and expenditures, see CRS Report R45826, Congressional Commissions: Funding and Expenditures, by William T. Egar. Most statutorily created congressional commissions do not compensate their members, except to reimburse members for expenses directly related to their service, such as travel costs.51 Among congressional commissions that compensate their members, the level of compensation is almost always specified statutorily, and is typically set in accordance with one of the federal pay scales, prorated to the number of days of service.52 The most common level of compensation is the daily equivalent of Level IV of the Executive Schedule (EX), which has a basic annual rate of pay of $166,50053 in 2019.54 Most commissions created in the past since the 101st Congress have not paid members beyond reimbursement. The remaining commissions have generally paid members at the daily equivalent of Level IV of the Executive Schedule.Congressional commissions created to study a policy problem or conduct an investigationReporting Requirements
Most of these congressional commissions are also authorized to hire consultants and procure intermittent services. Many commissions are statutorily authorized to request that federal agencies detail personnel to assist the commission. Some commissions are also authorized to accept voluntary services.
Statutes creating congressional commissions often direct the General Services Administration (or another agency) to offer administrative support to the commission:
Upon the request of the Commission, the Administrator of General Services shall provide to the Commission, on a reimbursable basis, the administrative support services necessary for the Commission to carry out its responsibilities under this Act. These administrative services may include human resource management, budget, leasing, accounting, and payroll services.
Congressional commissions are usually statutorily directed to carry out specific tasks. These can include studying a problem, fact-finding, assessing conditions, conducting an investigation, reviewing policy proposals, crafting recommendations, and making feasibility determinations. For example, the proposed Commission on Catastrophic Disaster Risk and Insurance is directed
to assess the condition of the property and casualty insurance and reinsurance markets in the aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma in 2005, and the 4 major hurricanes that struck the United States in 2004; and the ongoing exposure of the United States to windstorms, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, tsunamis, and floods; and recommend and report ... any necessary legislative and regulatory changes that will improve the domestic and international financial health and competitiveness of such markets; and assure consumers of availability of adequate insurance coverage when an insured event occurs.56
One of the primary functions of most congressional commissions is to produce a final report for Congress outlining their activities, findings, and legislative recommendations.57 Most commissions are required to produce an interim, annual, or final report for transmittal to Congress, and sometimes to the President or executive department or agency heads, usually within a specified period of time. A commission may also be authorized to issue other recommendations it considers appropriate.
Table 5. Reporting Requirements of Congressional Commissions
This report attempts to identify all congressional commissions enacted into law between the 101st and 115th Congress. To identify congressional commissions, CRS searched Congress.gov for terms and phrases related to commissions within the text of laws enacted between the 101st (1989-1990) and 115th (2017-2018) Congresses.55 Each piece of legislation returned was examined to determine if (1) the legislation established a commission, and (2) the commission met the five criteria outlined above. If the commission met the criteria, its name, public law number, Statutes-at-Large citation, date of enactment, and other information were recorded. 101st to 114Cataloging Congressional Commissions
th Congress
Recipient |
Total Number |
Percentage of Total |
Congress and the President |
66 |
62% |
Congress only |
24 |
22% |
Congress and an executive agency |
17 |
16% |
Source: CRS analysis of database query of Congressional Legislative Information System (LIS), 101st to 114th Congress.
As seen in Table 5, the majority of commissions created in the past 20 years have submitted their work product to both Congress and the President. About one-quarter of commissions have submitted their work to Congress only. The remainder have submitted their work to both Congress and an executive branch agency.
Since the recommendations contained in a commission report are only advisory, no changes in public policy occur on the authority of a congressional commission. The implementation of such recommendations is dependent upon future congressional or executive branch action.
Most commissions are given statutory deadlines for the submission of their final report. The deadline for the submission of final reports varies from commission to commission. Some commissions, such as the National Commission on the Cost of Higher Education,58 have been given less than six months to submit their final report for Congress. Other commissions, such as the Antitrust Modernization Commission,59 have been given three or more years to complete their work product. Table 6 summarizes the deadlines for submission of final reports.
Statutory Report Deadline |
Number of Commissions |
|
Six months or less |
| |
Between six months and one year |
| |
One year |
| |
Between one year and 18 months |
| |
Between 18 months and two years |
| |
Two years |
| |
Between two and three years |
| |
Three years or more |
| |
No specified deadline |
| |
No final report |
|
Source: CRS analysis of database query of Congressional Legislative Information System (LIS), 101st to 114th Congress.
As shown in Table 6, congressional commissions have been given a wide range of deadlines for the completion of the final reports to Congress. For the 107 identified commissions, final report deadlines ranged from 120 days to 4.5 years. Over 75% of the commissions had a final report deadline of two years or less.
The overall length of time for commissions to complete their final report also varies based on when the specified time limit begins. For the 107 commissions identified by the database search, four different events were used as the start point related to the report deadline: the enactment of the legislation, the appointment of the commission members, the date of the first meeting of the commission, or a specific calendar date. Therefore, a commission with a six-month deadline from the first meeting of the commission will have more total time than a commission with a six-month deadline linked to the enactment of the legislation. Table 7 reports the frequency of use of each of these four events as starting points for report deadlines.
Event |
Number of Commissions With Report Deadline Fixed to Event |
|
Enactment of legislation |
| |
Appointment of commissioners |
| |
First meeting of commission |
| |
Specific calendar date |
| |
Unspecified |
| |
No final report |
|
Source: CRS analysis of database query of Congressional Legislative Information System (LIS), 101st to 114th Congress.
