StatutoryInstrumentPractice 5th Edition
StatutoryInstrumentPractice 5th Edition
This is the fifth edition of Statutory Instrument Practice (SIP) and replaces the edition
published in November 2006.
This edition has been prepared by the Legislation Services team at The National Archives.
We will contact you regularly to make sure that this guide continues to meet your needs, and
remains accurate. If you would like to suggest additional changes to us, please email them
to the SI Registrar.
Thank you to all of the contributors who helped us to update this edition.
November 2017
CONTENTS .......................................................................................................................... iv
1.1 How to use the Statutory Instrument Practice (SIP) Guide ....................................... 1
2.9 Requirement for Explanatory Memoranda for SIs laid before Parliament ............ 33
2.15 Procedure for Statutory Instruments made under pre-1948 Acts .......................... 41
3.5 Headnotes....................................................................................................................... 49
3.7 Numbers.......................................................................................................................... 58
3.10 Italic date information: made, laid and coming into force dates ............................. 68
4.7 Correcting errors after submission through legislation.gov.uk Publishing .......... 126
5.2 The Joint Committee on Statutory Instruments (JCSI) and the Select Committee
on Statutory Instruments (SCSI) ............................................................................... 140
5.5 The House of Lords Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee and
the House of Commons Regulatory Reform Committee ...................................... 146
1.1.2 Formally, the functions of Her Majesty's Stationery Office (HMSO) are operated
from within The National Archives, including official publishing and the
management of Crown rights, for copyright and database rights. The Queen’s
Printer of Acts of Parliament (Controller of HMSO and an official in The National
Archives) is therefore responsible, on behalf of the Crown, for registering,
numbering and printing UK Statutory Instruments as they are first enacted or
made.
1.1.3 The National Archives is responsible for revising legislation and delivering the
legislation.gov.uk website. Day-to-day these responsibilities are carried out either
in-house or by a Publishing Contractor. The National Archives manages and
maintains legislation.gov.uk, which provides public access to legislation both as it
is first enacted or made and, for primary legislation, in a revised form showing
changes to the legislation over time. We are also the custodians of the official
legislation database, which stores and manages legislation for all parts of the UK.
● instruction on how to validate and submit your SIs so that they can be
registered, laid and published; and
1.1.6 SIP does not provide guidance on Scottish SIs, Welsh SIs and Northern Ireland
Statutory Rules:
1.1.7 We will review SIP annually (or more regularly if required) and update it
accordingly. The most up-to-date version will always be the online version that is
on legislation.gov.uk Publishing. In between this formal review process, we
welcome ad hoc feedback and updates from SIP users. Email your suggestions
and comments to the SI Registrar1.
1.1.8 Though SIP sometimes refers to drafting practices, it is not a guide to drafting.
The Government Legal Service (GLS) provides Statutory Instrument Drafting
Guidance.
1.1.9 SIP includes links to useful sites and provides full URLs for these links in
Appendix A.
● Most SIs are then made (i.e. signed) by the Secretary of State or an
authorised official.
● Once they have been made, they are submitted for registration. We carry
out registration checks, and allocate the SI number as appropriate. After
registration the SI is sent to our Publishing Contractor for pre-publication
checks.
● Most SIs are then laid before Parliament, and notification that this has
happened triggers publishing on legislation.gov.uk and in print, where
printing is required.
Subordinate legislation
1.3.1 Statutory Instruments (SIs) contain subordinate legislation. Subordinate
legislation is also called delegated or secondary legislation.
1.3.2 The term ‘Statutory Instrument’ contains most subordinate legislation made by
central Government since January 1948, though sometimes the term ‘Statutory
Instruments’ is used to include earlier instruments that are more correctly called
Statutory Rules and Orders.
Note: The Statutory Instruments Act 19461 came into force on 1 January 1948.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/36
1.3.4 Sometimes a parent Act states that an SI made under it can itself confer power to
make further instruments, usually in the form of Rules or regulations. The
exercise of this power is known as sub-delegated legislation.
● Sometimes, however, the Act provides that the SIs must also have the
approval, consent or agreement of some other authority, such as the
Treasury, the Welsh Ministers or the Scottish Ministers. Such SIs will not
acquire the force of law until this condition has been fulfilled.
● Some SIs come into force when made, but most contain express provision
bringing them into force at a later date (if no later date is given, the default
assumption is that an SI comes into force at the moment of making). The
time when an SI comes into force is known as its ‘commencement’ (the
Interpretation Act 1978, schedule 11).
● Orders in Council are also a form of subordinate legislation and are made
by the oral assent of the Sovereign in Council.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1978/30/schedule/1
1.3.8 If an SI is made jointly by two Ministers, it is only made when both signatures are
obtained. The last date signed is considered to be the date the SI is made.
1.3.9 Section 105 of the Deregulation Act 20152 gives the power to combine different
types of subordinate legislation.
EU legislation
1.3.10 Since the decision was taken for the United Kingdom to leave the European
Union, and during the period of preparations for exit, guidance on legislation that
relates to the EU will be subject to change. The most up-to-date guidance on
implementing EU law should be sought by contacting legal advisers at the
Department for Exiting the European Union (DExEU) at dexeula-eu-business-
[email protected]
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2013/1908/made
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2015/20/section/105
1
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/technical-standards-and-regulations-directive-9834ec-guidance-for-officials
1.3.13 After notification of the draft SI, there is a minimum standstill period of three
months when the draft SI cannot be made. Failure to observe these requirements
renders the SI unenforceable. UK SIs are notified via the Central Unit at the
Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS). There are
limited exceptions. The Explanatory Note to the finalised SI must include a
statement that a draft was notified for the purposes of the Technical Standards
Directive and include the relevant notification number. Guidance1 on
implementing the Technical Standards Directive is available on www.gov.uk.
● Regulations
● Orders
● Rules
● Orders in Council
● Orders of Council
1
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/490271/BIS-16-15-directive-2015-1535-
guidance.pdf
1.4.3 The recommendation in the revised drafting guidance does not alter the current
practice of using Rules; Orders in Council; or Orders subject to special procedure
under the Statutory Orders (Special Procedure) Act 19452.
1.4.4 In some cases it may still be appropriate to create a new Order-making power, for
example when amending an old Act that contains Order-making powers, or when
creating a new power that needs to be exercised with existing Order-making
powers.
1.4.6 However it should be noted that section 105 of the Deregulation Act 2015
provides authority for a statutory instrument to be in the form or an Order,
regulations or rules despite what is said in primary legislation conferring power to
make the instrument. This would also enable provisions that would otherwise
have had to be included in separate instruments in different forms (for example
as a single set of regulations).
1.4.7 Where reliance is placed on section 105 of the Deregulation Act 2015, this should
not be cited in the preamble of the instrument, nor should a footnote be included
by way of explanation.
Orders in Council
1.4.8 Some Orders in Council are primary legislation made under the Royal
prerogative. Most are secondary legislation, made under statutory powers.
1.4.9 Secondary legislation Orders in Council are used for a wide variety of purposes,
where an SI made by a Minister would be inappropriate. An example might be an
Order which transfers ministerial functions, or sub-delegates power to a Minister
to make subordinate legislation. Another might be where the Order is, in effect, a
constitutional document, for example extending legislation to the Channel Islands
or the Isle of Man, or legislating for United Kingdom dependencies. Orders in
1
https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/drafting-guidance-for-government-bills
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/18/contents
1.4.10 For more information on Orders in Council, see the Privy Council2 website.
Orders of Council
1.4.11 Orders of Council are made by the Privy Council in exercise of powers conferred
on them alone i.e. without the Sovereign. Such powers usually relate to the
regulation of professions or professional bodies: see for example the Opticians
Act 1989, section 34 (2) and (4)3.
1.4.12 For more information on Orders of Council, see the Privy Council4 website.
Commencement Instruments
1.4.13 A Commencement Instrument (Order/regulation/Appointed Day Order) exercises
a power to appoint a day on which an Act, or part of an Act, comes into force.
Such powers should be exercised in a separate Commencement Instrument, or
series of Commencement Instruments, and not by a provision in an SI dealing
with other matters. Transitional and/or savings provisions are sometimes included
in Commencement Instruments if authorised by the parent Act.
1.4.14 A Commencement Instrument can include provision under section 104 of the
Deregulation Act 20155.
1.4.16 Public Bodies Orders are used to abolish, merge or modify constitutional or
funding arrangements, or to modify or transfer functions of public bodies that are
listed in the appropriate Schedule to the Act. The Public Bodies Act 2011 sets out
tests that must be satisfied and the enhanced scrutiny procedure for the Orders, if
the Scrutiny Committee believes it is appropriate. The Act also sets out the time
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/1948/1/regulation/1/made
2
http://privycouncil.independent.gov.uk/privy-council/orders/
3
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1989/44/section/34
4
http://privycouncil.independent.gov.uk/privy-council/orders/
5
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2015/20/section/104
6
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2011/24/contents
7
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/legislative-reform-orders-guide-for-policy-officials
1.4.17 The Parliamentary Control required for Public Bodies Orders is set out in Part 2:
Parliamentary Control and SI Classes.
1.4.19 The purpose of LROs is to remove or reduce burdens resulting from legislation
and to improve the way regulatory functions are carried out. The Legislative and
Regulatory Reform Act 2006 sets out tests that must be satisfied. For more
information there is detailed guidance on drafting Legislative Reform Orders2 and
you can find past examples of LROs on the Delegated Powers Committee3 page
on the UK Parliament website.
1.4.20 The Parliamentary Control required for Legislative Reform Orders is set out in
Part 2: Parliamentary Control and SI Classes.
1.4.22 These Orders follow a procedure that allows people or bodies that are especially
affected by the Order to petition against it, to either House of Parliament. Some
Special Procedure Orders have to be made as SIs, but are excepted from some
of the requirements that normally apply to SIs. They cannot be laid before
Parliament before the outcomes of any consultation or inquiries have been
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2006/51/contents
2
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/legislative-reform-orders-guide-for-policy-officials
3
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/delegated-powers-and-regulatory-reform-
committee/lros/
4
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/18/contents
5
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1965/43/contents
1.4.23 Special Procedure Orders also require a notice in the London Gazette (now
known as The Gazette1) three days before laying, to evidence compliance. The
SI also needs to be laid with a certificate that sets out how you have complied
with the 1945 Act.
Localism Orders
1.4.24 Localism Orders arise from the Localism Act 20112. The aim of the Act is to
devolve more decision making powers from central government back into the
hands of individuals, communities and councils. It covers a wide range of issues
related to local public services, with a focus on the general power of competence,
community rights, neighbourhood planning and housing.
1.4.25 Sections 5, 6 and 7 of the Act deal with Localism Orders. Section 5 of the
Localism Act 2011 sets out the powers of the Secretary of State to use a
Localism Order to amend, repeal, revoke or disapply provisions that the
Secretary of State thinks are preventing or restricting local authorities, or where
the Secretary of State thinks that provisions overlap. It also sets out the need for
consultation with local authorities, local Government representatives or other
appropriate persons. Before making an Order that has effect in relation to Wales,
the Secretary of State must consult the Welsh Ministers.
1.4.26 The Parliamentary Control for Localism Orders is set out in Part 2: Parliamentary
Control and SI Classes.
1.4.28 Resolutions under the House of Commons Members’ Fund Act 1948, section 33,
are also numbered and published as SIs.
1.4.29 Where a document, that is not an SI, requires an SI to confirm or approve it, the
usual practice is to include the document as a Schedule to the SI.
1
http://www.thegazette.co.uk/
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2011/20/contents
3
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/11-12/36/section/3
1.5.2 According to the procedure applied to them, SIs fall into one of the nine Classes
shown in Part 2: Parliamentary Control and SI Classes.
Parliamentary committees
1.5.5 A number of Parliamentary committees are specifically concerned with SIs. They
are described in more detail in Part 5: Scrutiny Committees. The following is an
overview of what they do:
● The Joint Committee (of both Houses) on Statutory Instruments: The JCSI
scrutinises general SIs, and instruments subject to affirmative procedure,
in accordance with criteria set out in their Orders of Reference concerning
legal drafting. JCSI scrutiny also covers local instruments with any
parliamentary procedure.
