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In public policy, a sunset provision or sunset clause is a measure within a statute, regulation or other law that provides for the law to cease to be effective after a specified date, unless further legislative action is taken to extend it. Unlike most laws that remain in force indefinitely unless they are amended or repealed, sunset provisions ...
In terms of public policy, the Sunset provision is a regulation or part of legislation that provides an automatic repeal of a law that has reached its specific expiration date. The ruling to eliminate the sunset provision regarding vessel speed restrictions was first proposed in June 2013. [3]
Clauses limiting the duration of such laws are often called "sunset" clauses. [1] Temporary laws are commonly given temporal validity by the inclusion of an expiration date at which the law ceases to be in effect unless it is extended. But a law can also acquire temporal status by stipulating that it only applies to a certain event.
The Umstead Coalition, which advocates for the park, says that for decades the permit included a “sunset clause” that required Wake Stone to stop mining and donate the site to the state after ...
The Undetectable Firearms Act of 1988 Pub. L. 100–649 was signed into law by President Ronald Reagan on November 10, 1988. [2] The law included a ten-year sunset clause, and expired on November 10, 1998.
Americans face a $4 trillion tax hike as key provisions of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) sunset. The stakes are too high to ignore, and it has to be done right. ... provision allowed ...
The Umstead Coalition sued the Department of Environmental Quality for changing a single word from Wake Stone Corp.’s permit to mine next to Umstead State Park.
The policy of inserting sunset clauses into a constitution or charter of rights (as in Canada since 1982) or into regulations and other delegated/subordinate legislation made under an act (as in Australia since the early 1990s) can be regarded as a statutory codification of this jus commune doctrine. [2]