Posted: 10 Sep 2018 07:08 PM PDT As background, the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act of 2009 required FDA to promulgate a final rule mandating color graphic warnings on cigarette packs and in cigarette advertising by June 22, 2011, i.e., two years after Congress enacted the statute. FDA issued a final rule within the two year time period requiring the use of nine text warnings accompanied by graphic images. A group of tobacco product manufacturers and sellers promptly challenged the rule, alleging that it violated their constitutional right to free speech. The district court agreed with industry, and the D.C. Circuit upheld the lower court’s decision and vacated the final rule in 2012. A coalition of physician groups and cancer associations filed the instant suit to force FDA to follow the mandate of the Tobacco Control Act and issue new graphic warnings requirements. They alleged that FDA violated the APA because it “unlawfully withheld” agency action, or in the alternative, “unreasonably delayed” the final rule. FDA explained to the court that following the 2012 D.C. Circuit decision, the agency formed a working group to research the text of warning statements. In 2015, FDA contracted with a communications and marketing firm to develop new graphic warning image concepts that were tested in discussion groups. FDA revised the warnings and then contracted a social science research firm to conduct focus group testing on the revised warnings. FDA further modified the warnings in response to these results. FDA explained to the court that additional research was being planned, including another round of focus group review, and two quantitative studies. The research would then be used to support a formal rulemaking, which FDA estimated would conclude in November 2021. The Honorable Indira Talwani agreed with the plaintiffs that FDA violated the APA because it both “unlawfully withheld” agency action, and “unreasonably delayed” the final rule. “Unlawfully Withheld” Standard. Plaintiff argued that the court should compel agency action here because Congress established a firm, enforceable deadline in the statute. The district court agreed, highlighting the distinction that exists under the APA when the statute “impose[s] a date-certain deadline on agency action,” and not just a general admonition to act “within a reasonable time.” The court found that FDA’s duty to promulgate a rule under the Tobacco Control Act is “nondiscretionary”: “Not later than 24 months after June 22, 2009, the Secretary shall issue regulations that require color graphics depicting the negative health consequences of smoking to accompany the label statements . . . .” Even though FDA pointed to its original compliance with the two year deadline before vacatur, the court held that the vacatur “simply return[s] matters to where they stood before,” thus resetting the two-year clock. The court stated that “it cannot be the case that the FDA has freed itself from Congressional mandates and may now take the opportunity to promulgate this rule at whatever pace it chooses.” “Unreasonably Delayed” Standard. The court also walked through the six TRAC factors, named after the D.C. Circuit Court case establishing the test for “unreasonable delay.”
Given the deference typically afforded agencies in their statements of what is a reasonable timeline, this case is a notable win for challenges to agency (in)action. It will be interesting how much FDA’s new schedule shaves off its initial proposed deadline of November 2021, and whether FDA will use this “expedited” schedule as a basis for pushing other competing priorities on the backburner. |
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