As shown in Table 7, most commissions identified by the search linked the deadline for the submission of the final report to either the first meeting of the commission or a specific calendar date.
The length of time granted to a congressional commission for the completion of its work product is arguably one of the most important decisions facing legislators as they design a new commission. If the commission is given a short amount of time, the quality of its work product may suffer or the commission may not be able to fulfill its statutory mandate. Policymakers should also consider the amount of time necessary for "standing up" a new commission; the selection of commissioners, recruitment of staff, arrangement of office space, and other logistical matters may take six months or more from the date of enactment of commission legislation.
On the other hand, if the commission is given a long amount of time to complete its work product, it may undermine one of the primary legislative advantages of a commission, the timely production of expert advice on a current policy matter. If legislators seek to create a commission to address a pressing policy problem, a short deadline may be appropriate. In addition, the cost of a commission will increase with a longer deadline.
Legislators should also carefully select which event triggers the start of the deadline clock. Selecting a specific calendar date will ensure delivery of a final report at a predictable time, but may leave the commission less time to complete its work product than anticipated if there is a delay in member selection or staff hiring. Linking the deadline to a flexible date, such as the first meeting, will often give the commission a more predictable amount of time to complete its work, but may delay the actual calendar date of submission of the final report.
Most congressional commissions are directed to hold public meetings to discuss commission matters, usually at the call of the chair or the majority of the commission. In addition, most of these congressional commissions are statutorily empowered to hold fact-finding hearings and take testimony from witnesses.
Commissions are occasionally empowered to subpoena witnesses. For example, the proposed Hurricane Katrina Disaster Inquiry Commission60 is authorized to issue subpoenas by agreement of the chair and vice chair, or by the affirmative vote of eight commission members.61 Additional statutory language provides for the enforcement of the subpoenas in federal court.
Some commissions are empowered to secure information from federal agencies. For example, the proposed Hurricane Katrina Disaster Inquiry Commission would be authorized to
secure directly from any executive department, bureau, agency, board, commission, office, independent establishment, or instrumentality of the government, information, suggestions, estimates, and statistics ... [e]ach department, bureau, agency, board, commission, office, independent establishment, or instrumentality shall, to the extent authorized by law, furnish such information ... upon request made by the chairman.62
In addition, Congress occasionally directs specific executive branch agencies to assist a commission in the completion of its work.
Commissions may also be given the following powers: the authority to contract with public agencies and private firms, the authority to use the mails in the same manner as departments and agencies of the United States, and the authority to accept gifts and donations.
Congressional commission costs vary widely, ranging from several hundred thousand dollars to over $10 million. Overall expenses for any individual commission are dependent on a variety of factors, the most important of which are the number of paid staff and duration of the commission. Many commissions have few or no full-time staff; others employ large numbers, such as the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States,63 which had a full-time paid staff of 80. Additionally, some commissions provide compensation to members; others only reimburse members for travel expenses. Many commissions finish their work and terminate within a year of creation; in other cases, work may not be completed for several years.
Secondary factors that can affect commission costs include the number of commissioners, how often the commission meets or holds hearings, and the number and size of publications the commission produces. Although congressional commissions are primarily funded through congressional appropriations, many commissions are statutorily authorized to accept donations of money and volunteer labor, which may offset costs.
Most statutes authorizing the creation of congressional commissions do not specify how the commission should conduct its business. Instead, the statutory language is typically either silent on internal commission procedure or specifically empowers the commission to determine its own rules of procedure. For example, the statute authorizing the National Gambling Impact Study Commission provides that
The Commission may establish by majority vote any other rules for the conduct of the Commission's business, if such rules are not inconsistent with this Act or other applicable law.64
Certain rules of internal procedure, however, are found in the language of most statutes that establish commissions. For instance, many commission statutes provide that votes taken by the commission will be by simple majority, or that a quorum will consist of a particular number of commissioners.65 Similarly, commissions that are given subpoena authority are usually statutorily directed as to who on the commission has the authority to issue the subpoenas.66 Many commissions provide that rules regarding staff hires will be determined by the commission. For instance, the statute authorizing the Commission on Protecting and Reducing Government Secrecy states that
The Chairman, in accordance with rules agreed upon by the Commission, may appoint and fix the compensation of a staff director and such other personnel as may be necessary to enable the Commission to carry out its functions.67
Absent statutory guidance (either in general statutes or in individual statutes authorizing commissions), commissions vary widely in how they adopt their procedures. In general, three models exist: formal written rules, informal rules, and norms. Any individual commission may make use of all three of these models for different types of decisionmaking.
(1) Formal Written Rules: Some commissions choose to formalize their procedures for meetings and hearings. For example, the United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission68 established written rules of procedure for the conduct of meetings of the commission and for hearings held by the commission. The rules include procedures for selection of chairpersons, proxy use, budgeting, expenditures of money, hiring and firing of staff, commissioner ethics, and periodic revision of the rules.69 Changes to the rules require a majority vote of the commission as well as review by outside counsel.70 The commission's written rules for hearings include procedures for the hearing structure, the selection of panelists, generation of questions, opening statements, and post-hearing recommendations to Congress.71
(2) Informal Rules: Some commissions adopt set processes for establishing rules piecemeal as the need arises. For example, the National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Commission72 did not establish formal written rules of procedure.73 However, the members of the commission did take occasional votes to clarify particular procedures that the commission would use for meetings. For example, at the first meetings of the commission, members voted by simple majority as to whether future votes of commission members could be conducted by proxy.74 Although the result of this vote was used as precedent for the remainder of the commission's existence, neither the result of the vote, the rule, or the rules governing the vote itself were formalized in a written fashion.75
(3) Norms: Many advisory commissions choose not to create formal rules for commission meetings or hearings. Instead, these commissions rely on a collegial relationship between commission members and staff, and conduct the meetings in a procedurally flexible manner. In some cases, deference to the wishes of the chairman is followed for procedural matters. For instance, the Congressional-Executive Commission on China does not operate within a system of formal rules of procedure.76 Commission members make collective agreements about operational issues such as the recording of minutes or voting procedure, but these agreements are created and enforced by collective norms, not formal action or votes.77 Similarly, the National Surface Transportation Infrastructure Finance Commission78 relied on member collegiality and deference to the chair and co-chair of the commission for procedural decisions.79
The choice to adopt written rules or rely on informal norms to guide commission procedure may be based on a variety of factors, such as the size of the commission, frequency of meetings, commission member preferences regarding formality, the level of collegiality among members, and the amount of procedural guidance provided by the commission's authorizing statute. Regardless of how procedural issues are handled, procedures for decisionmaking regarding the following operational issues may be important for the commission to consider at the outset of its existence:
Congressional commissions are usually statutorily mandated to terminate. Termination dates for most commissions are linked to either a fixed period of time after the establishment of the commission, the selection of members, or the date of submission of the commission's final report. Alternatively, some commissions are given fixed calendar termination dates.
The following are key considerations for Congress in forming a commission.
The tables that follow provide information on the 107 congressional commissions identified by the database search of the 101st through 114th Congresses. For each commission, the following information is provided: the name of the commission; the type of commission; and the public law creating the commission and date of enactment.
Source: Database query of the congressional Legislative Information System (LIS)CRS analysis of commission legislation from Congress.gov.
Commission |
Type | Authority |
Commission | Policy |
P.L. 113-
|
National Commission on the Future of the Army | Policy |
P.L. 113-291; 128 Stat. 3810; December 19, 2014 |
National Commission on the Future of the Army | Policy |
P.L. 113-
|
National Commission on Hunger | Policy |
P.L. 113-76; 128 Stat. 41 ; January 17, 2014 |
Source: Database query of the congressional Legislative Information System (LIS)CRS analysis of commission legislation from Congress.gov.
Commission |
Type
|
Commission to Eliminate Child Abuse and Neglect Fatalities
|
P.L. 112-275; 126 Stat. 2461; January 14, 2013 Commission on Long-Term Care |
Authority |
National Commission on the Structure of the Air Force |
Policy |
P.L. 112- 2358; January 2, 2013 |
||
Congressional Advisory Panel on the Governance of the Nuclear Security Enterprise |
Policy | P.L. 112-239; 126 Stat. 2208 ; January 2, 2013 |
||
Commission on Long-Term care | Policy |
P.L. 112- 1787; January 2, 2013 |
||
World War I Centennial Commission | Commemorative |
P.L. 112- 1703; January |
||
Commission to Eliminate Child Abuse and Neglect Fatalities | Policy |
P.L. 112- 2449; January |
Source: Database query of the congressional Legislative Information System (LIS)CRS analysis of commission legislation from Congress.gov.
Commission |
Type | Authority |
Indian Law and Order Commission | Policy |
P.L. 111-
|
Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission | Investigative |
P.L. 111- May 20, 2009 |
|
Commemorative |
|
Foreign Intelligence and Information Commission |
Policy | P.L. 111-259; 124 Stat. 2739 ; October 7, 2010 |
Independent Panel to Assess the Quadrennial Defense Review | Policy |
P.L. 111- October 28, 2010 |
Source: Database query of the congressional Legislative Information System (LIS)CRS analysis of commission legislation from Congress.gov.
Commission |
Type | Authority |
Commission on the Abolition of the Transatlantic Slave Trade |
Commemorative | P.L. 110-183; 122 Stat. 606 ; February 5, 2008 |
Commission on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferation and Terrorism |
Policy | P.L. 110-53; 121 Stat. 501 ; August 3, 2007 |
Commission | Investigative |
P.L. 110-
|
Congressional Commission on the Strategic Posture of the United States | Policy |
P.L. 110-181; 122 Stat. 230; January 28, 2008 |
| Policy |
P.L. 110- December 26, 2007 |
Genetic Nondiscrimination Study Commission | Policy |
P.L. 110- 3791; October 3, 2008 |
Congressional Oversight Panel (Emergency Economic Stabilization Act) | Policy/Investigative |
P.L. 110- 917; October 3, 2008 |
Commission to Study the Potential Creation of a National Museum of the American Latino | Policy |
P.L. 110- May 8, 2008 |
Source: Database query of the congressional Legislative Information System (LIS)CRS analysis of commission legislation from Congress.gov.
Commission |
Type | Authority |
Commission on the Implementation of the New Strategic Posture of the United States |
Policy | P.L. 109-163; 119 Stat. 3431 ; January 6, 2006 |
Commission to Assess the Threat to the United States from Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) Attack | Policy |
P.L. 109- January 6, 2006 |
Human Space Flight Independent Investigation Commission | Investigative |
P.L. 109-
|
|
Policy | P.L. 109-59; 119 Stat. 1962; August 10, 2005 |
National Surface Transportation |
Policy | P.L. 109-59; 119 Stat. 1471; August 10, 2005 |
National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Commission | Policy |
P.L. 109- August 10, 2005 |
United States Commission on North American Energy Freedom |
Policy | P.L. 109-58; 119 Stat. 1064 ; August 8, 2005 |
Source: Database query of the congressional Legislative Information System (LIS): CRS analysis of commission legislation from Congress.gov.