1
http://www.hansardsociety.org.uk/negative-vs-affirmative-procedures-flowchart
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2011/24/section/8
1.6.2 The Statutory Instruments Act 1946 was amended by the Statutory Instruments
(Production and Sale) Act 19965. This meant SIs were now published and sold
under the authority of the Queen’s Printer, and issued under the authority of
HMSO.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2006/51/contents
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/1948/1/regulation/11/made
3
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/36
4
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/1948/1/contents/made
5
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1996/54/contents
1.6.5 HMSO prepares various publications relating to enacted law which are published
by a Publishing Contractor under the authority of the Queen’s Printer. These
publications include the tables in the annual volume of Public General Acts and
Measures and annual editions of Statutory Instruments, the Chronological Table
of the Statutes, the Chronological Tables of Local Acts, and the Chronological
Tables of Private Acts. The current Publishing Contractor is The Stationery Office
Ltd (TSO).
1.6.6 Copies of SIs and other documents printed under the superintendence or
authority of HMSO, including those published on legislation.gov.uk, are
admissible in evidence in the same circumstances as copies printed by the
Queen’s Printer (See section 21 of the Documentary Evidence Act 1868 and
section 22 of the Documentary Evidence Act 1882). They are commonly called
‘Queen’s Printer copies’.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Vict/31-32/37/section/2
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Vict/45-46/9/section/2
3
http://www.thegazette.co.uk/
General
SI Hub (Government Legal [email protected]
Department)
Better Regulation Executive [email protected]
Government Legal Service [email protected]
(GLS) One Kemble Street, London WC2B 4TS, email:
Office of Parliamentary 020 7276 6586
Counsel (OPC) [email protected]
Privy Council Office [email protected]
[email protected]
Parliament
The House of Commons 020 7219 3317/3310
Journal Office [email protected]
The House of Lords Printed 020 7219 1246
Paper Office [email protected]
2.1.2 In order to choose the correct required content for your SI you will need to identify
the Class of SI you are producing. Classes of SI relate to the Parliamentary
control and procedures required. These are detailed below.
2.2.2 The parent Act sets out the procedure you need to follow for affirmative SIs and
draft affirmative SIs. Some made affirmatives also have time limits within which
the affirmative resolution must be passed by Parliament or the House of
Commons. If this is the case, the time limits will also be set out in the parent Act.
Time limits do not apply to draft affirmatives.
2.2.3 If an SI relates to financial matters, it will usually only require the approval of the
House of Commons, depending on the parent Act.
● Class i) SIs are laid in draft and cannot come into force unless the draft is
approved.
● Class ii) SIs are laid after being made and cannot come into force unless
the instrument is approved.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/36
2.2.6 You should provide the letter requesting the motion when the SI is laid. Motions
to approve SIs go through the Government Whips’ Office.
2.2.7 Other motions relating to SIs are tabled with the House of Lords’ Table Office (for
example where a Member tables a motion praying against). The Government
Whips’ Office decides when that business is scheduled.
2.2.8 There are minor differences between the practice of the Lords and the Commons.
If (only in exceptional cases) you have to vary from the standard terms of a
motion you must notify the Government Whips’ Office at the House of Lords (if
appropriate), and the Clerk of the Journal Office at the House of Commons, and
explain the reason for the variation.
2.2.9 In the House of Commons, motions for approval are checked by the Journal
Office to ensure that they are worded correctly. Minor changes can be made in
the motion before it appears on the Order Paper to ensure that the correct
wording is used.
2.2.11 In the Commons, provide a draft motion to the Journal Office when laying the
instrument referred to in the motion.
2.2.12 Give the Whips' Offices five copies of the affirmative SI or affirmative draft SI.
Give them the name of the responsible Minister and details of relevant time limits
2.2.13 In the House of Lords a resolution to approve an SI or draft SI may not be moved
until the Joint Committee of Statutory Instruments (JCSI) has issued a report on
it. By convention the debate does not generally take place until after the
Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee (SLSC) has also considered the SI.
2.2.15 Sometimes the Government tables a ‘Business of the House’ motion varying this
provision for a debate on a particular SI or group of SIs. For more information on
standing orders go to the UK Parliament1 website.
2.2.16 In the House of Lords, debates are taken in Chamber or Grand Committee
according to how controversial the SI is. If the debate is taken in the Grand
Committee it needs to be endorsed in the Chamber. In the course of the debate,
the Minister should respond to, or at least acknowledge, any recommendations
made by a Scrutiny Committee.
● provide the Minister with the necessary briefing in the event of a debate;
and
1
http://www.parliament.uk/business/publications/house-of-lords-publications/rules-and-guides-for-business/the-standing-orders-
of-the-house-of-lords-relating-to-public-business/
2.3.2 There are two Classes of negative procedure SIs. Class iv) are laid in draft and
cannot be made if the draft is disapproved within 40 days. Class v) are laid after
being made and are subject to revocation if a resolution for annulment is passed
within 40 days.
2.3.3 The procedure for negative instruments (Class v)) is the most common form of
Parliamentary control. The procedure for negative drafts (Class iv)) is relatively
uncommon.
2.3.5 If either House resolves that the instrument should be annulled, no further
proceedings can be taken under the instrument after the date of the resolution
and Her Majesty may, by Order in Council, revoke it. This resolution must happen
within 40 days, and this period begins on the day on which the instrument is laid
before the House. The resolution or revocation does not prejudice the validity of
anything previously done under the SI, or the making of a new SI.
2.3.6 There are some negative procedure instruments whose ‘negative’ character
arises from legislation that pre-dates the Statutory Instruments Act 1946. These
instruments follow the same negative procedure described in the preceding
paragraph – though this procedure may be excluded or modified by Order in
Council.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/36
2.3.8 If a draft SI is to be laid before Parliament, but does not require the approval of
Parliament before it is made, then a 40 day period must expire before the SI is
made, or an Order in Council is submitted to Her Majesty in Council.
2.3.9 Within that 40-day period, if either House resolves that the draft should not be
submitted to Her Majesty or that the draft SI should not be made, no further
proceedings may be taken on that draft. This does not prejudice the laying of a
new draft.
2.3.10 There are some draft negative instruments whose ‘negative’ character pre-dates
the Statutory Instruments Act 1946. These instruments follow the same negative
procedure described in the preceding paragraph – though this procedure may be
excluded or modified by Order in Council.
(a) In the case of a negative made instrument (Class v)), the period begins on
the day on which the SI is laid before either the House of Lords or the
House of Commons.
(b) In the case of a draft negative SI (Class iv)), the period begins with the day
on which the draft is laid before each House, or, if the laying takes place on
different days, it begins with the later day.
2.3.12 The above rules also apply to a negative SI or draft negative SI that is only laid
before the House of Commons.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/36
2.3.14 Please be aware that there are different rules for Special Procedure Orders,
Public Bodies Orders, Legislative Reform Orders and Localism Orders.
2.3.15 Contact the Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee office for questions about
the 40 day period.
Negative resolutions
2.3.16 A negative resolution, or ‘prayer’, is directed against subordinate legislation made
or drafted by the Government. It will therefore usually either be moved by the
official Opposition or by a private Member.
2.3.17 Debate on the floor of the House on a prayer is very rare. In the House of
Commons, debate on a ‘prayer’ is 'exempted business'. This is because debate
on a prayer counts as proceedings under an Act for the purposes of Standing
Order No. 16. It means proceedings are not interrupted at the 'moment of
interruption' at which much Commons business finishes, but the Speaker puts the
question to the House 1½ hours after the start of proceedings.
2.3.18 The proceedings may not continue for more than 1½ hours after the moment of
interruption. If they are still under discussion the Speaker must either put the
question, or interrupt the business. The Speaker may interrupt business because
there has not been adequate time for the debate, either because it was late when
the proceedings started, or because of the importance of the subject matter. The
debate then stands adjourned to the next sitting (other than a Friday).
2.3.19 Debates on ‘prayers’ in the House of Commons take place in Government time
and can take place on Opposition Days. In recent years the pressure of other
business has made it increasingly difficult to provide for these debates within the
40-day period. The most common solution is to refer the SI or draft SI to a
Delegated Legislation Committee on Statutory Instruments. Such a referral can
only be made by a Government Minister, and is therefore a matter for the
Government Whips’ Office. The House can also debate an out-of-time prayer but
the instrument cannot be annulled after the 40 day period has expired.
(a) The Civil Contingencies Act 2004, section 27 (1)5: this states that
regulations shall lapse after 7 days beginning with the date of laying, unless
each House of Parliament passes a resolution approving them.
(b) The European Communities Act 1972, Schedule 2, paragraph 2(2)6: this
provides that the SI is either to be approved in draft, or to be subject to
annulment.
(c) The Northern Ireland (St. Andrews Agreement) Act 2006, section 247: this
states that the SI is to be approved in draft or, if the Secretary of State
makes a declaration that she or he considers it expedient for an Order to be
made without approval by resolution of each House of Parliament, the
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2006/51/contents
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2011/20/contents
3
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2004/21/contents
4
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2011/24/contents
5
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2004/36/section/27
6
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1972/68/schedule/2/paragraph/2
7
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2006/53/section/24
2.4.4 Public Bodies Orders will either use the affirmative or enhanced affirmative
procedure. The Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee4 provides further
guidance on this and lists recent Public Bodies Orders.
2.4.5 Public Bodies Orders are Class viii). They are laid in draft and are subject to
special enhanced Parliamentary procedures for approval of disapproval. The
applicable procedure is ultimately determined by the House of Lords or the
Committee charged with reporting on the draft order. Class viii) SIs are laid in
draft and are subject to special enhanced Parliamentary procedures for approval
or disapproval.
2.4.6 The Minster lays a draft affirmative Order and an Explanatory Document. Within a
30-day period, either House, or the SLSC (subject to overrule by the House of
Lords) may recommend that the enhanced affirmative procedure should apply. If
no such recommendation is made, the normal 40-day affirmative procedure
applies.
2.4.7 If the Order is made as an enhanced affirmative, a 60-day period applies, and the
Minister must have regard to representations/House resolutions/SLSC
recommendations made within the 60-day period. After 60 days, the Minister is
expected to explain to the House how she or he has had regard to these
representations/resolutions/recommendations.
2.4.8 If the Minister lays a revised draft with material changes, she or he has to lay a
statement summarising changes. Material changes are subject to scrutiny by the
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2011/24/contents
2
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/secondary-legislation-scrutiny-committee/public-
bodies-orders/
3
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/243891/Laying_an_order_under_the_Public_Bod
ies_Act_2011.pdf
4
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/secondary-legislation-scrutiny-committee/public-
bodies-orders/
2.4.10 The Minister lays the draft Order and Explanatory Document. The Explanatory
Document must recommend whether the negative, affirmative or super-
affirmative procedure should apply. An Explanatory Memorandum is not required
for Legislative Reform Orders – the Explanatory Document is the requisite
equivalent.
2.4.12 Where the negative procedure applies, the Minister may make the Order at the
end of a 40 day period unless either House resolves that the Order should not be
made or the relevant scrutiny Committee of either House recommends that the
Order is not made (and that recommendation is not rejected by the House
concerned).
2.4.13 If it is affirmative, the affirmative procedure applies, with the addition that DPRRC
can recommend that the LRO does not proceed.
2.4.14 If it is super-affirmative, the DPRRC can recommend, at any time before the draft
LRO is approved by both Houses, that the LRO does not proceed. The relevant
scrutiny of each House can also recommend that any revised LRO with material
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2006/51/contents
2
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/legislative-reform-orders-guide-for-policy-officials
Exceptional Procedure: Section 5 Orders under the Localism Act 2011 and
Section 5C Orders under the Fire and Rescue Services Act 2004
2.4.15 Localism Orders arise from the Localism Act 20111, whose purpose is to devolve
more decision making powers from central Government back into the hands of
individuals, communities and councils. It covers a wide range of issues related to
local public services, with a focus on the general power of competence,
community rights, neighbourhood planning and housing.
2.4.16 Section 5 Orders under the Localism Act 2011 and section 5C Orders under the
Fire and Rescue Services Act 20042 follow the parliamentary procedure set out
for LROs.
2.4.17 The first Localism Order was laid in March 2014 (the Draft Harrogate Stray Act
1985 (Amendment) Order 2014 (SI 2014/11903)).
2.4.19 If a Minister intents to make the Order in a revised form, the draft Order must be
laid with an explanation of representations received.
2.4.20 Between laying the revised Order and the explanation of representations
received, and the House approving, the Committee (JCSI or SLSC) can
recommend the instrument does not proceed (subject to overrule by the House).
2.4.21 If the Minister lays a revised draft with material changes, she or he has to lay a
statement summarising those changes. At this point the DPRCC can recommend
that the instrument does not proceed (subject to overrule by the House).
