Oregon Bulletin
- The Oregon Bulletin is a monthly publication put out by the Secretary of State’s Archives Division on the first business day of each month containing the filings of administrative rules from the previous month.
- This publication includes filings for notices of proposed rulemaking, permanent administrative orders, temporary administrative orders, and statutory minor corrections.
- This publication also includes other notices such as the Governor’s Executive Orders, public notices from agencies that do not pertain to rulemaking activities, and other information.
- The filing deadline is the last day of the month by the end of the day. It’s recommended to submit filings
at least five business days before the deadline to allow time for any necessary corrections.
- Filings are
not guaranteed to be included in the Oregon Bulletin unless they are received, reviewed, and published before the deadline and all corrections have been made.
- Filings submitted by the deadline will be reviewed for inclusion.
- If corrections are needed, the Administrative Rules Unit will give two business days during the calendar month and up to two hours on filing deadline or Bulletin publication day to correct and resubmit the filing for possible inclusion in the Bulletin.
- The
Oregon Bulletin is published on the
first business day of the month.
- If you miss the deadline or do not make the required corrections in time on
any filing, the filing
may be voided and
will not be included in the Bulletin publication for that month. This could delay the rulemaking process, such as requiring rescheduling of hearings or adjusting the timeline for public comments.
- Filings submitted in any given month will appear in the following month’s Bulletin. For example, filings submitted during the month of September will be published in the October Bulletin.
- For more information on filing requirements and deadlines, see
OAR chapter 166 division 500.
Rulemaking Filing Questions
- If a filing is returned, it will appear in
red with the word, "Returned" in the
Filings Work Queue. Click
Edit, make the necessary changes, check the box under the red text identifying the error
Check when error is corrected, click
Save, click
Return to Filing, and then click
Submit to re-submit the filing.
- If the return to filing button or the submit button is greyed out, you must click save first.
- You may only change the field(s) where the red error message is located for the corrections that are required. Follow the directions from the error message below the field that contains the error and make the required change(s).
- You have two business days to return your filing with corrections otherwise it may be voided, unless it is a Bulletin publication day, then the time allowed for corrections is up to two hours but may be shorter.
- Corrections not made before the publication of the Bulletin may cause the filing to be voided and the filing will have to be resubmitted.
- The OARD system does not provide email copies of filings.
- Once a filing is reviewed and published, a tracked changes copy (for Notices) or a receipt copy (for Permanent, Temporary, or Statutory Minor Correction filings) will appear in the “Filings Final Queue” on the OARD Dashboard.
- This is a great topic to discuss with an agency’s assigned DOJ contact.
- If a publication is copyrighted or too large to include in OARD, the rulemaking entity must note that the publication is adopted by reference in the rule text. There may be other reasons for incorporating standards, publications, and other things by reference instead of including an attachment of the actual language in rule.
- Include a reference at the bottom of the rule text directing users to the agency for any referenced publications.
- Example: [Editor's Note: Publication referenced is available from the agency.]
- This note should be formatted using a block quote (“) in OARD. Use the quotation mark (“) button in the formatting tools area where the rule text is entered. Hovering over the formatting tool bar, the hint will show Block Quote.
- The
Oregon Attorney General’s Administrative Law Manual and Uniform and Model Rules of Procedure under the Administrative Procedures Act manual provides guidance in section D of the 2024 manual on incorporating standards by reference.
- Only
one PDF attachment is allowed per rule. The PDF must be saved using the
reduced size or
optimized saving option in Adobe Acrobat. If the PDF attachment is too large, OARD will not upload it.
- The attachment will be linked to the rule after the filing is published.
-
IMPORTANT NOTE: Each time a rule is included in
any type of filing, the attachment will need to be attached again.
- PDFs are ideal for manuals, tables, forms, maps, images, matrixes, or other supporting documents that are not part of the rule text.
- The attached PDFs are considered part of the rule and follow the same rulemaking guidelines when updates to it are needed.
- When attaching a PDF, be sure to identify it in the rule language in the appropriate place (e.g., Appendix A, Table 1, see attached table, etc.).
- If an attachment is inadvertently left off a rule during a filing, the full permanent rulemaking process must be followed to reattach the PDF.
- OARD requires you to select the yes or no option on the rule maintenance screen regarding if there is an attachment for that rule.
- The rule must be saved before OARD will allow attaching an PDF.
