The extensive reliance on "voluntary" actions throughout the NSM make it even harder to understand the "over-regulation" charge levied by some people.
Rather than simply throwing out a couple years of hard-fought (and, I suggest, pretty successful) intergovernmental coordination that resulted in the NSM and governance framework, it would seem the better starting point for the new administration would be to revise what already exists: matching their desired ends to preferred ways and means.
Lots of ways to do this, rather than starting from scratch.
The extensive reliance on "voluntary" actions throughout the NSM make it even harder to understand the "over-regulation" charge levied by some people.
Rather than simply throwing out a couple years of hard-fought (and, I suggest, pretty successful) intergovernmental coordination that resulted in the NSM and governance framework, it would seem the better starting point for the new administration would be to revise what already exists: matching their desired ends to preferred ways and means.
Lots of ways to do this, rather than starting from scratch.