Commission |
Type | Authority |
Commission on the Abraham Lincoln Study Abroad Fellowship Program | Policy |
P.L. 108-199; 118 Stat. 435 ; January 23, 2003 |
Commission on the National Guard and Reserve |
Policy | P.L. 108-375; 118 Stat. 1880 ; October 28, 2004 |
Commission on Review the Overseas Military Facility Structure of the United States |
Policy | P.L. 108-132; 117 Stat. 1382 ; November 22, 2003 |
Helping to Enhance the Livelihood of People (HELP) Around the Globe Commission |
Policy | P.L. 108-199; 118 Stat. 101 ; January 23, 2003 |
National Commission on Small Community Air Service | Policy |
P.L. 108-176; 117 Stat. 2549 ; October 18, 2003 |
National Prison Rape Reduction Commission |
Policy Panel to Review Sexual Misconduct Allegations at United States Air Force Academy |
P.L. 108-
|
Veterans' Disability Benefits Commission |
Policy | P.L. 108-136; 117 Stat. 1676 ; November 24, 2003 |
Source: Database query of the congressional Legislative Information System (LIS)CRS analysis of commission legislation from Congress.gov.
Commission |
Type | Authority |
|
Antitrust Modernization Commission |
Policy | P.L. 107-273; 116 Stat. 1856 ; November 2, 2002 |
|
Benjamin Franklin Tercentenary Commission |
Commemorative | P.L. 107-202; 116 Stat. 739 ; July 24, 2002 |
|
Brown v. Board of Education 50th Anniversary Commission |
Commemorative | P.L. 107-41; 115 Stat. 226 ; September 18, 2001 |
|
Commission on the Application of Payment Limitations for Agriculture P.L. 107-171; 116 Stat. 216; May 13, 2002 Guam War Claims Review Commission | Investigative |
P.L. 107-333; 116 Stat. 2873 ; December 12, 2002 |
|
National Commission for the Review of the Research and Development Programs of the United States Intelligence Community | Policy |
P.L. 107-306; 116 Stat. 2437 ; November 27, 2002 |
|
National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States |
Investigative | P.L. 107-306; 116 Stat. 2408 ; November 27, 2002 |
|
National Museum of African American History and Culture Plan for Action Presidential Commission |
Policy | P.L. 107-106; 115 Stat. 1009 ; December 28, 2001 |
Source: Database query of the congressional Legislative Information System (LIS)CRS analysis of commission legislation from Congress.gov.
Commission |
Type | Authority |
||||
Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission |
Commemorative | P.L. 106-173; 114 Stat. 14 ; February 25, 2000 |
||||
Commission on Affordable Housing and Health Care Facility Needs in the 21st Century | Policy |
P.L. 106-74; 113 Stat. 1106 October 20, 1999
|
Commission to Assess the Threat to the United States from Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) Attacks P.L. 106-398, 114 Stat. 1645A-345; October 30, 2000 |
|||
Commission on Indian and Native Alaskan Health Care | Policy |
P.L. 106-310; 114 Stat. 1216 ; October 17, 2000 |
||||
Commission on Ocean Policy |
Policy Commission on the Future of the United States Aerospace Industry |
P.L. 106- 1654A-301; October |
||||
Commission on the National Military Museum |
Policy | P.L. 106-65; 113 Stat. 880 ; October 5, 1999 |
||||
Commission on Victory in the Cold War |
Commemorative | P.L. 106-65; 113 Stat. 765 ; October 5, 1999 |
||||
Commission to Assess United States National Security Space Management and Organization |
Policy | P.L. 106-65; 113 Stat. 813 ; October 5, 1999 |
||||
Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial Commission |
Commemorative | P.L. 106-79; 113 Stat. 1274 ; October 25, 1999 |
||||
Forest Counties Payments Committee P.L. 106-291; 114 Stat. 991; October 11, 2000 | Commemorative |
P.L. 106-550; 114 Stat. 2745 ; December 19, 2000 |
||||
Judicial Review Commission on Foreign Asset Control |
Policy | P.L. 106-120; 113 Stat. 1633 ; December 3, 1999 |
||||
Lands Title Report Commission |
Policy | P.L. 106-568; 114 Stat. 2923 ; December 27, 2000 P.L. 106-569; 114 Stat. 2959; December 27, 2000 |
||||
Millennial Housing Commission |
Policy | P.L. 106-74; 113 Stat. 1070 ; October 20, 1999 |
||||
National Commission for the Review of the National Reconnaissance Office |
Policy National Commission on the Use of Offsets in Defense Trade |
P.L. 106-
|
||||
National Commission to Ensure Consumer Information and Choice in the Airline Industry |
Policy National Wildlife Refuge System Centennial Commission |
P.L. 106- Public Interest Declassification Board P.L. 106-567; 114 Stat. 2856; December 27, 2000 Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Advisory Panel P.L. 106-170; 113 Stat. 1887; December 17, 1999 Source: CRS analysis of commission legislation from Congress.gov. April 15, 2000 |
Source: Database query of the congressional Legislative Information System (LIS).
Commission |
Type | Authority
|
Advisory Committee on Electronic Commerce
|
P.L. 105-277; 112 Stat. 2681-722; October 21, 1998
|
Amtrak Reform Council
|
P.L. 105-134; 111 Stat. 2579; December 2, 1997
|
Census Monitoring Board P.L. 105-119; 111 Stat. 2483; November 26, 1997 |
Commission on the Advancement of Women and Minorities in Science, Engineering, and Technology Development | Policy |
P.L. 105-255; 112 Stat. 1889 ; October 14, 1998 |
|||||
Commission on Military Training and Gender-Related Issues |
Policy Commission on Online Child Protection |
P.L. 105- Independent Panel to Evaluate the Adequacy of Current Planning for United States Long-Range Air Power and the Requirement for Continued Low-Rate Production of B-2 Stealth Bombers
|
|||||
National Bipartisan Commission on the Future of Medicare | Policy |
P.L. 105-33; 111 Stat. 347 ; October 5, 1997 |
|||||
National Commission on the Cost of Higher Education |
Policy | P.L. 105-18; 111 Stat. 207 ; June 12, 1997 |
|||||
National Commission on Terrorism |
Policy | P.L. 105-277; 112 Stat. 2681-210 ; October 21, 1998 |
|||||
National Health Museum Commission |
Policy Parents Advisory Council on Youth Drug Abuse |
P.L. 105- November 13, 1997 |
|||||
Presidential Advisory Commission on Holocaust Assets in the United States |
Investigative | P.L. 105-186; 112 Stat. 611 ; June 23, 1998 |
|||||
Twenty-First Century Workforce Commission |
Policy | P.L. 105-220; 112 Stat. 1087 ; October 7, 1998 |
|||||
Trade Deficit Review Commission |
Policy | P.L. 105-277; 112 Stat. 2681-547 ; October 21, 1998 |
|||||
United States Commission on International Religious Freedom |
Policy | P.L. 105-292; 112 Stat. 2797 ; October 27, 1998 |
|||||
Web-Based Education Commission |
Policy | P.L. 105-244; 112 Stat. 1822 ; October 7, 1998 |
|||||
Women's Progress Commemoration Commission |
Commemorative | P.L. 105-341; 112 Stat. 3196 ; October 31, 1998 |
Source: Database query of the congressional Legislative Information System (LIS)CRS analysis of commission legislation from Congress.gov.
Commission |
Type |
Authority |
|||||
Commission on Maintaining United States Nuclear Weapons Expertise |
Policy
|
Commission on 21st Century Production Agriculture
|
P.L. 104-127; 110 Stat. 938; April 4, 1996
|
Commission on Consensus Reform in the District of Columbia Public Schools
|
P.L. 104-134; 110 Stat. 1321-151; April 26, 1996
|
P.L. 104-201; 110 Stat. 2843; Commission on Maintaining United States Nuclear Weapons Expertise | P.L. 104-201; 110 Stat. 2843 September 23, 1996 |
Commission on |
Policy | P.L. 104-275; 110 Stat. 3346 ; October 9, 1996 |
|||||
Commission on the Advancement of Federal Law Enforcement |
Policy Commission to Assess the Ballistic Missile Threat to the United States |
P.L. 104-
|
|||||
Commission to Assess the Organization of the Federal Government to Combat the Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction |
Policy National Civil Aviation Review Commission |
P.L. 104- October 11, 1996
|
National Commission on Restructuring the Internal Revenue Service P.L. 104-52; 110 Stat. 509; November 19, 1995 |
||||
National Gambling Impact Study Commission |
Policy Water Rights Task Force |
P.L. 104-
|
Source: Database query of the congressional Legislative Information System (LIS)CRS analysis of commission legislation from Congress.gov.
Commission |
Type | Authority
|
Advisory Board on Welfare Indicators P.L. 103-432; 108 Stat. 4463; October 31, 1994 |
Commission on Leave | Policy |
P.L. 103-3; 107 Stat. 23 ; February 5, 1993 |
|
Commission on Protecting and Reducing Government Secrecy | Policy |
P.L. 103-236; 108 Stat. 525 ; April 30, 1994 |
|
Commission on the Roles and Capabilities of the United States Intelligence Community | Policy |
P.L. 103-359; 108 Stat. 3456 ; October 14, 1994 |
|
National Bankruptcy Review Commission |
Policy | P.L. 103-394; 108 Stat. 4147 ; October 22, 1994 |
|
National Commission on Crime Control and Prevention |
Policy National Skill Standards Board |
P.L. 103-
|
Source: Database query of the congressional Legislative Information System (LIS)CRS analysis of commission legislation from Congress.gov.
Commission |
Type | Authority |
|
Commission on | Commemorative
|
P.L. 102-138; 105 Stat. 705; October 28, 1991 Commission on Child and Family Welfare |
P.L. 102- 3406; October |
Commission on | Policy
|
P.L. 102-392; 106 Stat. 1726; October 6, 1992 Commission on the Social Security "Notch" Issue |
P.L. 102- October 28, 1991 |
Commission | Policy |
P.L. 102- October 25, 1992 |
|
Congressional Commission on the Evaluation of Defense Industry Base Policy |
Policy | P.L. 102-558; 106 Stat. 4220 ; October 28, 1992 |
|
National Education Commission on Time and Learning | Policy
|
P.L. 102-166; 105 Stat. 1082; November 21, 1991 National Commission on Intermodal Transportation |
P.L. 102-
|
National Commission on Reducing Capital Gains for Emerging Technology | Policy |
P.L. 102-245; 106 Stat. 21 ; February 14, 1992 |
|
National Commission on Rehabilitation Services | Policy |
P.L. 102-569; ; October 29, 1992 |
|
National Commission on the Future Role of United States Nuclear Weapons | Policy |
P.L. 102-172; 105 Stat. 1208 ; November 26, 1991 |
|
National Commission to Promote a Strong Competitive Airline Industry | Policy |
P.L. 102-581; 106 Stat. 4891 ; October 31, 1992 |
|
Thomas Jefferson Commemoration Commission | Commemorative
|
P.L. 102-62; 105 Stat. 306; June 27, 1991 Thomas Jefferson Commemoration Commission |
P.L. 102-343; 106 Stat. 915 ; October 17, 1992 |
Source: Database query of the congressional Legislative Information System (LIS)CRS analysis of commission legislation from Congress.gov.
Commission |
Type | Authority |
||
Civil War Sites Advisory Commission |
Policy |
P.L. 101-628; 104 Stat. 4504 November 28, 1990 |
||
National Commission on Manufactured Housing |
Policy |
P.L. 101-625; 104 Stat. 4413 P.L. 101-628; 104 Stat. 4504; November 28, 1990 |
||
Commission on Legal Immigration Reform | Policy |
P.L. 101-649; 104 Stat. 5001 ; November 29, 1990 |
||
Commission on Management of the Agency for International Development Programs | Policy |
P.L. 101-513; 104 Stat. 2022 ; November 5, 1990 |
||
Commission on State and Private Forests | Policy |
P.L. 101-624; 104 Stat. 3548 ; November 28, 1990 |
||
Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission |
Policy Independent Commission |
P.L. 101- November 5, 1990 |
||
Joint Federal-State Commission on Policies and Programs Affecting Alaska Natives |
Policy National Advisory Council on the Public Service |
P.L. 101-
|
||
National Commission on American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian Housing | Policy |
P.L. 101-235; 103 Stat. 2052 ; December 15, 1989 |
||
National Commission on Defense and National Security |
Policy | P.L. 101-511; 104 Stat. 1899 ; November 5, 1990 |
||
National Commission on Financial Institution Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement |
Policy National Commission on Judicial Discipline and Removal |
P.L. 101- National Commission on Manufactured Housing |
||
National Commission on | Policy
|
P.L. 101-235; 103 Stat. 2048; December 15, 1989 National Commission on Wildfire Disasters |
P.L. 101-
|
|
National Commission | Policy
|
P.L. 101-515; 104 Stat. 2122; November 5, 1990 Preservation of Jazz Advisory Commission |
P.L. 101- Risk Assessment and Management Commission P.L. 101-549; 104 Stat. 2574; November 15, 1990 December 15, 1989 |
Source: Database query of the congressional Legislative Information System (LIS).
Author Contact Information
Acknowledgments
This report was originally coauthored with former CRS analyst [author name scrubbed]. [author name scrubbed], research assistant, supported with data aspects of the current report.
William T. Egar, Analyst in American National Government
([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
Acknowledgments This report was originally coauthored with former CRS Analyst Matthew E. Glassman. Raymond T. Williams, former Research Assistant, supported with data aspects of the current report. Footnotes1.
|
|
Colton Campbell, Discharging Congress: Government by Commission (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2002); Jordan Tama, Terrorism and National Security Reforms: How Commissions Can Drive Change During Crisis (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2011). |
P.L. 109-58, 119 Stat 1064, August 8, 2005. |
|||||||||
P.L. 107-306, 116 Stat. 2408, November 27, 2002. |
||||||||||||
P.L. 106-173, 114 Stat. 14, February 25, 2000. |
||||||||||||
|
For more information on commemorative commissions, see CRS Report R41425, Commemorative Commissions: Overview, Structure, and Funding, by Jacob R. Straus. 6.
|
|
For more information on executive branch advisory commissions, see CRS Report R44232, Creating a Federal Advisory Committee in the Executive Branch, by Meghan M. Stuessy; and CRS Report R44253, Federal Advisory Committees: An Introduction and Overview, by Meghan M. Stuessy. |
Alternative definitions might be equally appealing. The wide variety of boards, task forces, panels, and commissions created by Congress, coupled with the lack of a legal definition for "congressional commission," results in many gray areas. Consequently, some entities created by Congress that do not meet all five characteristics might be considered congressional commissions by observers using |
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An example of a commission that was widely considered a congressional commission but was not established by Congress was the Iraq Study Group. Congress appropriated money to the U.S. Institute of Peace and informally arranged for the selection of the |
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For more information on establishing an advisory commission in the executive branch, see CRS Report R44232, Creating a Federal Advisory Committee in the Executive Branch, by Meghan M. Stuessy. Many well-known advisory commissions have been established by the President or by an agency. For example, the U.S. Commission on National Security/21st Century (the Hart-Rudman |
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For example, the Advisory Commission to Study the Consumer Price Index was established by the Senate Committee on Finance in June 1995 and submitted its report to the committee in December |
||||||||||||
2 U.S.C. §2001; P.L. 59-253; 34 Stat. 1365. |
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2 U.S.C. §2101; P.L. 100-696; 102 Stat. 4610. |
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22 U.S.C. §1928a; P.L. 84-689; 70 Stat. 523. |
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22 U.S.C. §276(d); P.L. 86-42, 73 Stat. 72. |
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36 U.S.C. §2302; P.L. 96-388; 94 Stat. 1547. |
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20 U.S.C. §76h; P.L. 85-874; 72 Stat. 1698. |
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| ||||||||||||
15. |
For example, provisions for the establishment of 12 separate advisory bodies were included in the text of the FY1999 Omnibus Consolidated and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act (P.L. 105-277, 112 Stat. 2681). |
|||||||||||
18.
|
|
The Commission on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferation and Terrorism: P.L. 110-53, 121 Stat. 501, August 3, 2007. 19.
|
|
Motor Fuel Tax Enforcement Advisory Committee: P.L. 109-59, 119 Stat. 1959, August 10, 2005. |
P.L. 109-163, 119 Stat. 3434, January 6, 2006; P.L. 110-53, 121 Stat. 501, August 3, 2007; P.L. 109-59, 119 Stat. 1959, August 10, 2005; P.L. 109-163, 119 Stat. 3434, January 6, 2006. |
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17. |
P.L. 110-181, January 28, 2008; P.L. 110-343, October 3, 2008. |
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18. |
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22National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States (the 9/11 Commission): P.L. 107-306, 116 Stat. 2408, November 27, 2002. |
The events are the ending of the transatlantic slave trade, the construction of the Capitol, the Seneca Falls convention, the first successful airplane flight, the end of the Cold War, the Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education, World War I, and the territorial status of the Virgin Islands. |
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20. |
P.L. 106-79, 113 Stat. 1274, October 25, 1999. |
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Colton Campbell, "Creating an Angel: Congressional Delegation to Ad Hoc Commissions," Congress and the Presidency, vol. 25, no. 2 (Autumn 1998), p. 162. |
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Morris P. Fiorina, "Group Concentration and the Delegation of Legislative Authority," in Roger G. Noll, ed., Regulatory Policy and the Social Sciences (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1985), p. 184. See also James E. Katz, "Science, Technology, and Congress," Science vol. 30, no. 4 (May 1993), pp. 41-44. |
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George T. Sulzner, "The Policy Process and the |
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Kenneth R. Mayer, "Closing Military Bases (Finally): Solving Collective Dilemmas Through Delegation," Legislative Studies Quarterly, vol. 20, no. 3 (August 1995), pp. 395-397. |
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Campbell, Discharging Congress, pp. 9-10. 30.
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Sulzner, "The Policy Process and the Uses |
Campbell, Discharging Congress, p. 12. |
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29. |
Ibid, p. 13; Newt Gingrich, "Leadership Task Forces: The 'Third Wave' Way to Consider Legislation," Roll Call, November 16, 1995, p. 5. |
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30. |
Campbell, Discharging Congress, p. 10. |
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31. |
Ibid., p. 9. |
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32. |
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John B. Gilmour, "Summits and Stalemates: Bipartisan Negotiations in the Postreform Era," in Roger H. Davidson, ed., The Postreform Congress (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1993), pp. 247-248. |
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Daniel Bell, "Government by Commission," Public Interest, vol. 1, no. 3 (Spring 1966), p. 7; Campbell, Discharging Congress, p. 70; Campbell, Discharging Congress, p. 13; Newt Gingrich, "Leadership Task Forces: The 'Third Wave' Way to Consider Legislation," Roll Call, November 16, 1995, p. 5. |
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Gary W. Cox and Matthew D. McCubbins, Legislative Leviathan: Party Government in the House (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993), p. 80. |
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Mayer, "Closing Military Bases |
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Charles E. Cook, "Base Closing Furor: Minimal Political Impact for Members," Roll Call, March 18, 1993, p. 1. |
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David S. Brown, "The Public Advisory Board as an Instrument of Government," Public Administration Review, vol. 15, no. 3 (Summer 1955), pp. 197-199. |
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Charles J. Hanser, Guide to Decision: The Royal Commission (Totowa, New Jersey: Bedminster Press, 1965), pp. 222-225. |
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Sen. Trent Lott, "Special Commissions," Remarks in the Senate |
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R. Kent Weaver, "The Politics of Blame Avoidance," Journal of Public Policy, vol. 6, no. 4 (October-December 1986), pp. 373-374. See also Douglas Arnold, The Logic of Congressional Action (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1990), p. 101. |
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Campbell, Discharging Congress, pp. 68-69; |
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R. Kent Weaver, "Is Congress Abdicating Power to Commissions?" Roll Call, February 12, 1989, pp. 5, 25. |
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Natalie Hanlon, "Military Base Closures: A Study of Government by Commission," Colorado Law Review, vol. 62, no. 2 (1991), pp. 331-364. |
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James Q. Wilson, "A Reader's Guide to the Crime Commission's Report," Public Interest, no. 9 (Fall 1967), pp. 64, 82. |
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These considerations are based, in part, on Campbell, Discharging Congress, p. 7, Table 1.3. 47.
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Some commissions, such as the Motor Fuel Tax Enforcement Advisory Commission (P.L. 109-59; 119 Stat. 2941) are not required to submit a final report, but instead make annual reports to Congress during the specified lifespan of the commission. 48.
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P.L. 105-18; 111 Stat. 207 (June 12, 1997). 49.
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P.L. 107-273; 116 Stat. 1856 (November 2, 2002). 50.
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P.L. 107-306; 116 Stat. 2408. 51.