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2011/20/contents
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2004/21/contents
3
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2014/1190/contents/made
4
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2011/20/contents
2.4.25 Special Procedure Orders also require a notice in the London Gazette (now
called The Gazette3) three days before laying, to evidence compliance. The SI
also needs to be laid with a certificate that sets out how you have complied with
the 1945 Act.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/18/contents
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1965/43/contents
3
http://www.thegazette.co.uk/
2.5.3 In some cases, the JCSI and the SLSC need to see Codes where an
understanding of the instrument is dependent on it. For example a Combination
Code is not subject to Parliamentary procedure, but it is brought into force by an
SI, which is. So they can understand the effect of the SI, the scrutiny Committees
would expect to see the Code - they would not consider the SI in isolation.
2.5.5 Parts of combined instruments, for example the provisions made by the Welsh
Ministers in an SI made by the National Assembly for Wales and the Secretary of
State under an enabling Act that post-dates the Government of Wales Act 20064
do not require Parliamentary control.
Incompatible procedure
2.6.1 A Minister may be given a number of different powers to make SIs, and the SIs
may be subject to different forms of Parliamentary Control according to the
enabling power under which they are made.
2.6.2 For example, those made under one power may be subject to negative
procedure, while those made under another may be subject to affirmative
procedure. In such a case the exercise of both powers in one SI is likely to give
rise to procedural difficulties and should be avoided unless clearly contemplated
by the parent Act.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1971/29/section/26
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/36/section/6
3
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/36/section/4
4
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2006/32/contents
2.7.2 Departments are sent notice of a forthcoming Council. This notice includes the
laying date for Orders in Council - normally five days after the Council, excluding
weekends and bank holidays. If there are compelling reasons for an Order to be
laid sooner, talk to the Privy Council Office1 and the SI Registrar2.
2.7.3 If the Order has to be brought into force before it is laid, the Department should
also notify the Speakers of both Houses of Parliament. The Order should be
complete except for the date and signature and it will be signed by the Clerk of
the Privy Council.
2.7.5 When the Parliamentary procedure that applies to the draft has been completed
the Department should use the legislation.gov.uk Publishing service to send the
Order in Council and any other required papers to the Privy Council Office for
approval.
1
[email protected]
2
[email protected]
28 day Orders
2.8.3 Some Class iii) SIs are also referred to as ‘28 day Orders’ since that is most
frequently the period within which they must be approved (although some parent
Acts prescribe a month or 40 days).
2.8.4 This approval time normally runs in the period that begins with the meeting of a
new Parliament and precedes the State Opening (the ‘swearing-in days’). If you
have any questions about this, please contact the Clerk of the Printed Paper
Office at the House of Lords, or the Clerk of the Papers at the House of
Commons.
Negative procedure
2.8.5 Many SIs are subject to negative procedure, which normally means the SI is laid
before Parliament after being made (signed). To allow time for Parliamentary
Other procedures
2.8.7 Instruments that are laid before Parliament after being made but which are not
subject to further Parliamentary procedures do not often arise.
Exceptional procedures
2.8.9 A few Acts prescribe enhanced Parliamentary procedures or a choice between
procedures, alongside recommendations from the House/Committee. See, for
example, the Legislative Reform Act 20061, the Localism Act 20112, Orders under
the Fire and Rescue Services Act 20043, and the Public Bodies Act 20114.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2006/51/contents
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2011/20/contents
3
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2004/21/contents
4
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2011/24/contents
2.8.10 A few enabling Acts set out procedures that are different from those shown in the
tables above. In some cases SIs are subject to procedure in the Scottish
Parliament, the National Assembly for Wales and/or the Northern Ireland
Assembly. The procedure in those Parliaments/Assemblies is not dealt with in
this guide.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/18/contents
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1965/43/contents
2.9.4 If the SLSC do not feel that your EM complies with their guidance, they will
require you to produce a revised EM at your Department’s expense. This will be
published alongside the originally published EM. You will need to upload the
revised EM using the Associated Document bundle type on the legislation.gov.uk
Publishing service. This is described in more detail in Part 4: Registration and
Publishing.
2.9.5 The EM template and guidance is in the Tools and Guidance section on
legislation.gov.uk Publishing:
● https://publishing.legislation.gov.uk/tools
2.9.6 You can provide a single EM for a group of linked SIs that are subject to the
same Parliamentary procedure and laid on the same day. You must submit a
copy of that EM with every linked SI, using legislation.gov.uk Publishing. English
Votes for English Laws may impact on whether or not a single EM can be used.
2.9.7 If you are submitting SIs with a shared EM, you should use the legislation.gov.uk
Publishing service to request numbers in advance to ensure that the SIs are
numbered sequentially. You should enter the numbers issued into the SI(s) and
EM before you upload the documents for registration.
2.9.8 If an EM has minor typographical errors then you can issue a replacement EM
(this will replace the EM published on legislation.gov.uk). You will need to upload
the replacement EM as an Associated Document bundle, using the
legislation.gov.uk Publishing service. The SLSC should be advised if any
substantive changes of content are made to the original EM.
1
http://www.parliament.uk/documents/lords-committees/Secondary-Legislation-Scrutiny-Committee/departmental-Guidance-
Statutory-Instruments-Secondary-Legislation-Scrutiny-Committee.pdf
2.9.10 Both an Order in Council and an Order of Council are an ‘instrument’ for the
purposes of the standing orders.
2.9.11 The territorial extent of legislation is the legal jurisdiction (legal system) it affects
i.e. it is the body of law of which it forms a part. There are three legal jurisdictions
in the UK: England and Wales; Scotland; Northern Ireland. Legislation may
extend to one or more of these legal jurisdictions.
2.9.12 Territorial application concerns the geographical area within which legislation has
practical effect. The extent of a piece of legislation may therefore be different
from its territorial application. For example, a provision may well only apply in
relation to England, or in relation to Wales. It is wrong to say that it only extends
to England, or only extends to Wales.
2.9.13 The Cabinet Office provide guidance on English Votes for English Laws for
secondary legislation, which you can obtain by emailing
[email protected].
2.9.16 However, the originating Department is responsible for providing copies of the
EM and the SI to both the SLSC and the JCSI/SCSI.
2.10.2 Where the instrument is to be laid before the House of Commons only, the same
number of copies should be supplied, and the package directed to the Select
Committee on Statutory Instruments (at the same address as above).
2.10.4 You should send 15 copies of the EM, collated with 15 copies of the instrument it
describes, to the Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee, Room 25 West
Front, Palace of Westminster, London SW1A 0PW.
2.10.5 Include the same number of any Codes or guidance necessary to the
understanding of the instrument. Where maps or other reference documents are
part of the bundle, the Committee will usually accept two copies. If in doubt you
can contact the SLSC.
● Commencement Orders/regulations;
● a remedial Order, or draft remedial Order, under section 101 of the Human
Rights Act 1998 (which should be sent to the Joint Committee on Human
Rights);
● Correction slips.
2.10.7 However, the SLSC does consider all other instruments subject to Parliamentary
procedure. This includes statutory Codes of Practice, statutory guidance, Rules,
Orders in Council and Orders of Council.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1998/42/section/10
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo5/9-10/76/contents
2.11.2 ‘21 days’ means 21 calendar days including days on which Parliament, or either
House, is not sitting. The purpose of this rule of practice is to enable the House to
consider the instrument before it comes into force.
2.11.3 You should treat the 21-day period as a minimum period and aim to lay an
instrument as far in advance as possible.
2.11.4 If the 21-day period is reduced, you are reducing the time Parliament has to
scrutinise the SI. This should not be done simply for Departmental convenience.
If observing the ‘21 day rule’ is impossible, you must explain in the EM why the SI
could not have been made and laid sooner, and why it had to come into effect on
the day specified. If the reasons are matters of policy, explain why the policy
requires such urgent action. The explanation in the EM should also include what
the financial or other impact of delaying the legislation to meet the rule would be.
2.12.2 Such a statement should always be made regarding secondary legislation which
amends primary legislation. All such Ministerial statements (and corresponding
statements from other Authorities) should be included within the Explanatory
Memorandum at section 6 of the EM and include the name of the Minister giving
approval.
2.14.2 Decisions on matters of policy, where a new Government might want the
opportunity to take a different view, should be postponed until after the Election,
provided such postponement would not be detrimental to the national interest or
wasteful of public money.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1998/42/section/19
2.14.4 If an SI has been laid before a dissolution takes place the provisions of the
relevant Act(s) and the practice or Standing Orders of the two Houses will
determine whether or not it must be re-laid when the new Parliament meets.
(a) Class i) SIs (affirmative drafts requiring approval) or (Class ii) SIs
(affirmative instruments laid after being made but requiring approval before
coming into force).
(b) Class iii) SIs (affirmative instruments laid after being made but requiring
approval within a specified period to remain in force). In all known cases,
the time during which Parliament is dissolved is excluded from the specified
period by the parent Act and therefore re-laying is not required. (If there
were no such exclusion the SI would have to be re-laid.)
(c) Class iv) SIs (negative drafts) and Class v) SIs (negative instruments).
Under section 7(1)2 of the Statutory Instruments Act 1946 the time during
which Parliament is dissolved is excluded from the 40-day period
prescribed by sections 5 and 6 and therefore re-laying is not required.
(d) Special Procedure Orders. It is the practice of the House of Lords that
these are not re-laid. In the House of Commons, they are exempted
because of Private Business Standing Order No 247. Proceedings begun in
the last Parliament may be resumed in the new Parliament. The time during
which Parliament is dissolved is excluded from the 21 day petitioning period
of 21 days (see Private Business Standing Orders, House of Lords No
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/36/contents
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/36/section/7
2.14.6 If possible, though, made SIs and draft SIs in the above categories should be laid
before a dissolution takes place, to avoid delay in completing the Parliamentary
procedure.
2.14.7 For negative instruments, the 21 day rule still applies. Unlike the 40 day praying
period, the 21 days are not ‘suspended’ on dissolution, so the 21 day rule can be
complied with whenever the SI is laid. But, if you don’t allow 21 days when
Parliament is sitting between laying and the commencement date, you risk
criticism from Parliament for not complying with the ‘spirit’ of the rule. To avoid
that criticism you should ensure you lay your SI more than 21 days before the
likely last sitting date of Parliament, or bring the SI into force on a date well after
the new Parliament meets. Note though that the circumstances of each SI are
different and these may drive particular timing issues. Always keep in touch with
your Parliamentary team, particularly on anything controversial or with strict
deadlines.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/18/section/4
2.14.12 The Speaker of the House of Lords remains in office despite dissolution. Send
notification on the day the instrument comes into force.
2.14.13 The Speaker of the House of Commons vacates his or her office upon
dissolution. You cannot send notification until the new House of Commons has
assembled and elected a Speaker.
2.15.2 To determine whether a document made after 1947 under an Act passed before
1948 is a Statutory Instrument, you must consider the following enactments:
(a) the Statutory Instruments Act 19461 (‘the 1946 Act’), sections 1(2), 8(1)(d)
and 9(1);
(b) the Statutory Instruments Regulations 1947 (SI 1948/1) (‘the 1947
Regulations’), regulation 22;
(c) the Statutory Instruments (Confirmatory Powers) Order 1947 (SI 1948/23)
(‘the 1947 Order’);
(d) the Rules Publication Act 1893 (‘the 1893 Act’), sections 3 and 4:
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/36/contents
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/1948/1/regulation/2/made
3
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/1948/2/contents/made
2.15.5 The distinction between legislative and executive documents was carried into
regulation 2(1)(a) from the regulations made under the 1893 Act.
2.15.6 A further class of documents is brought within the Statutory Instruments series by
regulation 2(1)(b) of the 1947 Regulations. This class comprises instruments
made after 1947 which would, by virtue of an enabling Act passed before 1948,
have been subject to the provisions of section 3 (printing, numbering and sale) of
the 1893 Act if that section had not been repealed.
(b) any document made under any of the enactments (which relate to the
armed forces) set out in Part 1A of the Schedule to the 1947 Regulations
(regulation 2(3)(c)).
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1978/30/schedule/1
(c) the document confirmed or approved is executive not legislative, since both
regulation 2(2) of the 1947 Regulations and the 1947 Order relate to the
confirmation or approval of subordinate legislation.
