The Administrative Procedure Act requires federal agencies, when making rules, to publish proposed rules in the Federal Register and accept public comments for a specified period before finalizing those rules. The agency must then consider the comments received and respond to significant issues raised. This is the noticeandcomment process, and it is a genuine participatory mechanism, not a formality, but a legal requirement that shapes what rules can look like and provides a basis for judicial challenge if the process is not followed.
Most people have never submitted a public comment. Most people don't know the process exists. The gap between the formal openness of the regulatory process and public awareness of it represents a significant democratic deficit, one that tends to be filled by organized interests with the resources to monitor agency activity and engage systematically.
How the process actually works
Regulations.gov provides a centralized portal for public comment submissions across federal agencies. Finding relevant proposed rules requires either monitoring agency websites in your areas of interest or using the portal's search function. Comments can range from a single sentence to technical reports accompanied by extensive data analysis. The weight given to a comment is determined by its substantive content, agencies are required to respond to significant comments, which means comments that raise factual claims the agency has not addressed, present data the agency has not considered, or identify legal and procedural problems with the proposal.
Form letters and mass comment campaigns have limited impact compared to substantive, individualized comments. A single expert comment that identifies a genuine gap in an agency's analysis can carry more weight than thousands of form submissions.