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For example, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom's statute (P.L. 105-292; 112 Stat. 2787, October 27, 1998) stated, "(i) Funding.—Members of the Commission shall be allowed travel expenses, including per diem in lieu of subsistence, at rates authorized for employees under subchapter I of chapter 57 of title 5, United States Code, while away from their homes or regular places of business in the performance of services for the Commission." |
Section 3, H.R. 537 (110th Congress). |
49. |
Office of Legal Counsel, Department of Justice. "Applicability of 18 U.S.C. §208 to National Gambling Impact Study Commission," Memorandum for the Acting General Counsel, General Services Administration, January 26, 1999. See also Ameron, Inc. v. U.S. Army Corp of Engineers, 787 F.2d 875 (3d Cir. 1986); Bowsher v. Synar, 478 U.S. 714 (1986). |
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50. |
For example, P.L. 109-58 prescribes that nominees for the United States Commission on North American Energy Freedom must be "knowledgeable on energy issues, including oil and gas exploration and production, crude oil refining, oil and gas pipelines, electricity production and transmission, coal, unconventional hydrocarbon resources, fuel cells, motor vehicle power systems, nuclear energy, renewable energy, biofuels, energy efficiency, and energy conservation." |
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51. |
P.L. 107-273, 116 Stat. 1758, (2002). |
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52. |
P.L. 105-292; 112 Stat. 2787, 2798 (October 27, 1998). |
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53. |
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54. |
Although Level IV of the Executive Schedule is the most common compensation level, commission members could be compensated at other levels of the Executive Schedule or at particular levels of the General Schedule. Members of congressional commissions that fall under the Federal Advisory Committee Act (P.L. 92-463), however, are prohibited from receiving compensation in excess of the rate specified for Executive Schedule Level IV. |
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55. |
P.L. 107-273, 116 Stat. 1768, 1858, January 2, 2002. |
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56. |
Section 5, H.R. 537 (110th Congress). |
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57. |
Some commissions, such as the Motor Fuel Tax Enforcement Advisory Commission (P.L. 109-59; 119 Stat. 2941) are not required to submit a final report, but instead make annual reports to Congress during the specified lifespan of the commission. |
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58. |
P.L. 105-18; 111 Stat. 207 (June 12, 1997). |
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59. |
P.L. 107-273; 116 Stat. 1856 (November 2, 2002). |
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60. |
H.R. 265 (110th Congress). |
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61. |
Section 6(a)(2), H.R. 265 (110th Congress). |
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62. |
Section 6(c), H.R. 265 (110th Congress). |
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63. |
P.L. 107-306; 116 Stat. 2408. |
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64. |
P.L. 104-169; 110 Stat. 1482 (October 3, 1996). |
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65. |
For example, the statute creating the Brown vs. Board of Education 50th Anniversary Commemorative Commission (P.L. 107-41; 115 Stat. 206) provides that "a majority of members" will form a quorum, while the statute creating the Commission on the National Military Museum (P.L. 106-65; 113 Stat. 880) provides that a specific number of commissioners (six) will form a quorum. |
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66. |
For example, see P.L. 107-306, which created the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States. |
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For example, the Antitrust Modernization Commissions statute stated, "(a) Pay.—(1) Nongovernment employees.—Each member of the Commission who is not otherwise employed by a government shall be entitled to receive the daily equivalent of the annual rate of basic pay payable for level IV of the Executive Schedule under section 5315 of title 5 United States Code, as in effect from time to time, for each day (including travel time) during which such member is engaged in the actual performance of duties of the Commission. (2) Government employees.—A member of the Commission who is an officer or employee of a government shall serve without additional pay (or benefits in the nature of compensation) for service as a member of the Commission. (b) Travel Expenses.—Members of the Commission shall receive travel expenses, including per diem in lieu of subsistence, in accordance with subchapter I of chapter 57 of title 5, United States Code." P.L. 107-273, 116 Stat. 1768, 1858, January 2, 2002. 53.
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|
U.S. Office of Personnel Management, "Salary Table No. 2019-EX: Rates of Basic Pay for the Executive Schedule (EX)," at https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/pay-leave/salaries-wages/salary-tables/pdf/2019/EX.pdf. 54.
|
|
Although Level IV of the Executive Schedule is the most common compensation level, commission members could be compensated at other levels of the Executive Schedule or at particular levels of the General Schedule. Members of congressional commissions that fall under the Federal Advisory Committee Act (P.L. 92-463), however, are prohibited from receiving compensation in excess of the rate specified for Executive Schedule Level IV. 55.
|
|
The search included such terms as commission, task force, advisory, board, panel, independent establishment, coordinating committee, study group, and working group. 56.
|
For example, provisions for the establishment of 12 separate advisory bodies were included in the text of the FY1999 Omnibus Consolidated and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act (P.L. 105-277, 112 Stat. 2681) |
P.L. 103-236; 108 Stat 255 (April 30, 1994). |
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68. |
P.L. 106-398; 114 Stat. 1654A-334 (October 30, 2000). |
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69. |
United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission, Commission Rules, adopted June 6, 2003. |
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70. |
Ibid., rule 19. |
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71. |
United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission, Procedures and Responsibilities of Hearing Cochairs. |
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72. |
P.L. 109-59; 119 Stat. 1470 (August 10, 2005). |
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73. |
Interview with Susan Binder, former Executive Director, National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Commission, July 10, 2008. |
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74. |
Ibid. |
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75. |
Ibid. |
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76. |
Interview with Douglas Grob, Staff Director, July 10, 2008. |
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77. |
Ibid. |
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78. |
P.L. 109-59; 119 Stat. 1962 (August 10, 2005). |
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79. |
Interview with Jack Wells, staff director, July 10, 2008. |
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80. |
|