(a) relate to any court in the United Kingdom, or to the procedure, practice,
costs or fees therein, or to any fees or matters applying generally
throughout England, Scotland, or Ireland; or
(b) are made by Her Majesty in Council, the Judicial Committee, the Treasury,
the Lord Chancellor of Great Britain, or the Lord Lieutenant or the Lord
Chancellor of Ireland, or a Secretary of State, the Admiralty, the Board of
Trade, the Local Government Board for England or Ireland, the Chief
Secretary for Ireland, or any other Government Department.
3.1.2 Before you start, you might find it useful to read section 4.3 in Part 4: Registration
and Publishing (which tells you about using the SI template).
3.1.3 Throughout this part, we refer you to examples on legislation.gov.uk that show
you the correct layout and required content.
3.3.2 An SI will be general or local according to its subject matter. An SI will usually be
local if its nature is personal, local or private and general if its nature is public and
general, unless there are special reasons to the contrary. This is set out in the
Statutory Instruments Regulations 1947 (SI 1948/1), regulation 41.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/1948/1/regulation/4/made
3.3.4 The fact that an SI amends an Act or SI of general application does not mean it
should be classified as general. If the amendment relates to a local area it should
be classed as local. Nor does the fact that a local SI is likely to be of general
interest or attract wider publicity mean that it should be classified as general.
3.5.2 You do not need a headnote if the SI is not dependent on Parliamentary approval
or being disapproved, and is not being issued free of charge. SIs can be subject
to Parliamentary procedure but not bear a headnote, for example Class v)
negative instruments. This type of SI will only bear a headnote if it is being
corrected free of charge. Similarly, Class vi) Sis which are being laid but are not
subject to any further Parliamentary proceedings, and Class vii) SIs which are not
required to be laid at all, will only bear a headnote if they are being issued free of
charge.
Position of headnotes
3.5.3 Both a Parliamentary procedure headnote and a corrected reprint headnote
appear in italic at the top of the first page, above the banner. They should never
be put in the document header. The headnotes differ in formatting, so therefore
please use the SI Template styles to ensure your headnotes are in the correct
style, rather than formatting the text yourself. The corrected reprint headnote
should always appear above any Parliamentary procedure headnote.
● in the case of the draft of a Class iv) negative procedure SI, the date of
laying.
Example
Headnote 1 – for affirmative drafts (Style 1)
Draft [insert type of SI here for example Regulations, Rules, Order, Order in
Council] laid before Parliament under section .... of the .... Act 20…., for
approval by resolution of each House of Parliament.
Example
Headnote 2 – for affirmative drafts (Style 2)
Draft Order in Council laid before the House of Commons under section.... of
the …. Act 20…., for an address to Her Majesty from that House praying that
the Order be made.
3.5.7 Class i) affirmative drafts are submitted for registration but are not given an SI
number until they are approved and made. They are initially published in draft
without an SI number, but with their italic headnote.
Example
Headnote 3 – for Class ii) affirmative instruments
Scheme made by the Secretary of State for .... and the Secretary of State for
...., laid before Parliament under section ... of the .... Act 20...., for approval
by resolution of each House of Parliament.
3.5.9 Class ii) affirmative instruments are submitted for registration but are not given an
SI number until they are approved. They are published with their italic headnote
Example
Headnote 4 – for Class iii) affirmative instruments (Style 1)
Order made by the Secretary of State, laid before Parliament under section ....
of the .... Act 20...., for approval by resolution of each House of Parliament
within [insert number of days here – it is generally twenty-eight or forty] days
beginning with the day on which the Order was made, subject to extension for
periods of dissolution, prorogation or adjournment for more than four days.
3.5.11 Class iii) affirmative instruments are published as soon as possible after they
have been made, registered and laid. This published copy includes the SI number
and the italic headnote.
Note: The headnote for a Class iv) negative drafts must include the date of laying.
Example headnote 6 is useful if the SI is being made under an Act passed before
1948 that sets out a procedure that has subsequently been replaced by that set
out in section 62 of the Statutory Instruments Act 1946.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2000/8/schedule/2/paragraph/26
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/36/section/6
Example
Headnote 6 – for Class iv) negative drafts (Style 2)
Draft Order in Council laid before Parliament under section 6(2) of the
Statutory Instruments Act 1946 (superseding section .... of the .... Act 18....)
on.... 20....; draft to lie for forty days pursuant to section 6(1) of that Act of
1946, during which period either House of Parliament may resolve that the
draft be not submitted to Her Majesty.
3.5.13 Class iv) negative drafts are submitted for registration but are not given an SI
number until they are approved and made. They are initially published in draft
with their italic headnote but without an SI number.
Headnotes for Classes v) (negative instruments) and, vi) and vii) (Other
Procedure) SIs
3.5.14 Class v) negative instruments are laid after being made and are subject to a
resolution if an annulment is passed within 40 days. Class vi) other procedure SIs
are laid after being made and there is no further provision for Parliamentary
procedure. Class vii) other procedure SIs are not required to be laid.
Example
Headnote 8 – for Legislative Reform Orders revised after the first scrutiny, using
the super affirmative process
Revised draft Order laid before Parliament under section 18(7) of the
Legislative and Regulatory Reform Act 2006 [for approval by resolution of
each House of Parliament].
Note: If the LRO is using a super-affirmative procedure and is revised after the first
scrutiny stage, the headnote reference must change from section 14(1) to section
18(7). If the reference to section 14(1) remains, then formally you will be starting
the initial scrutiny again.
Example
Headnote 9 – for Localism Orders
Draft Order laid before Parliament under section 7(2) of the Localism Act
2011 to which the Secretary of State has recommended that the negative
resolution procedure under section 16 of the Legislative and Regulatory
Reform Act 2006 should apply.
Example
Headnote 10 – for Public Bodies Orders
Draft Order laid before Parliament under section 11 of the Public Bodies Act
2011, for approval by resolution of each House of Parliament after the expiry
of the 40-day period referred to in section 11(4) of that Act.
3.5.17 Class viii) exceptional procedure SIs are not given an SI number until they are
approved and made. They are initially published in draft without an SI number,
but with their italic headnote.
3.5.19 Here is a headnote for Special Procedure Orders that you can use, or adapt:
Example
Headnote 11 – for Special Procedure Orders
Order made (or, confirmed) by the Secretary of State for ...., subject to special
Parliamentary procedure, and laid before Parliament under section 1 of the
Statutory Orders (Special Procedure) Act 1945 on.... 20...., together with the
certificate or statement required by section 2 of that Act (or, the statement
required by sections 2(5) and 10(2) of that Act).
Note: A headnote in this form should also appear on Special Procedure Orders even if
they are not made as SIs.
3.5.21 If you do produce a new SI in these circumstances, you must include a headnote
to explain what has happened. Here are some headnotes you can use or adapt.
The corrected reprint headnote should appear before the Parliamentary
procedure headnote, in italics.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/18/contents
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1965/43/contents
3
http://www.parliament.uk/business/bills-and-legislation/secondary-legislation/special-procedure-orders/
Example
Headnote 13 – for new SIs that correct a defective SI
This Statutory Instrument has been made in consequence of a defect in [SI
2016/0000] and is being issued free of charge to all known recipients of that
Statutory Instrument.
Example
Headnote 14 – for a substitution of the same SI (with the same number)
This Statutory Instrument has been printed in substitution of the SI of the same
number and is being issued free of charge to all known recipients of that
Statutory Instrument.
3.5.23 The corrected reprint headnote should appear before the Parliamentary
procedure headnote, in italics. Here are headnotes you can use, or adapt:
Example
Headnote 16 – for when the draft SI was laid/published on same date (Style 1)
This draft Statutory Instrument supersedes the draft of the same title which
was laid before Parliament/the House of Commons [delete as applicable] and
published on [insert date] (ISBN [Insert ISBN Number]). It is being issued
free of charge to all known recipients of that draft Statutory Instrument.
Example
Headnote 17 – for when the draft SI was laid/published on same date (Style 2)
This draft Statutory Instrument supersedes the draft laid before
Parliament/the House of Commons [delete as applicable] on [insert date] and
published on [insert date] (ISBN [Insert ISBN Number]). It is being issued
free of charge to all known recipients of that draft Statutory Instrument.
3.6 Banners
Example
The changes you need to make to headnotes, banners, and headings when an
SI is approved
3.6.4 When an SI is approved you need to make changes to headnotes, banner and
headings. Use the SI template functionality to change the banner type to
Statutory Instruments. You must not make changes to the content of the SI
document.
● insert the dates into the ‘made’ and ‘coming into force’ italic date
information (if this does not already appear in the draft);
● insert the date into the ‘coming into force’ italic date information;
● insert the dates into the ‘made’ and ‘coming into force’ italic date
information, if this does not already appear in the draft;
3.6.9 When Class viii) exceptional procedure Orders are approved, make the
amendments for the procedure that is prescribed (these Orders can be negative,
affirmative, super affirmative or enhanced affirmative).
3.7 Numbers
The SI number
3.7.1 The numbers for the UK SI series and the subsidiary numbers are issued by the
SI Registrar when an SI is registered. The number series run from the beginning
of the calendar year.
3.7.2 Below the banner comes the year and SI number(s). This takes the form: ‘20[…]
No. […]’.
3.7.3 The number is issued and inserted into a made SI as part of registration, except
where the SI is subject to approval (Class ii)). The year in the SI number must
match the year in the SI title. The year used for the number is the year in which
Subsidiary numbers
3.7.4 Some types of SI have subsidiary numbers. These appear in parentheses with a
distinguishing letter as follows:
Exceptions:
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2015/1480/contents/made
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2012/10/section/77
(NI): Northern Ireland series: Orders in Council making legislation for Northern
Ireland, mainly in relation to reserved matters under section 85 of the Northern
Ireland Act 19982.
(W): Welsh series: SIs made by the Welsh Minsters and applying to Wales only.
Such SIs are generally made in both the English and Welsh languages where the
subsidiary number will be shown as (W.) in English and (Cy.) in Welsh.
3.7.5 These subsidiary numbers are not the same as the numbers included in the title
of an SI to distinguish it within a sequence of SIs bearing similar titles.
● The one exception to this is where the SI is made by the Welsh Ministers,
in which case the “W. / Cy.” number will always follow the SI number; for
example ‘2005 No. 71 (W. 9) (C. 3)’.
3.7.7 Departments must ensure that the correct order is followed and that the correct
letters in parentheses ((W.) or (C.) for example) are included. The SI and
subsidiary numbers will be automatically added for you at registration, except
when an advanced number(s) has been approved. In this case you need to insert
the allocated number(s) in the SI and any accompanying Explanatory
Memorandum.
3.7.8 Subsidiary numbers in SIs must be formatted correctly. Here is how you should
format subsidiary numbers:
● open parenthesis;
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1998/46/contents
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1998/47/section/85
● close parenthesis.
3.8.3 You should use a subject heading that is appropriate to your SI and that is on the
valid subject heading list that you can find in the Tools and Guidance section of
legislation.gov.uk Publishing:
● https://publishing.legislation.gov.uk/tools/uksi/drafting/si-subject-headings
3.8.4 If the proposed heading has not been used before, please email a copy of your
SI, your suggested subject heading and any relevant background information
(including your reason for not using an existing subject heading) to the SI
Registrar.
3.8.5 In the case of SIs made under section 21 of the European Communities Act 1972,
the SI should carry a heading that is relevant to its subject matter, rather than:
“European Union”. You should only use the heading “European Union” when the
SI deals specifically with that subject.
3.8.6 If more than one subject headings is used, they can be listed in order of
relevance or importance, but should be listed in alphabetical order where no
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1972/68/section/2
Example
DEFENCE
INCOME TAX
3.8.7 Using a correct subject heading is important because it enables the SI to be
classified and indexed correctly.
Subject headings for Legislative Reform Orders and Public Bodies Orders
3.8.8 To ensure consistency, in addition to any specific subject heading, subject
headings for Legislative Reform Orders should include:
Example
REGULATORY REFORM
3.8.9 To ensure consistency, in addition for any specific subject heading, subject
headings for a Public Bodies Order should include:
Example
PUBLIC BODIES
Inclusion of territorial suffixes in subject headings
3.8.10 Following the devolution of powers to the Scottish Parliament, the Northern
Ireland Assembly, and the National Assembly for Wales, all SIs that contain law
for only part of the UK should include a territorial suffix. The territorial suffix
indicates the coverage of the SI.
3.8.11 The suffixes may differ in a single SI, for example some headings may deal with
subjects of a UK or Great Britain extent (requiring no suffix) as well as subjects
that apply to England only (therefore requiring an England suffix).
