Commerce Ditches Clunky Mail Rules for Finding Missing Kids
Published Date: 1/15/2026
Rule
Summary
The Department of Commerce is cleaning up old, complicated rules about using official mail to help find missing kids. By removing outdated steps and reports, they’re making the process simpler and more flexible, so they can act faster and smarter. This change kicks in on January 15, 2026, with no extra costs, just better teamwork to keep kids safe.
Analyzed Economic Effects
3 provisions identified: 3 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
Removes rigid internal contact rules
The Department removed overly prescriptive internal management rules (Sec. 23.2, 23.6, and 23.7) that named a specific contact person (who is now deceased) and detailed staff roles. This change, effective January 15, 2026, lets the Department handle staffing and duties through internal directives so it can use penalty mail more flexibly to help locate missing children.
Deletes obsolete cost and reporting history
The Department removed historical implementation details (Sec. 23.4 and 23.5), including the original first-year cost estimate of $39,530, a projection that 9% of penalty mail would be used for the program, and a one-time report requirement due June 30, 1987. These removals take effect January 15, 2026 and clear outdated, historical items from the regulations.
No new paperwork or costs imposed
The Department states this final rule will not impose additional reporting or recordkeeping requirements and will not add costs; it is intended to streamline regulations and improve program operation. The rule is effective January 15, 2026.
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