the ATLANTIC
 
Philip K. Howard is a lawyer, author and chair of Common Good. He is the  
author, most recently, of Life Without Lawyers: Restoring Responsibility in  
America, and wrote the introduction to Al Gore's Common Sense  Government
 
It's Time to Clean House
By Philip K. Howard  


Mar 6 2012
 
America is basically run by dead people: We elect new representatives,  but 
continue on with policy from decades ago. To go forward, Congress needs to  
confront the past.
 
 
This is the first article in a new series The Atlantic is  publishing in 
partnership with Common Good, a nonpartisan government reform  organization, 
devoted to remaking government within budget and without  suffocating the 
American spirit. Each month, America the Fixable will identify a  different 
challenge facing the United States -- regulation, school bureaucracy,  
healthcare, civil service, campaign finance reform -- and, drawing together a  
range 
of expert voices on the topic, offer potential solutions in articles,  
online discussions, and video reports. This month, the series tackles the  
scourge of obsolete laws.--The Editors  
____________________________________
  
America is mired in a tarpit of accumulated law. Reformers propose new  
laws to fix health care, schools, and the regulatory system, but almost never  
suggest cleaning out the legal swamp these institutions operate in. These  
complex legal tangles not only set goals but allocate resources and dictate 
the  minutest details of how to meet those goals. Most are obsolete in whole 
or part. 
 
Nothing important can get fixed without remaking a coherent legal 
framework.  
The flaw is not one that can be solved by deregulation. Almost no one, for  
example, would disagree about the need to provide education for disabled  
children. But special education law, enacted in 1975, was structured as an  
open-ended mandate, and soon spun out of control. Today, special ed consumes 
20  percent of the total K-12 budget in America. Programs for gifted 
children  get less than half of one percent, and pre-K education gets almost 
nothing. Is  this a sensible allocation of education dollars? No one is even 
asking the  question.  
Congress treats most laws as if they were the Ten Commandments -- except  
they're more like the 10 million commandments. Most legislative programs do 
not  codify timeless principles of right and wrong. They are tools of social  
management. These laws allocate social resources -- almost 70 percent of 
federal  revenue in 2010 was consumed by three entitlement programs enacted a 
half  century or more ago. Congress almost never goes back to rationalize 
these  programs. Running government today is like trying to run a business 
using every  idea every manager ever had. 
 
At this point, Democracy is basically run by dead people. We elect new  
representatives, but society is run by policy ideas and political deals from  
decades ago. Congress has a tragic 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2012/03/its-time-to-clean-house/253921/editor-content.html?cs=utf-8)
  
misconception of its responsibility -- it sees itself as  a body that makes new 
law, not one that makes sense of old laws.  
The problem of obsolete law is not theoretical. It's concrete, affecting  
daily choices across the country. It adds to cost, and slows productive 
activity  to a crawl.  
There are four problems caused by the accumulation of old law:  
    1.  Too much law causes paralysis. Over the past century laws have 
piled up,  like sediment in the harbor, until it's almost impossible to do 
anything  sensibly. Building a "green infrastructure," for example, is stymied 
by 
 environmental processes that sometimes consume upwards of a decade. 
    2.  Laws have unintended consequences. Things never work out as 
planned.  Sometimes a well-meaning idea, such as special education, ends up 
undermining  other important goals. 
    3.  Priorities change. The more specific a law, the faster it becomes  
obsolete. In the 1930s, when many farmers were struggling, Congress enacted  
farm subsidies. The crisis ended by 1941. Now, 70 years later, farm prices 
are  at record highs, and much of farming is done by corporations. But the 
farm  subsidies continue -- $15 billion in 2010. 
    4.  Legal accretion is not coherent. The goal of law is to provide a 
framework  for a free society. The idea of legal "codes" -- such as the 
Uniform  Commercial Code -- is to provide uniform standards by which people can 
 
organize their activities. Federal law attempts no such coherence: the  
Government Accountability Office found 82 separate programs for teacher  
quality. 
The fact that the laws are generally well-intentioned cannot disguise  the 
unavoidable resemblance to a huge legal junkyard.
Fixing what ails America is impossible, indeed illegal, without a  legal 
spring cleaning. The goal is not mainly to "deregulate" but to restate  
programs in light of current needs and priorities.  
As a practical matter, this requires Congress to authorize special  
commissions to make proposals, area by area. Using the base closing commission  
model, these proposals would be submitted to Congress for an up or down vote.  
Going forward, Congress should incorporate sunset provisions in all laws 
with  budgetary impact. The goal is not to end good programs but to impose a  
discipline that is essential for a functioning democracy that must 
constantly  make tough tradeoffs.  
Accumulated law is not a problem our founders anticipated. They made it 
hard  to enact new laws, thinking they would thereby protect the open field of 
freedom  against too much legal interference. But 200 years later, the land 
of the free  is a legal swamp. It's hard to dredge, because those same 
checks and balances  apply to repealing a law -- with one additional 
impediment. 
Once a law is  enacted, it is immediately surrounded by an army of special 
interests. Not one  word can be changed until a majority of Congress has run 
a gauntlet of special  interests, flogging each member with campaign 
funding. That's why changing old  law is so politically difficult as to be 
unthinkable.  
"The difficulty lies not in the new ideas," John Maynard Keynes observed,  
"but in escaping from the old ones." American government is trapped in  
structures of its own making. The essential first step in rescuing America is a 
 
spring cleaning. It's hard to fix things until we can make fresh  choices.

-- 
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