3.8.12 Table F below provides guidance on the suffixes you should use.
England England
Wales Wales
Scotland Scotland
Scotland
Northern Ireland
England and Wales, and Northern Ireland Two headings = England and Wales
Northern Ireland
3.8.13 The territorial suffix tells you where in the UK the law applies. Legislation.gov.uk
Publishing now includes a Subject Heading Guide. This is available as follows:
● https://publishing.legislation.gov.uk/sites/default/files/SI%20Reg%20Guide
-%20Subject%20Heading.pdf
Example
EUROPEAN UNION
DEFENCE
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
Note: Some older SIs with the subject heading EUROPEAN UNION or EUROPEAN
COMMUNITIES include a suffix in the subject heading. This is an erroneous
precedent, and you should not follow it.
3.8.16 Do not use a sub-heading if its subject matter is already included in the title of the
SI.
3.8.17 In general, avoid using too many sub-headings and only use those clearly
relevant to the particular SI.
3.8.18 You should aim to use existing sub-headings. If you need further advice please
contact the SI Registrar.
SI titles generally
3.9.1 The title of the SI appears below the subject heading (or sub-heading if any). The
title should always end with the calendar year in which the SI is made. If a draft SI
includes a year in its title and has been approved but not made in that year, you
must change the date in the title to the year in which the SI was made. No further
Parliamentary approval is required.
● The title should give an accurate indication of the nature of the SI, and
distinguish it from all others.
● When different Departments make SIs under the same Act, they must
jointly ensure that the titles are not duplicated.
● The title should match exactly that which has been used in the citation
clause.
● The title should begin with ‘The…’ and end with the year in which it is
made. The only exception to using ‘The’ in SI titles is when they start with
‘Her Majesty’s…’: For example see: Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of
Education, Children’s Services and Skills (Fees and Frequency of
Inspections) (Children’s Homes etc.) (Amendment) Regulations 2013 (SI
2013/5231).
Example
The Protection of Children Act 1999 (Commencement No.
3) Order 2002
The Police Pensions (Amendment) (No. 3) Regulations
2004
The Import Duties (Temporary Reductions and
Exemptions) (No. 24) Order 1976
3.9.4 If there is a series of commencement Orders/Regulations for an Act, the title
should include a number in a single sequence, irrespective of the year in which
the SIs are made.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2013/523/made
Example
The Small Business, Enterprise and Employment Act 2015
(Commencement No. 1) Regulations 2015
The Small Business, Enterprise and Employment Act 2015
(Commencement No. 1) (Wales) Regulations 2015
3.9.6 Where different Departments make Commencement Instruments under the same
Act, relating to the same jurisdiction, they must jointly ensure that the numbers
used in the titles follow in sequence.
3.9.7 You can use a Commencement Instrument to commence a mix of provisions with
varying territorial applications. The subject headings in the instrument should
reflect the different provisions and territorial applications. The instrument can still
be titled as part of the main series of Commencement Instruments for an Act
without any reference to territorial application. For an example of this see: the
Infrastructure Act 2015 (Commencement No.1) Regulations 2015 (SI 2015/4811).
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2015/481/introduction/made
3.9.10 The substantive provisions usually relate to transitional arrangements. The titles
of such instruments should include this information as below:
Example
The National Lottery Act 2006 (Commencement No. 2
and Transitional Provisions) Order 2006
The Anti-social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014
(Commencement No. 2 and Transitional Provisions)
(Wales) Order 2014
Note: The Commencement series number should always appear before the additional
wording, to preserve the integrity of numbering.
Example
The Public Bodies (Abolition of Her Majesty’s
Inspectorate of Courts Administration and the Public
Guardian Board) Order 2012
3.9.13 You may find it useful to consult the SLSC’s list of past examples1.
Example
The Legislative Reform (Payments by Parish Councils,
Community Councils and Charter Trustees) Order 2014
3.9.15 You may find it useful to consult the Delegated Powers Committee’s list of
LROs2.
3.10 Italic date information: made, laid and coming into force dates
3.10.1 The italic date information comes below the SI Title, in a typical SI laid before
Parliament. It includes the following information:
(b) where applicable, the date on which it was laid before UK Parliament or the
House of Commons and laid dates for other Parliaments and Assemblies
(where the instrument is required to be laid); and
1
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/secondary-legislation-scrutiny-committee/public-
bodies-orders/
2
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/delegated-powers-and-regulatory-reform-
committee/lros/
3.10.2 If laying before the two Houses of the UK Parliament is on different dates, enter
the later date in b). If the SI comes into force before it is laid, the coming into
force italic date should be given immediately after the made italic date, with the
laid italic date last.
3.10.3 Where an SI is made, laid and comes into force on the same day, Departments
should insert the times of making/signing, laying and coming into force
immediately before the relevant dates. For examples of this practice see:
● The Prison and Young Offender Institution (Amendment) Rules 2014 (SI
2014/21693).
Note: Any italic dates made, laid or coming into force should have the time inserted
before the date.
Example
The correct formatting is:
Coming into force - - at 9.15 a.m. on 8th October 2018
The following formatting is not correct:
Coming into force at 9.15 a.m. on 8th October 2018
3.10.4 The wording used for made, laid and coming into force italic dates varies
according to the procedure followed, as follows:
3.10.4.1 SIs that are laid before the House of Commons and the House of Lords:
Example
Made - - - - [NNth Month Year]
Laid before Parliament [NNth Month Year]
Coming into force - - [NNth Month Year]
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2014/3230/contents/made
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2014/1843/contents/made
3
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2014/2169/contents/made
Example
Made - - - - [NNth Month Year]
Laid before the House of Commons [NNth Month Year]
Coming into force - - [NNth Month Year]
Example
Made - - - - [NNth Month Year]
Coming into force - - [NNth Month Year]
To be laid before Parliament [NNth Month Year]
3.10.4.4 SIs that do not have to be laid before Parliament or the House of Commons and
that do not require an italic coming into force date (e.g. a Commencement
Instrument):
Example
Made - - -- [NNth Month Year]
3.10.4.5 SIs that do not have to be laid before Parliament or the House of Commons, and
which come into force when made, or ‘forthwith’:
Example
Made - - - - [1st May 2015]
Coming into force - - [1st May 2015]
Note: (i) If laying before the two Houses takes place on different dates, insert the later
date.
(ii) If the SI is to come into force before it is laid, the words ‘Coming into force’
and the date appear above ‘Laid before Parliament’.
3.10.4.6 SIs that are laid before the House of Commons and the House of Lords in draft:
Example
Made - - - - [ Year]
Coming into force - - [ Year]
or
Made - - - -
Note: In the examples above, where the Coming in Force date is known it can be
entered in the format of NNth Month Year, or just the Year.
3.10.4.7 SIs that have more than one coming into force date:
Example
Made - - - - [3rd March 2015]
Coming into force
Articles 1 and 2 [25th March 2015]
Remainder [1st July 2015]
or
Example
Made [3rd March 2015]
Coming into force in accordance with [article 1(2)]
Note: You can use this formula if the commencement is to be determined later under
the article, Regulation or Rule specified, but try to use a calendar date whenever
possible.
3.10.5 Orders in Council: Before an Order in Council is sent to the Privy Council Office
for submission to Her Majesty in Council, the responsible department must
complete the italic date information, including the date on which the Order is to be
laid before Parliament. You should also include the Privy Council meeting date,
which comes below the italic date information, as in the example below.
Example
Made - - - - [NNth Month Year]
Laid before Parliament [NNth Month Year]
Present,
Example
Made - - - - [NNth Month Year]
Laid before Parliament [NNth Month Year]
Coming into force - - [NNth Month Year]
or
or
or
3.10.7 Special Procedure Orders do not require italic date information giving the dates of
laying and commencement (although most have them). When used, complete the
italic date information (made, laid, coming into force) with as much information as
is available. You may not be able to specify the date on which a Special
Procedure Order will come into force if it is (or could become) subject to special
Parliamentary procedure (for example, following consultation). In this case, you
can include a recital in the preamble that states that the Order will not come into
force until the relevant statutory provisions have been complied with.
3.10.9 Information used for the table of contents tab on the legislation.gov.uk website is
automatically generated from the content of the instrument.
● the recital of any other matters upon which its validity depends; and
3.11.2 Best practice is to combine the recitals and words of enactment in one sentence,
but in some cases this would produce a sentence of undue length and
complexity. For example see: The Legislative Reform (Community Governance
Reviews) Order 2015 (SI 2015/9981). If that is the case, you can have separate
recitals before the words of enactment. In order to make it clear who is exercising
the power, start the wording with (in the case of the Secretary of State): “The
[Secretary of State] in exercise of powers”. Note that where the power to make
the instrument is conferred on ‘the Secretary of State’ the preamble does not
need to specify the department (for example ‘The Secretary of State for
Education in exercise of …’) unless the power is conferred specifically on that
departmental Secretary of State.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2015/998/introduction/made
Example
Her Majesty, in exercise of the powers conferred on Her by section 8(2) and (3) of
the Coinage Act 1971(a), is pleased, by and with the advice of Her Privy Council,
to order, and it is hereby ordered, as follows:
3.11.4 GLS Statutory Instrument Drafting Guidance gives more information on drafting
the preamble.
3.11.6 If you are drafting an SI under section 2(2)2 of the European Communities Act
1972 you need to be satisfied that the power provides the necessary vires for the
instrument, but you do not need to specify any further detail in the preamble. A
reference to “section 2(2) of the European Communities Act 1972” is sufficient.
3.11.7 The preamble to an instrument made under section 2(2) of the European
Communities Act should recite the subject matter of the designation (if any) upon
which the maker of the instrument relies. If more than one designation is relied
on, all the relevant designations must be cited.
3.11.8 If the instrument extends to the European Economic Area (EAA), a footnote to the
reference in the preamble to section 2(2) should note the effect of the European
Economic Area Act 19933. Similarly, if the exercise of powers in section 2(2) of
the European Communities Act is dependent on the fact that an international
agreement has been specified as one of the EU Treaties, this should be
explained in a footnote to the preamble.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2012/2746/contents/made
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1972/68/section/2
3
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1993/51
3.11.10 Wording such as “and of all other powers enabling him on that behalf” should
generally only be used in limited circumstances, such as where reliance is placed
on prerogative powers. If in doubt, you should contact DExEU legal advisers.
Enabling powers
3.11.11 The preamble should recite every enabling provision that the SI derives its validity
from or through, whether they are in primary or secondary legislation. It should
specify the relevant section, subsection and paragraph.
3.11.12 Words such as: ‘and of all other powers enabling him [or her] to do so’ should
only be used in very limited circumstances (for example, where reliance is placed
on prerogative powers).
3.11.13 Where the enabling power and prerogative action are inter-dependent you can
use these words to cover the prerogative action. This should not be included just
because the SI exercises the general power to revoke, amend or re-enact
conferred by section 141 of the Interpretation Act 1978. If, however, the SI
exercises a specific power (for example, a power to revoke Orders conferred by
an Act passed before 1979), you should cite that enabling provision in the
preamble.
3.11.14 The enabling provisions include all of those that make clear:
3.11.15 For example, citing a provision that empowers ‘the Minister’ or ‘the Authority’ to
‘prescribe’ certain matters also requires a reference to:
(a) the provision which defines the expression ‘the Minister’ or ‘the Authority’,
or which specifies which Minister or Authority is to exercise the power;
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1978/30/section/14
3.11.16 Cite the defining provision by using a footnote showing where the definition can
be found.
3.11.17 Where the defining provision sets out numerous definitions that are not
identifiable by letter or number, it is good practice to indicate the relevant
definition in a footnote. For example where the provision is cited in the preamble,
the footnote might read:
Example
(x) ‘See the definitions of “prescribed” and “Regulations” in section X’
Where the provision is mentioned only in a footnote, the footnote might read:
Example
(x) ‘See section X for the definitions of ‘prescribed’ and “Regulations”’
3.11.18 You can find more information about preambles in the GLS Statutory Instrument
Drafting Guidance.
● other long-established terms defined outside the Act that confer the power
to make the SI; or
3.11.20 For example you do not need to cite the authority, contained in the Treasury
Instruments (Signature) Act 1849, by which two of the Commissioners of Her
Majesty’s Treasury may sign SIs.
