Public Comment + Rulemaking
Civics | core | Updated 2026-03-01
Tags
civics, playbook, core
Public Comment + Rulemaking
Use when: agencies ask for comments on proposed rules, permits, plans, or enforcement changes.
Goal: get a clear request into the official record, in a form agencies can use.
Why this matters
Rules and enforcement shape reality more than speeches do.
The comment structure (short)
- Stake: who you are + how it affects you
- Position: support/oppose specific provision
- Evidence: 2–3 bullets (observed impact, data, implementation reality)
- Fix: change A → B (one ask)
- Metric: what to track + how often to publish
- Close: confirm it’s in the record
Tips
- Be concrete: timelines, staffing, reporting
- Avoid speculation
- One credible source beats five angry links
Agency-friendly formatting
- Put a 150-250 word executive summary at the top
- Use numbered asks
- Default to one page unless the record clearly needs an appendix
- Attach evidence only if it adds something staff can actually use
Agencies are more likely to use comments that can be pasted into a staff memo.
Comment scoreboard
- Docket or comment channel confirmed? (Y/N)
- Executive summary included? (Y/N)
- Numbered asks included? (Y/N)
- Metric and reporting cadence requested? (Y/N)
- Confirmation or docket receipt saved? (Y/N)
What success looks like
Your comment is received and referenced. A rule changes, or a reporting requirement gets added.
Definition of done
Leave with:
- one submitted comment
- one docket receipt or confirmation
- one follow-up date
- one log entry