- A check box acknowledging the ADA WCAG compliance must be checked before a PDF attachment can be uploaded after April 21, 2026.
- Only PDFs are allowed to be uploaded to OARD. No other file type is allowed.
- From the
Current Chapter Rules list, either click
Start Draft to amend an existing rule or use the
Adopt New Rule button to create a new rule draft.
-
NOTE: Rules writers may only edit drafts they create. OARD does not allow for rules writers to edit other rules writers’ draft rules, only a rules coordinator may edit all rule drafts.
- There is not a limit on how many different rules are in draft form at one time in the Rules Work Queue.
- Each rule may only have one draft version at any time. If you don’t see the start draft link for a rule that means there is a draft existing somewhere else in OARD whether that be in the draft rule work queue, or in a filing that may not have been submitted and published yet.
- Watch
YouTube tutorial videos on drafting rules in OARD and the Rules Writer and Rules Coordinator Dashboards.
- Review the
PDF guides on drafting rules in OARD and the Rules Writer and Rules Coordinator Dashboards in the Training Materials for OARD section of our OARD Filing Resources page.
- Use the notes field at the bottom of the rule maintenance screen to communicate with rules coordinators. It is for internal agency use only and does not appear outside of the agency’s dashboard or in the final rule or filing.
- View our PDF guide on how to
Create a Rule Draft in the Training Materials for OARD section of our OARD Filing Resources page.
- The Rule Summary describes the changes to the rule and the reason for those changes; summaries are also necessary for rules being repealed.
- This is a required field in the Rule Maintenance screen.
- The summary will be included with the rule on the filing.
- The summary should answer the questions: what is changing and why is it needed?
- View our PDF guide on how to
Create a Rule Draft in the Training Materials for OARD section of our OARD Filing Resources page.
- Watch a
YouTube video tutorial on Maintaining Divisions.
- View our PDF guide on
Maintaining Divisions in the Training Materials for OARD section of our OARD Filing Resources page.
- From the
Dashboard, select
Select an action… then select
Maintain Divisions from the drop-down menu. Click
Edit, make the changes, and select
Save.
- The filing caption is included in each filing type. This is the location for stating the reason for the filing in 15 words or less.
- If there is only one rule in the filing, then the caption statement will only be about the one rule. Consequently, if there is more than one rule in the filing, then the caption statement should be about all of the rules in the filing and not just one.
- This is an excellent place to request help from DOJ as they can help determine if a caption is too general or too specific for the filing that is occurring.
-
Oregon Revised Statute 183.335(2)(a)(A) states, “A caption of not more than 15 words that reasonably identifies the subject matter of the agency’s intended action. The agency shall include the caption on each separate notice, statement, certificate or other similar document related to the intended action.”
- The
Need for Rule is required for notice of proposed rulemaking filings and temporary filings, but not permanent filings and it describes the changes made to the rule generally. This is also referred to as the Statement of Need.
- Example, “Due to a legislative change in ORS 123.456 regarding fee structures, these rules are being adopted and amended to reflect the changes in statute…”
- Yes, the notice of proposed rulemaking including the proposed text will be available to the public in the monthly
Oregon Bulletin.
- Rule coordinators are able to download a filing receipt in OARD to use as needed once the Administrative Rules Unit reviews and publishes the filing.
- Yes, a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking must be filed and the process for making the rule permanent must be completed before a rule can be considered permanent.
- A Notice of Proposed Rulemaking must be filed and statutory requirements must be met before any administrative rule may become permanent.
- Watch a
YouTube tutorial on how to file a statutory minor correction (SMC).
- Review our PDF guide on
File a Statutory Minor Correction Filing in the Training Materials for OARD section of our OARD Filing Resources page.
- Unlike other filing types, statutory minor corrections must be filed one at a time and are effective immediately.
- An SMC does not require a notice of proposed rulemaking but must follow
ORS 183.335(7).
- Use the checkboxes to select which changes are made to the rule. Only the changes specified under
ORS 183.335(7) and
OAR 166-500-0047 should be included.
- SMCs are treated like other filings, with an Administrative Order Number (AON), to ensure transparency.
-
Tip: If you have a permanent rulemaking effort in the works for a rule or several rules, consider waiting to include your minor correction with that filing.
If your question isn't answered here, contact
adminrules.archives@sos.oregon.gov for help.