3.11.21 You should cite a provision that specifies whether the power is to be exercised by
the making of Rules, Regulations, an Order or some other kind of subordinate
legislation.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1978/30/contents
3.11.23 You can find an example in The Occupational Pension Schemes (Schemes that
were Contracted-out) Regulations 2015 (SI 2015/14521).
Transfer of functions
3.11.24 If a power in the enabling Act is expressed as exercisable by one Minister, but
has been transferred to another Minister (for example following a Transfer of
Functions Order), state the full basis of the Minister’s powers by using or adapting
the wording in the following example:
Example
The Secretary of State for ...... makes the following Order in exercise of powers
conferred by section..... of the.... Act 20... and now vested in the Secretary of
State.
3.11.25 You should include in a footnote the citation of the enabling Act, and the Transfer
of Functions Order or Orders or other instruments that have vested the enabling
power to the Minister. For an example, see: the Office of the Renewable Fuels
Agency (Dissolution and Transfer of Functions) Order 2011 (SI 2011/4932).
3.11.26 If the power has been transferred to Ministers in Scotland, Wales or Northern
Ireland as part of devolution, you do not need to include this in a footnote, unless
the devolution arrangements are directly relevant to the SI you are drafting.
3.11.27 Please note that although previous practice has been to include the full titles of
the SIs in the footnotes, you should now simply reference the SI by year and
number.
Fulfilment of conditions
3.11.28 The preamble should also set out the fulfilment of any condition that the enabling
Act requires before the SI can be made. Examples include:
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2015/1452/contents/made
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2011/493/contents/made
● that necessary notices have been published, for example in The Gazette1;
or
Example
Her Majesty, in pursuance of [relevant section of primary legislation], is pleased,
by and with the advice of Her Privy Council, to order as follows:
3.11.32 However, the wording can vary depending on the geographical origin, the powers
of enactment, and the Parliamentary procedure and you should refer to previous
SIs under the same powers for relevant preamble examples.
1
https://www.thegazette.co.uk/
2
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/delegated-powers-and-regulatory-reform-
committee/lros/
3
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/243888/Using_the_Public_Bodies_Act_2011.pdf
Interpretation provisions
3.12.1 It may be convenient to include an interpretation provision. By convention, this
follows the provisions relating to citation, commencement and extent (or
application). For detailed guidance on the appropriate use of the interpretation
provision, see the GLS SI Drafting Guidance (December 2015, para 4.3).
3.12.2 Section 11 of the Interpretation Act 1978 provides the general proposition that
where an Act confers power to make subordinate legislation, expressions used in
that legislation have, unless the contrary intention appears, the meaning which
they bear in the Act. There is no need, therefore, to repeat definitions used in the
enabling Act.
3.12.3 There may be circumstances where it would assist the reader of a statutory
instrument to point out that a particular expression is defined in the enabling Act.
This should be done by way of a footnote.
Citation
3.12.4 Every SI has a citation clause, which enacts the title, and in most SIs there is a
commencement clause to bring the SI into effect.
3.12.5 Citation and commencement are often covered in the same clause.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Edw8and1Geo6/1/16/contents
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/6-7/42/contents
3
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Eliz2/2-3/1/contents
4
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1978/30/schedule/1
3.12.8 If it is essential that the SI is brought into force before it can be laid you must
notify the Speaker of the House of Commons (if laying before both Houses) and
the Speaker of the House of Lords and explain why.
3.12.9 SIs considered by the Joint Committee (or House of Commons Select
Committee) on Statutory Instruments are subject to certain rules of practice. The
Committees scrutinise the coming into force date with particular care.
3.12.10 With affirmatives, if the new law imposes duties on people that are significantly
more onerous than before, and requires them to adopt different patterns of
behaviour, then the instrument should not be brought into force on a date earlier
than appears to give those affected reasonable chance to adapt to the changes
required. In the JCSI’s 1st report of the 2014/15 Session on draft Openness of
Local Government Bodies Regulations 2014, the committee stated that a date
earlier than 21 days after the instrument is made is unlikely to be reasonable.
3.12.11 You should aim to lay SIs that are subject to annulment (Class v)) at least 21
days before they are due to come into force. This is known as the ‘21 day rule’.
You must also provide copies to the Committee at this time.
3.12.12 Good planning and management are key to the successful making and
commencement of SIs:
● Where your SI includes significant new policy, try to avoid laying just
before the 21 day minimum period before commencement.
Note: The 21 day minimum is just that – a minimum. A good project plan will allow more
than the minimum time available.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/36/contents
● Remember that in the Lords, a motion cannot be moved for the approval
of an affirmative SI before it has been reported on by the JCSI. This will
vary according to the type of SI; you should be particularly careful with
Legislative Reform Orders, Public Bodies Orders and Localism Orders,
which follow special procedures, as set out elsewhere in this guidance.
● Debates for affirmative SIs can only take place when Parliament is sitting.
It is important to allow time for recesses when planning the timings for
affirmative SIs.
● Wherever possible, try and lay negative SIs, as well as affirmatives, well
in advance of commencement. A good project plan will allow for more
time than the minimum required.
3.12.13 Departments should also check with Parliamentary Business Managers before
inserting a specific date in an affirmative SI to make sure that there is enough
time for required scrutiny and debate before the SI needs to come into effect.
Often it is better to leave the commencement date as “X days after making”.
3.12.15 If the clause provides that the SI, or part of it, is to come into force on a particular
day, it will come into force at the beginning of that day (Interpretation Act 19781,
section 4(a) and 23(a)) – unless the contrary intention appears (see section 23(1)
of the Interpretation Act2. This means that an SI expressed to come into force on
the day on which it is made will have retrospective effect.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1978/30/contents
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1978/30/section/23
3.12.17 Such clauses are also inappropriate for certain types of SI that do not need to be
laid before Parliament or the House of Commons, such as Commencement
Orders/Regulations, Appointed Day Orders and Declaratory Orders.
Commencement clauses are omitted from some Orders/Regulations that are (or
may be) subject to special Parliamentary procedure.
3.12.18 Section 131 of the Interpretation Act 1978 is relevant and you should be aware of
it. Subordinate legislation may be made and brought into force after the enabling
Act is passed but before it is commenced. Such subordinate legislation can bring
that Act (or any provision of it) into force, or give full effect to the Act (or any
provision of it) at or after its commencement.
● the need for members of the public, or some section of them, to study the
SI before it comes into force; or
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1978/30/section/13
2
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/better-regulation-framework-manual
3
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/36/section/3
3.12.22 Where an SI requires approval by Parliament before it is brought into force (Class
ii) affirmative instruments); has to be laid in draft for approval (Class i) affirmative
drafts); or is subject to negative procedure before it is made (Class iv) negative
drafts), include a calendar date of coming into force where possible and where
you are confident that the relevant Parliamentary procedure will be completed
before that date. If you cannot specify a date on which affirmative SIs come into
force, then it is common drafting practice to use wording that states that the SI
comes into force on the day after, or on a specified number of days after, the day
on which it is made.
3.12.24 You should avoid, where possible, bringing different sections of the Act into force
within short intervals of each other and avoid a large number of different
commencement dates. This may involve negotiation with policy officials in your
Department, or across Departments.
Commencement clauses
3.12.25 Commencement clauses are made in many different forms, but the following
examples may be useful:
Example
This Order [Regulation] may be cited as the .... Order [Regulation] 20.... and
comes into force on .... 20.... .
3.12.25.2 SIs requiring approval by Parliament or the House of Commons before coming
into force (Class i) affirmative drafts and Class ii) affirmative instruments where
you are not able to specify a calendar date of coming into force):
Note: In Class iv) negative drafts, specify a calendar date of coming into force in the
draft if you are able to. If not, you can use one of the following forms:
Example
.... comes into force on the day (or, the [tenth] day) after the day on which it is
made.
or
.... comes into force forthwith.
3.12.25.4 SIs that have more than one commencement date:
Example
Articles 1 and 2 of this Order come into force on 25th March 2006 and all other
articles come into force on 1st July 2006.
or
.... comes into force for the purposes of articles 7 and 9 on 25th March 2006 and
for all other purposes on 1st July 2006.
3.12.25.5 SIs that are commenced at a particular time of day
All instruments are presumed to commence at the start of the day on which they
come into force unless otherwise stated. Where an instrument is to be
commenced at a particular time of day then the commencement clause should
read as follows:
Example
This Order [These Regulation] may be cited as the …… Order [Regulations] 20..
and comes [come] into force at [time] on ………20….. .
with the time specified in the following form: e.g. 10.30 a.m., 4.00 p.m. or noon.
Example
.... comes into force on .... 20.... but [Order/Regulation 5] shall have effect from
.... 20... .
3.12.25.7 SIs having effect for a limited period
3.13.2 Where an instrument has a more limited territorial extent than its enabling power,
a provision will be needed to limit the extent of the instrument. Extent should only
be used where differentiating between England and Wales (combined), or
Scotland, or Northern Ireland i.e. between territories that have their own legal
systems.
3.13.3 However, it may also be necessary, for example, when differentiating between
the geographical territories of England and Wales, to provide that the instrument
has a more limited application than its enabling powers.
3.13.5 If the application is obvious from the operative provisions in your instrument,
there is no need to add an application provision making the same point (for
example if your regulations are (in terms) about schools in England). An
3.14.2 If a parent Act, or the enabling section of it, is repealed, SIs made under it will
lapse unless they are saved i.e. re-enacted. You can often find such savings in
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1978/30/section/14
3.14.3 Subordinate legislation may also become spent because it was expressed to
have effect only for a limited period, or because it has ceased to have any effect.
Many SIs become spent but are not specifically revoked.
3.14.4 Where you are revoking a principal SI, you should explicitly revoke all other SIs
that would be spent on its revocation.
3.14.5 If you are revoking several SIs, good practice is to set them out in a Schedule to
the revoking SI.
3.14.6 Information that you should give in the Explanatory Note to revoking SIs is set out
in section 3.23.6.
3.15.2 Until 1962 it was usual to put a comma after the last word, and before the year, in
the title of an Act or subordinate SI. You should always omit this comma even
though it appears in the original citation provision.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1978/30/section/17
● For EU legislation, be clear what you are cross referencing to. Wherever
possible follow the approach taken in the EU instrument itself. Section
3.18 explains this in more detail.
3.16.2 In an instrument made after 1978 (see the Interpretation Act 19781, sections
20(2), 23(1) and (2)) a reference to an enactment is a reference to that enactment
as amended, and includes a reference to it as extended or applied by or under
any other enactment (including any other provision of that instrument).
‘Enactment’ includes, for this purpose, an enactment in subordinate legislation
whenever made. Do not include words such as ‘as amended’, or particulars of
amendments, in the preamble or text of an instrument.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1978/30/contents
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/changes
3.17.2 For printed publications give the publisher’s name, the place and year of
publication and the edition, and any other particulars that may help to identify the
publication (including the ISBN if known). If you do not do this, any subsequent
changes to the external publication may change the effect of the SI. This may
constitute unauthorised sub-delegation. Say where hard copies can be obtained
or inspected, where possible. Where a printed publication has also been
published on Gov.uk, you should also include the web address of the document.
Note: The scrutiny or Parliamentary committees require 2 hard copies of the referenced
printed documents.
3.17.3 When referring to a digital document you must also quote a date or version
number to fix it at a given moment and avoid creating an ambulatory reference. If
you do not do this, and the authors of the digital document alter it, the effect of
the SI may be altered. This may constitute unauthorised sub-delegation. It is
good practice if readers of the legislation can access the referred document freely
on the web, rather than linking to a paid for site. You should reference documents
that are open and available wherever possible.
3.17.4 The Explanatory Note, or a footnote, should give particulars of the place where
the printed publication may be obtained or inspected. Where a documents has
been produced in digital form only, the Explanatory Note or footnote should state
this and should set out any arrangements that are in place for an informally
printed version of the document to be made available on request where the
subject matter of the instrument means that it is unlikely that there will be
significant users of the SI who do not have internet access.
3.17.5 There are exceptions. Examples of specific statutory exceptions are the
Medicines Act 1968, section 103(3)1, which authorises references to future
editions of specified publications, including the British Pharmacopoeia, and in the
Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974, section 15(4)(b)2, which authorises
references to any specified document as revised or re-issued from time to time.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1968/67/section/103
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1974/37/section/15
3.17.7 Images larger than A4 size need to be published as fold-outs and separate image
files (TIFF) will need to be submitted, as well as being included as a reduced size
image embedded in the SI Template Word file. Please note that the imprinted
copies for laying will only contain the placeholder image and not the fold out
version image. Where the image is very small, consider providing a separate print
of the image to the scrutiny committees. Print copies will contain the full size
image and will be published as a fold out. If you have any concerns or questions
please contact the SI support desk: [email protected].
