Regulations are sourced from state registers and various agency websites. Since not all states are uniform, State Net assigns each Regulation its own identification number in-house.
After identifying specific regulations of interest utilizing a topic or text search, you can easily find the unique assigned regulatory id.
When our experts assign each regulation its own ID, we do so in the following format: Year Proposed followed by JX followed by Number
For Example:
|
Year Proposed |
JX |
Number |
|
2009 |
AK |
3865 |
1. Enter Regulation ID in the required format (Year Proposed + JX + #)
- To check the status for more than one Regulation, separate Regulation IDs by comma:
2. Click enter or the red magnifying glass to complete search.
- The search will encompass both Proposed and Adopted Text if available.
- You can use the "Filters" column to the left to select "Status and Stage", selecting the Regulation category to limit to just Proposed or Adopted versions:
Not only can you search by Regulatory ID. You can search by Citation or State ID. Note: Not all states have State IDs.
To search by Citation complete the following steps:
1. Enter the Citation in the search bar:
Example: 3 AAC 14
- You can use our wildcard "$" to account for additional characters after where you place it. For instance, if you input 3 AAC 14$, you will catch citation 3 AAC 14.010 and anything after the decimal in your results.
2. Press enter or click the red magnifying glass to submit your search.
To search by State ID complete the following steps:
1. Enter the State ID in the search bar:
Example: 47 IR 6433
2. Press enter or click the red magnifying glass to submit your search.
Note: You can always locate the State ID directly next to the citation:
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