An “Unknowable” Number of Bureaucrats
Filed under: Health Law, Health Reform, Obama Administration
Perhaps I’ve just read too much Kafka for this to be a comfortable paragraph, but I’ll let you decide. From Politico, in “Health reform’s bureaucratic spawn“:
Don’t bother trying to count up the number of agencies, boards and commissions created under the new health care law. Estimating the number is “impossible,” a recent Congressional Research Service report says, and a true count “unknowable.”
The modern course of the law is administrative. In the end, the appropriate scope of the Congressional delegation of power falls to the Supreme Court’s “intelligible principle” doctrine and the acknowledged need for technical expertise in complex areas that require rules–such as Health Law and Health Law Finance. But that doesn’t make it all that much less scary.
The rest of the Politico article is worth a quick read. And if you’re an aspiring attorney, you might want to consider taking Administrative Law. And, of course, Health Law.




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