Wisconsin Code § 227.21

Publication of rules; incorporation by reference
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) The legislative reference bureau shall publish all
rules that agencies are directed by this chapter to file with the legislative reference bureau under s. 227.20 in the register and shall
publish all permanent rules that agencies are directed by this
chapter to file with the legislative reference bureau under s.
227.20 in the code, as provided in s. 35.93.
(2) (a) Except as provided in s. 601.41 (3) (b), to avoid unnecessary expense an agency may, with the consent of the attorney general, adopt standards established by technical societies
and organizations of recognized national standing by incorporating the standards in its rules by reference to the specific issue or
issues of the publication in which they appear, without reproducing the standards in full.
(b) The attorney general shall consent to incorporation by reference only in a rule of limited public interest and in a case where
the incorporated standards are readily available in published form
or are available on optical disc or in another electronic format.
Each rule containing an incorporation by reference shall state
how the material incorporated may be obtained and, except as
provided in s. 601.41 (3) (b), that the standards are on file at the
legislative reference bureau.
(c) An agency that adopts standards under par. (a) may provide the legislative reference bureau with one or more Web addresses to provide electronic access to the standards for publication in conjunction with the publication of the Wisconsin administrative code and register under s. 35.93.
(3) A rule promulgated jointly by 2 or more agencies need not
be published in more than one place in the code.
(4) Agency materials that are exempt from the requirements
of this chapter under s. 227.01 (13) may be published, either verbatim or in summary form, if the promulgating agency and the
legislative reference bureau determine that the public interest
would be served by publication.

‹ Prev All Wisconsin sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.