3.17.8 You can also refer to the document, for example by reference to its date,
signature, distinguishing marks, place of deposit or similar, without formally
making it part of the SI.
3.17.9 Either the Explanatory Note or the footnote should state the place and times at
which the map or plan may be inspected, as well as providing a website
reference if it is also available online.
3.17.11 We do not check date ordinals in the main body of the SI or in the Explanatory
Notes but these should similarly not be in superscript.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1978/30/section/20A
Example
.... section 2(1) of the Conservation of Seals Act 1970 (which establishes an
annual close season for grey seals) ....
3.19.2 It is good practice to reserve parentheses for material that has no legislative
effect and is included merely to assist the reader. You should use commas in the
case of a qualifying proposition that needs to be distinguished from surrounding
text, but which still retains legislative effect.
3.20.2 Instruments are sometimes required to be made by more than one Minister or
Department, or require the confirmation, approval or consent of some further
Minister or Department.
3.20.3 Where an SI requires only the agreement of the National Assembly for Wales this
approval does not need to be indicated by a signature. Approval should be
recited in the preamble, in the same way as the approval of Parliament on
affirmative resolution instruments.
3.20.4 You should add the date of signing against each signature, even though it
repeats a date already inserted. Where there is more than one signature, and the
dates of signing vary, the instrument is taken to be made on the last date of
signing. This should be entered as the ‘made’ date in the italic date information
below the title of the instrument.
Name of official
Department
The date of signing should appear in the signature block on the left hand side of
the page, opposite the Department as shown below.
Example
Dan Rogerson
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State
26th March 2015 Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
Form of signature
3.20.7 The signature should always appear in italic type.
3.20.8 Unless an instrument is signed by a Peer, then the established form is first name
followed by surname, for example ‘George Osborne’.
3.20.9 When an instrument is signed by a Peer, convention is that the signature does
not contain the Peer’s full title. For example the signature should read ‘Altmann’
not ‘Baroness Altmann’. For Peers with the same, or similar, name then their title
suffix should be included to distinguish which Peer has signed the instrument. For
example, the signature on the Road Traffic Offenders Act 1988 and Motor
Vehicles (Driving Licences) (Amendment) Regulations 2015 (SI 2015/20041), the
signature reads ‘Ahmad of Wimbledon’ to avoid any possible confusion with Lord
Ahmed, who is a different Peer.
3.20.10 The signature should omit prefix or suffix details such as ‘Sir’, ‘Rt. Hon.’, ‘Esq.’ or
‘MP’.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2015/2004/signature/made
3.20.13 Where an instrument is classified as local and not laid before Parliament, it is
often signed by an official. If an official is signing the preferred formula is: title of
post followed by “for and on behalf of the Secretary of State for […]”. You should
use the signatory’s full title to clarify who they are.
3.21 Footnotes
Introduction to footnotes
3.21.1 Footnotes are there to help the reader, for example by referring to definitions in
the parent Act, or by telling people where they can find useful external
information. The information in the footnotes helps contextualise the legislation.
This is useful for readers, and also for those writing commentaries about the
legislation such as legal writers and publishers.
3.21.3 If you are adding a footnote to a definition, it should reference where the definition
may be found.
3.21.4 Footnote the amendment history of the legislation you have referenced where this
is relevant and helpful to the reader. This amendment history may be specific to
the legislation you have referenced and only included if relevant to the SI. So, for
3.21.5 To help you compile a list of amendments, you can use the changes to legislation
feature1 on legislation.gov.uk. In the longer term, The National Archives is
developing functionality that will enable you to make better use of the
amendments data it holds for generating the content of footnotes. If a table
contains a reference to legislation it should be lettered and appear in the
footnotes at the bottom of the page in the normal way.
Form of footnotes
3.21.7 The SI template will make sure that footnotes are correctly lettered (a), (b) and so
on, starting at (a) on each page. An exception is WSIs made by the Welsh
Ministers where footnotes are numbered (1), (2) and so on, starting at (1) on each
page. (This is necessary because of the dual language nature of these SIs).
3.21.8 Where an Act or SI is referred to more than once in the same instrument you only
need to footnote it the first time it is referenced.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/changes
Subordinate legislation
Statutory Rules and Orders (Northern S.R. & O. (NI) 1952 No. 77
Ireland)
(a) if the Order was the only one scheduled to the confirming Act:
Example
(a) See 1959 c. viii.
(b) if the Order was one of a number scheduled to the confirming Act:
Example
(a) Confirmed by 1920 c. ciii’
3.21.12 If an SI refers to a provision of an Act that has been amended, extended or
applied, you may reference it in footnotes. If the footnote relates to the first
mention of the amended provision, give the details after the citation, as in the
following examples:
Example
(a) 1968 c. 77; section 8(4) was amended by the Fishery Limits Act 1976 (c. 86), section 9(1) and
Schedule 2, paragraph 17(1).
(b) 1964 c. 48; section 34 was extended by sections 12 and 15(5) of the Superannuation Act 1972
(c. 11).
Note: In example a) above, omit the reference to the amending section if the section
does no more than introduce the Schedule without qualification or interpretation.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo5/9-10/76/contents
3.21.15 Where the year and serial number are known, you can find an SI by searching for
it at www.legislation.gov.uk.
3.21.16 For older legislation you currently need to find the legislation by looking in the
printed volumes of the Statutory Rules and Orders, SI series, or in the official
editions. You should reference them as follows:
(a) if it is in The Statutory Rules and Orders and Statutory Instruments Revised
to December 31, 1948, by means of the numerical table in Volume XXV;
(c) if it was made before 1961, by means of the Table of Government Orders;
(d) if it is in an annual edition after 1960, by going direct to the appropriate Part
and (after 1963) section, which may be identified (after 1961) by the serial
numbers printed on the spine.
3.21.17 The annual editions arrange SIs in straightforward numerical sequence and the
large majority of references are now to SIs in these editions.
3.21.18 The National Archives has created a new ‘core reference’ data set, which we will
publish on legislation.gov.uk, which lists every piece of general legislation that
has been made and published. In the future, you will be able to use references
from this dataset for citation information.
3.21.19 In the very exceptional case of a footnote relating to a Statutory Rule made
before 1936 and not included in The Statutory Rules and Orders and Statutory
Instruments Revised to December 31, 1948, you should include a reference to
the appropriate annual edition. This is because annual editions before 1936, and
the earlier collected editions, did not have numerical tables or lists.
3.21.20 If an SI refers to an amended SI, any footnote should be written in one of the
following forms:
3.21.26 For instruments in force at the end of 1972 the Special Edition reference is also
required. Volumes of the Special Edition should be described by the words
following ‘Special Edition’ in the heading. The same practice applies to
amendments to European Legislation as applies to amended domestic Statutory
Instruments.
3.21.27 Please note that the legislative (‘L’) series of the OJ began only in 1968. From 1
July 2013 the electronic version of the OJEU is the official version (until then, the
print version is the official version). Here is an example of an OJEU reference:
Example
(a) OJ No. L 345, 19.12.2002, p. 1.
3.21.28 Sometimes a Statutory Instrument which refers to an EU instrument may have to
be made and printed before the EU instrument has appeared in the OJEU. In
such cases, the footnote should be in the form ‘(a) OJ No L ‘, sufficient space
being left to complete the reference. The responsible department must notify the
SI Registrar of the full reference as soon as it is known, so that the footnote can
be completed in the annual edition of Statutory Instruments.
3.21.29 To note, from 1 January 2015 the numbering of EU legal acts changed as follows:
(domain i.e. EU, Euratom, CFSP) YYYY/N. So for example, they will be as
follows:
1
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● cite all the amendments to the EU instrument, if all of them are relevant;
● cite only the most recent amendment where it is appropriate and not
misleading to do so;
Example
… Commission Regulation (EU) No. xxx/yyyy on the eradication of salmonella
(a)
…
(a) OJ No. L 123, 29.02.2009, p. 1; relevant amending instruments are …
3.22.2 The shoulder note at the head of a Schedule states the operative provision which
introduces the Schedule. Include all provisions that reference the Schedule. For
example, where Regulation 3 says ‘Part 1 of Schedule 1 has effect’ and
Regulation 4 says ‘Part 2 of Schedule 1 has effect’, the shoulder note should
include Regulation 3 and 4.
3.22.3 The shoulder note should appear on the right-hand side of the Schedule, whether
the Schedule is on a left-hand printed page or on a right-hand printed page.
3.23.3 The Explanatory Note should give a short, clear and comprehensive statement of
what the SI does. It must not be argumentative, must not seek to explain or justify
policy or offer a debateable construction of the law. It should help readers decide
whether they need to refer to the SI, and should make sense to anyone who is
not familiar with the relevant area of law or administration. It should generally be
suitable for use in professional and other journals.
● explain any other point relevant to the validity of the instrument, but not
covered in the preamble; and
3.23.5 Often the text of an SI cannot be understood unless it is read in conjunction with
other legislation. If this is the case the Explanatory Note should help the reader to
understand the SI’s effect without looking up other provisions. You should make
the point and substance of the amendment clear in the note to an amending SI.
3.23.6 If you are revoking and replacing an earlier SI, mention this in the Explanatory
Note to the new SI.
Note: In paragraph 4 of the special report from the Joint Committee on Statutory
Instruments, 1985 – 86 (HL216, HC31-xxxvii), the Committee criticised the
inadequacy of information in Explanatory Notes. In particular, the committee
expects that Explanatory Notes to SIs that revoke other SIs (wholly or in part)
3.23.7 You should check that any Command Paper referred to in an SI or its Explanatory
Note is available from www.gov.uk.
3.23.8 If it is out of print, and a reprint is not possible, state in the footnote or
Explanatory Note where readers can obtain photocopies of the out of date
document.
3.23.10 If this is difficult (for example where an SI is long and complex) indicate the
amount or order of magnitude of the increase (for example +15% or -12%).
Include this in either the Explanatory Note or in the Explanatory Memorandum.
You may not need to provide a full list of the increases. It might be more efficient
to say: “All fees increased by 4% (based on RPI for the 12 months to June)
except for fee x and fee y which went up by x % because ...”.
3.23.11 The Explanatory Note is where you should give the facts of the increase. The
Explanatory Memorandum is where you should explain the policy behind the
increase.
Example
This Order/Regulation brings into force on........ 20... all the provisions of the.......
Act 20... excepting section 3 (which relates to ...) and section 7 (which relates to
....).
or
3.23.14 Avoid complex details. Instead, summarise the provisions and refer to the
relevant regulation, article or other sub-division where the details may be found.
Avoid replicating text contained within the SI itself. Where you can, avoid
technical terms and do not use Latin words and phrases. If you have to use
complex terms and phrases, explain clearly what they mean so that they are
accessible to a non-specialist reader.
3.23.15 An Explanatory Note should generally use the same terms used in the SI, or in
the enabling Act. Subject to that, try and use the standard vocabulary used in the
tables of effect when you are referring to the effect of an SI on other legislation. It
is usual to say that:
3.23.16 You should avoid vague or indefinite expressions such as ‘substantially’, ‘with
certain additions’, ‘with certain modifications’ in Explanatory Notes, or at least
couple them with references to the provisions in which details may be found.
3.23.17 You should avoid introductory phrases such as ‘The purpose (or object) of this
Order is .......’ Instead use the following:
Example
This Order amends....
or
This Order re-enacts (or consolidates) the..... with only drafting (or minor and
drafting) amendments.
or
This Order re-enacts (or consolidates) the..... with amendments (or modifications).
In addition to drafting (or minor and drafting) amendments, it makes the
3.23.20 IAs are mandatory for measures that have a significant regulatory impact on
business and civil society organisations. For all other measures, responsibility for
determining the appropriate level of appraisal (including whether an IA should be
produced) is delegated to departments. Where departments have delegated
responsibility they are expected to consider the needs of Parliament as well as
other factors such as proportionality.
3.23.21 IAs are also required for all public sector initiatives that cost more than £5m.
These include additional controls on burdensome regulation, but a lighter touch
fast track for small or deregulatory interventions. For further information on IAs for
public bodies see the Green Book1.
3.23.22 The BRE guidance should be consulted at an early stage, as IAs may require
scrutiny from the Independent Regulatory Policy Committee before Cabinet
clearance is sought.
