Skip to main content Skip to office menu Skip to footer
Capital IconMinnesota Legislature

Office of the Revisor of Statutes

14.26 ADOPTION OF PROPOSED RULE; SUBMISSION TO ADMINISTRATIVE LAW
JUDGE.
    Subdivision 1. Submission. If no hearing is required, the agency shall submit to an
administrative law judge assigned by the chief administrative law judge the proposed rule and
notice as published, the rule as adopted, any written comments received by the agency, and a
statement of need and reasonableness for the rule. The agency shall give notice to all persons who
requested to be informed that these materials have been submitted to the administrative law judge.
This notice must be given on the same day that the record is submitted. If the proposed rule has
been modified, the notice must state that fact, and must also state that a free copy of the proposed
rule, as modified, is available upon request from the agency. The rule and these materials must be
submitted to the administrative law judge within 180 days of the day that the comment period for
the rule is over or the rule is automatically withdrawn. The agency may not adopt the withdrawn
rules without again following the procedures of sections 14.05 to 14.28, with the exception of
section 14.101, if the noncompliance is approved by the chief administrative law judge. The
agency shall report its failure to adopt the rules and the reasons for that failure to the Legislative
Coordinating Commission, other appropriate legislative committees, and the governor.
    Subd. 2. Resubmission. Even if the 180-day period expires while the administrative law
judge reviews the rule, if the administrative law judge rejects the rule, the agency may resubmit it
after taking corrective action. The resubmission must occur within 30 days of when the agency
receives written notice of the disapproval. If the rule is again disapproved, the rule is withdrawn.
An agency may resubmit at any time before the expiration of the 180-day period. If the agency
withholds some of the proposed rule, it may not adopt the withheld portion without again
following the procedures of sections 14.14 to 14.28.
    Subd. 3. Review. (a) Within 14 days, the administrative law judge shall approve or
disapprove the rule as to its legality and its form to the extent that the form relates to legality,
including the issues of whether the rule if modified is substantially different, as determined under
section 14.05, subdivision 2, from the rule as originally proposed, whether the agency has the
authority to adopt the rule, and whether the record demonstrates a rational basis for the need for
and reasonableness of the proposed rule. If the rule is approved, the administrative law judge shall
promptly file four copies of it in the Office of the Secretary of State. The secretary of state shall
forward one copy of each rule to the revisor of statutes, one to the agency, and one to the governor.
If the rule is disapproved, the administrative law judge shall state in writing the reasons for the
disapproval and make recommendations to overcome the defects.
(b) The written disapproval must be submitted to the chief administrative law judge for
approval. If the chief administrative law judge approves of the findings of the administrative law
judge, the chief administrative law judge shall send the statement of the reasons for disapproval of
the rule to the agency, the Legislative Coordinating Commission, the house of representatives and
senate policy committees with primary jurisdiction over state governmental operations, and the
revisor of statutes and advise the agency and the revisor of statutes of actions that will correct the
defects. The rule may not be filed in the Office of the Secretary of State, nor be published, until the
chief administrative law judge determines that the defects have been corrected or, if applicable,
that the agency has satisfied the rule requirements for the adoption of a substantially different rule.
(c) If the chief administrative law judge determines that the need for or reasonableness of the
rule has not been established, and if the agency does not elect to follow the suggested actions of
the chief administrative law judge to correct that defect, then the agency shall submit the proposed
rule to the Legislative Coordinating Commission and to the house of representatives and senate
policy committees with primary jurisdiction over state governmental operations for advice and
comment. The agency may not adopt the rule until it has received and considered the advice of the
commission and committees. However, the agency need not wait for advice for more than 60 days
after the commission and committees have received the agency's submission.
(d) The administrative law judge shall disregard any error or defect in the proceeding
due to the agency's failure to satisfy any procedural requirements imposed by law or rule if
the administrative law judge finds:
(1) that the failure did not deprive any person or entity of an opportunity to participate
meaningfully in the rulemaking process; or
(2) that the agency has taken corrective action to cure the error or defect so that the failure
did not deprive any person or entity of an opportunity to participate meaningfully in the
rulemaking process.
    Subd. 4. Costs. The Office of Administrative Hearings shall assess an agency for the actual
cost of processing rules under this section. Each agency shall include in its budget money to pay
the assessment. Receipts from the assessment must be deposited in the administrative hearings
account created in section 14.54.
History: 1957 c 806 s 2; 1974 c 344 s 1-3; 1975 c 380 s 2; 1975 c 413 s 1; 1976 c 138 s 1;
1977 c 443 s 2; 1980 c 615 s 3-7,9-11,39-50; 1981 c 253 s 5-19; 1981 c 357 s 25; 1Sp1981 c
4 art 2 s 1; 1982 c 424 s 130; 1983 c 210 s 13; 1984 c 640 s 15,32; 1Sp1985 c 13 s 82; 1987
c 404 s 71; 1992 c 494 s 6; 1995 c 233 art 2 s 24; 1997 c 98 s 14,15; 1999 c 129 s 3; 2000 c
469 s 3; 2001 c 106 s 15,16

Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes