The Federal Register is a daily digest where the
federal government announces proposed and final regulations,
announces agency hearings, and posts certain presidential
documents. This year’s edition passed the 75,000 page mark
yesterday. An average weekday sees 327 pages of federal doings, um,
registered.
This year’s Register is already over 5,000 pages longer
than last year’s, which had an unadjusted page count of 69,644
(some pages are left intentionally blank; the adjusted page count
was 68,598).
There are still 20 working days left in the year. Assuming 250
working days, the 2010 Federal Register is on pace for an
unadjusted page count of 81,560 pages. That would be the third-most
of all time in the Federal Register’s 75-year history.
The record was set in 1980 with an impressive midnight flurry
from the Carter administration’s final year. The Clinton era also
ended with a bang, pumping out 83,294 unadjusted pages in 2000. The
inaugural 1936 Federal Register, published at the height
of the Roosevelt administration, was 2,620 pages.
The number of blank pages in the Federal Register
varies from year to year, though it is trending down as technology
improves. Adjusted page counts make for an apples-to-apples
comparison. By this measure, President Bush made Carter and Clinton
look like pikers.
His 2008 exeunt set the all-time record with 79,435
adjusted pages of new regulations, notices, and government doings.
George W. Bush was nothing if not a friend of big government. He
beat Clinton’s final flourish by 5,000 pages and Carter’s by
6,000.
President Obama’s zeal for big government may exceed even
Bush’s. He could beat the record for adjusted page count this year,
and he isn’t even leaving office, which is usually when page counts
are highest. One wonders how many pages of midnight regulations his
administration will publish when it ends in 2013 or 2017.