Section 4: Statutory instrument procedure
80.Subsection (1) requires that orders be made by statutory instrument. Subsection (2) sets out the standard provision for the draft affirmative order procedure.
81.Subsections (3)-(11) provide for detailed provisions of orders to be amended by either negative or either type of affirmative resolution procedure. The wide scope of the 1994 Act enabled matters to be prescribed by a further instrument (as, for example, with the Deregulation (Corn Returns Act 1882) Order (SI No. 1996/848) where minor detail was set out in the Corn Returns Regulations (SI No. 1997/1873)). However, this power was very limited in practice, because of the need to ensure that any such regulations maintained necessary protection.
82.The Act does not contain an express power for orders to sub-delegate. However, given that it would be possible for an order to re-enact existing provision and that it can do so with or without amendment, one option that would help preserve flexibility would be for an order to adapt an existing power to make delegated legislation. Such a reform could involve extending an existing order-making power to cover new but related matters, but not to the extent of providing for an open-ended and unconstrained power or one covering entirely new provision from that permitted by the original delegated power.
83.Where that option was not available, it would be open to the Minister to identify certain provisions in the draft regulatory reform proposal as subordinate. This new approach allows Parliament to see what is proposed as subordinate provisions when considering the draft regulatory reform order but also enables such provisions to be amended subsequently by statutory instrument. It allows for parts of a proposed regulatory reform order to be designated as subordinate provisions, thereby enabling Ministers to change them subsequently either by negative resolution order or either form of affirmative resolution order, if the need arises. It is envisaged that subordinate provisions would usually be included in schedules to the main part of the regulatory reform order, in the same way as technical detail is omitted from Articles in European Community legislation, but rather set out in Annexes.
84.This approach is more open and accountable, in that the elements that the Minister sees as subordinate would have to be identified in advance in the consultation paper, the draft Order itself and details provided in the explanatory document presented under Section 6. In order to satisfy the scrutiny Committees that there was not an issue of inappropriate sub-delegation, the main order would set out the principles that govern the detailed matters and those principles would not themselves be amendable – but the detail as identified as subordinate provisions would be amendable. During consideration of the proposed regulatory reform order, the main safeguards would be the ability of either scrutiny Committee to:
insist, on pain of an adverse report, that the main principles were set out in the main part of the order, which would be unamendable (except by a further full regulatory reform order). Indeed, the Committees could set out in their reports what unamendable principles they would require in the main body of the order – for instance, they could decide that the main order should set out the principles governing the sale of goods by weight, but that it could also identify as subordinate provisions a schedule setting out the precise list of those goods that were to be sold by weight; and
similarly insist that any change to particular subordinate provisions should be by way of affirmative rather than negative resolution procedure.
85.Subsequently, there would be the additional safeguard of further Committee scrutiny at the time any subordinate provisions order was made by either negative or affirmative resolution procedure. Under Commons Standing Order 141, the Deregulation and Regulatory Reform Committee, rather than the Joint Committee on Statutory Instruments, will scrutinise subordinate provisions orders. The Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee will perform the same function in the Lords.
86.As the order has to be tabled in a complete form as a combination of both main and subordinate provisions, it will not be possible to have a “skeleton” order. The kind of details that will be dealt with by a subordinate provisions order (which could have been dealt with by way of further sub-delegation under the 1994 Act) will include matters of administrative arrangement such as the precise detail of an application form, the number of copies of the form required (where it is to be submitted other than electronically) and any accompanying fee, etc. In addition, a subordinate provisions order might cover the more technical details of the legislation, such as procedures needed to give effect to principles set out in the main part of the order. Such details may change from time to time. Without provision for a subordinate provisions order, the only way to change the details would be to undergo the full consultation and scrutiny procedure, which might be viewed as an inappropriate use of Parliamentary time and would be likely to lead to delay.
87.Subsection (5) makes clear that subordinate provisions orders can make provisions that purely apply burdens and that, as such, the safeguard in section 3(2)(b) does not apply. This is to ensure that subordinate provisions orders could be used, for example, to raise the level of a fee from time to time. They could also be used, for example, to add to lists of things subject to some requirement.
88.Subsection (6) specifies the role of the National Assembly for Wales in making subordinate provisions orders relating to Wales. The purpose is to reflect the devolution settlement.
89.Subsections (7) to (9) allow a main regulatory reform order to provide for subordinate provisions orders to be subject to either negative resolution or an alternative form of affirmative resolution. The alternative affirmative procedures are for subordinate provisions orders to be made following approval by both Houses, or for them to be made without approval but to cease to have effect unless approved within 28 days (not counting recesses).
90.Subsection (10) makes a technical amendment for the purposes of the Statutory Instruments Act 1946 and subsection (11) makes clear that subordinate provisions orders are not subject to the public consultation and Parliamentary scrutiny procedures required for the regulatory reform orders themselves.