Independent agencies of the United States government

Federal independent agencies were established through separate statutes passed by Congress. Each respective statutory grant of authority defines the goals the agency must work towards, as well as what substantive areas, if any, it may have the power of rulemaking over. These agency rules (or regulations), while in force, have the power of federal law in the United States.

The executive departments are the major operating units of the U.S. federal government, but many other agencies have important responsibilities for serving the public interest, and keeping the government and the economy working smoothly. They are often called independent agencies because they are not part of the executive departments.

The nature and purpose of independent agencies vary widely. Some are regulatory groups with powers to supervise certain sectors of the economy. Others provide special services either to the government or to the people. In most cases, the agencies have been created by Congress to deal with matters that have become too complex for the scope of ordinary legislation. In 1970, for example, Congress established the Environmental Protection Agency to coordinate governmental action to protect the environment.

The Administrative Procedure Act establishes the protocols for agency rulemaking and decisions in agency enforcement proceedings. The APA also provides for direct judicial review of agency action in the D.C. Circuit Court (and then on appeal to the Supreme Court), once all intra-agency procedures been exhausted. The D.C. Circuit can uphold the regulation as a valid exercise of statutory authority by the agency, or it can remand back to the agency for further consideration and information gathering. Decisions and rules must be sufficiently justified by the agency to withstand judicial review. If there is no established factual or rational basis for the agency's actions, the court will not infer or assume one.

Well known examples

Note: This does not list ALL such agencies.

See also

See also: Independent agencies of the United States government, Administrative Procedure Act, Administrative law, Central Intelligence Agency, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Environmental Protection Agency, Executive branch, Federal Communications Commission, Federal Government of the United States, Federal Reserve Board