3.23.23 There is separate guidance for Tax Information and Impact Notes (TIINS2). TIINS
provide further information on tax policy changes – explaining the policy objective
together with details of the tax impact on the Exchequer, the economy,
individuals, business, civil society organisations, as well as any equality or other
specific area of impact.
3.23.24 Government operates a ‘One in, Three out’ rule3. The Regulatory Policy
Committee (RPC) reviews the evidence and analysis supporting all IAs for all
significant regulatory proposals and provides an opinion in advance of
1
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/the-green-book-appraisal-and-evaluation-in-central-governent
2
http://www.gov.uk/government/collections/tax-information-and-impact-notes-tiins
3
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/government-going-further-to-cut-red-tape-by-10-billion
3.23.26 The Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee expects the version of the IA that
is laid to be the final version, and to be signed by a Minister. This is required to
demonstrate that this is the official assessment of the costs that can, for example,
later be used as a baseline for evaluation.
3.23.27 The Minister’s name should be inserted by typing in their name using the same
format as you use in SIs. You do not need to insert an electronic signature or to
scan a signed copy of the IA for the purpose of publishing.
3.23.28 Where there is an impact assessment (IA) the Explanatory Note to the SI should
say at the end:
Example
A full impact assessment of the effect that this instrument will have on the costs
of business, the voluntary sector and the public sector is available from…
3.23.29 Where an impact assessment (IA) is not required, the Explanatory Note to the SI
should say at the end:
Example
A full impact assessment has not been produced for this instrument as no, or no
significant, impact on the private, voluntary or public sector is foreseen.
3.23.30 There are occasions where the use of these exact formulations will not be
accurate, in which case they should be adapted accordingly (for example, where
the instrument is one of a group of instruments covered by a single IA).
Example
NOTE AS TO EARLIER COMMENCEMENT [ORDERS / REGULATIONS]
(This note is not part of the [Order / Regulations])
The following provisions of the [XXXX Act 20xx] have been brought into force by
3.24.2 The word ‘(partially)’ is used where the provision has been brought into force in
part, or for a limited area, or for a limited purpose. Use the tabular arrangement in
all cases.
3.24.3 If you are making a series of commencement orders or regulations relating only
to a particular jurisdiction within the wider extent of the Act, the note as to earlier
Commencement Orders/Regulations need only contain details of earlier
commencements relating to that jurisdiction. Where, for example, in the case of
an Act extending to the whole of the UK, a series of Commencement Orders or
Regulations commence the Act only for England and Wales, the note might read
as follows:
Example
The following provisions of the Act have been brought into force in England and
Wales by………..
3.24.4 When you are preparing the note, find out if all the dates listed for earlier
commencement Orders/Regulations will have been reached by the date when
your Order is to be made. If they will not be reached, make this clear in the note.
3.24.5 Where the Order brings the last remaining provisions of the Act into force, state
this in the Explanatory Note.
In other cases the title should normally refer to the subject matter to which the SI
relates. If you are not sure what titles to use, email the SI Registrar. Send a copy
of your SI, your suggested title and any relevant background information.
Ambulatory references
3.25.5 The EN should make it clear if an ambulatory reference is being introduced. For
example, see The Syria (European Union Financial Sanctions) Regulations 2012
(SI 2012/1293).
3.25.6 If you need more information on ambulatory references please contact the
DExEU legal advisers. More information about ambulatory references is also
available in the GLS Statutory Instrument Drafting Guidance.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1972/68/section/2
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1972/68/schedule/2
3
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2012/129/note/made
Where a series of EU instruments is involved, you only need to cite those which
are necessary to an understanding of the SI.
3.25.10 This legal obligation can be met by using the electronic notification system. For
more information please see the Cabinet Office guidance on the Electronic
Notification of Transposition Measures and talk to the DExEU legal advisers.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1972/68/section/2
4.1.2 The following diagram provides a high-level overview of the process for
submitting instruments and any Associated Document(s) for registration, laying
(where applicable) and publishing.
● obtain the certified version of your SI for laying. This version contains a
‘certified true copy’ banner inserted by the system and is the version the
Journal Office in the House of Commons and the Printed Paper Office in
the House of Lords now expect to see laid (they notify us when legislation
has been laid and this triggers online publication);
4.2.3 Legislation.gov.uk Publishing is how The National Archives (working with its
Publishing Contractor) delivers the statutory responsibility for legislation
publishing.
4.2.5 If you need to reset your user password, use the online password reset form.
4.2.7 You can save personal details, and invoice and delivery addresses (where
applicable) within your profile. This means you do not have to enter this
information every time you use the system. Simply update your profile page.
Ensuring the certified copy of the SI is the version that is registered, laid and
published
4.2.8 The collection of documents you are sending for registration and publication is
called a ‘bundle’. For example, a UKSI bundle refers to the group of documents
related to a UK SI.
4.2.9 Legislation.gov.uk Publishing creates an audit trail for each bundle submitted for
registration and publication. The audit trail records each event in the process. It
captures the date and time the SI bundle is submitted for registration; the SI
number allocated at registration; when registration is completed; when notification
is received from Parliament to confirm the SI has been laid; and when documents
are subsequently published, as well as the person who performed these actions.
The audit trail also captures all events in the publishing process, including any
changes made by the publisher.
4.2.10 The audit trail provides the assurance that the certified version of the legislation
to be published is the one that is registered, laid and printed (if required) and
published on legislation.gov.uk.
● SI template
● Impact Assessment template (to be used for all IAs other than Post
Implementation Review IAs)
The SI template
4.3.3 The SI template helps the drafter to correctly format the legislation. It helps the
publisher to produce the various outputs needed to make the legislation
accessible. The correct use of the templates is important as it guarantees
accurate and timely publication. It also supports the provision of data for re-use
by third parties (such as other legal publishers).
4.3.5 Registered users of the legislation.gov.uk Publishing service can download the
template and guidance from:
● https://publishing.legislation.gov.uk/tools/uksi/drafting/si-
template/template-download
4.3.7 If you need to insert a form as an image, landscape images will require a
landscape section and there is guidance in the SI template manual on how to do
this. Alternatively, you can use the full width of an A4 portrait page margin to
reproduce images, making them as large as is possible. You should use images
in the TIFF file format for a good quality result.
4.3.8 Images larger than A4 size need to be published as fold-outs and separate image
files (TIFF) need to be supplied for publication. These images should also be
included as a reduced size image embedded in the SI Word file. If you have any
questions please contact the SI support desk: [email protected].
4.3.9 Please note that the imprinted copies for laying will only contain the placeholder
image and not the fold out version for print. Where the image is very small,
consider providing a separate print of the image to the scrutiny committees.
Printed copies will contain the full size image and will be published as a fold out.
4.3.11 Registered users can find information about training courses, and a copy of the
user manual at: https://publishing.legislation.gov.uk/tools/uksi/
4.3.12 The SI template user guide and FAQs aim to answer most of the technical
questions you might have when using the SI template. If you require additional
support, you can email the SI support desk between 8:30 am and 5.30 pm on
weekdays. When contacting the SI support desk, please forward the validation
email received from the legislation.gov.uk Publishing service and provide a
description of the issue you need help with. There is no need to email the
document to the SI support Desk. Email: [email protected].
● https://publishing.legislation.gov.uk/tools/uksi/drafting/si-template/non-
templated-sis
4.3.14 The timescales for typesetting depend on the number of pages in the instrument,
and the time needed for proofs and revisions. Typically you should allow four
working days for an instrument of less than 16 pages, five working days for 17 –
64 pages, and seven working days for 65 – 96 pages.
4.3.15 Once you have agreed the final proof, our Publishing Contractor will provide you
with a Word file that you can submit for registration using the legislation.gov.uk
Publishing service. This will enable the SI to be registered, laid (where applicable)
and published.
● https://publishing.legislation.gov.uk/tools/uksiem/drafting
4.3.17 The EM template is a Microsoft Word template that uses the .dot file extension.
You should save new EMs based on the EM template as Word documents, using
the .doc or .docx file extension. We are not able to support the open document
format at the moment. Users are advised not to change the format, structure or
styles of the EM template.
4.3.18 The EM template sets out the 13 sections that are required in an EM. It includes
the correct section headings and sub-headings and some of the associated
content (some of which is mandatory). You will also find notes on how to prepare
an EM, including guidance on the information that should appear in each section.
4.3.19 We recommend that users download a fresh version of the EM template each
time they create a new EM. This will help to ensure that your EM complies with
4.3.20 If you require further help with the EM template, please contact the SI Registrar.
● https://publishing.legislation.gov.uk/tools/ukia/drafting
4.3.22 The IA template was developed by our Publishing Contractor on behalf of the
Better Regulation Executive (BRE), who are part of the Department for Innovation
Business and Skills. BRE are responsible for the policy for Impact Assessments.
Note: The IA template is not validated through the legislation.gov.uk Publishing service.
● https://publishing.legislation.gov.uk/validation
4.4.3 The Legislation.gov.uk Publishing service allows you to upload your templated SI
document for validation. You will receive notification of your validation results by
email, with links where you can access the validation report. The validation report
details where there are issues requiring attention, and what type of issue it is.
4.4.5 The following diagram illustrates where (at a minimum) in the SI process we
recommend you validate your SI.
4.4.6 SIs must be validated once Ministerial signature details and italic date information
have been added. You must address any high impact validation errors before you
submit your SI for registration.
4.4.8 You cannot make any changes to the SI after registration that alter the content or
visual presentation of the instrument. This ensures that the document that is
registered is the same as the certified copy for laying and the copy published
online and in print. Validation errors need to be corrected before the SI is
submitted for registration and publishing.
4.4.10 This email from the Validation service contains a link to the validation report that
details any issues requiring attention. The report will state the type or error or
warning. You can then use this information, alongside the Validation Error
Message Guide, to help you to correct the issue(s). You can find the Validation
Error Message Guide as follows:
● https://publishing.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/validation/validation-reports
Note: An SI can pass validation but may still contain warnings which you should review
and correct where applicable.
4.4.11 If your SI contains validation errors and is under 25 pages, you can access an
interactive web report that explains the errors and provides help where the error
occurs. This will help you to identify and resolve errors within the content of the
SI.
4.4.12 You can also access a PDF report, which you can use to check any page-specific
or global errors, for example in document headers or footers. Information about
these types of errors is not available in the interactive version of the validation
report.
4.4.13 For longer SIs (those over 25 pages) you can access a PDF version of the
validation report.
4.4.14 Your validation report may contain some warning messages. Warnings highlight
areas you need to double check and verify before you submit the SI for
registration. It is best practice, and recommended, to address these but it is not
compulsory. Some warning messages stem from the nature of the SI – such as
the missing SI number warning for draft SIs.
4.4.15 You can obtain help from the SI support team to resolve validation errors and
warnings and with other aspects of the SI template. Email [email protected].
Please forward the validation email you receive from the legislation.gov.uk
Publishing service to SI support, and briefly describe the issue you need help
with. You do not need to email the document to the SI support team.
4.5.2 If you need advanced numbers for a sequence of SIs, include information for all
of the SIs in your advanced number request. Input all advanced numbers into the
SI document(s) and EM(s) before you upload the documents for registration.
4.5.3 If you are submitting SIs with a shared EM, you should also request numbers in
advance. It is best practice to ensure that SIs with a shared EM receive
sequential numbering wherever possible. Input all numbers into the SI document
and EM before you upload the documents for registration. In the shared EM,
present the SI Titles and their associated SI number in numerical order, with the
lowest number first. If the shared EM contains any draft SIs, list these below any
numbered SIs. Upload a copy of the shared EM with each SI submitted for
registration.
About SI registration
4.5.4 The Registration service is part of legislation.gov.uk Publishing. Once you have
validated your SI and corrected all validation errors (and it has been signed, if it is
a made SI), you will need to submit it for registration.
4.5.5 Once made (signed) you should immediately send the SI for registration, and
numbering as set out in the Statutory Instruments Act 19461.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/36/contents
4.5.7 Legislation.gov.uk Publishing guides you through each step of the submission
process.
Note: You can abandon a bundle at any point in the submission process, by clicking on
the Registration tab. You will then receive a message asking you to confirm that
you wish to continue.
4.5.12 You can also upload any Associated Documents, for example an EM and/or an
IA. These should be uploaded as Word (.doc) documents (with any approved
advanced number(s) inserted into your EM prior to uploading).
4.5.13 If you need to upload further associated documents, select the document type
from the ‘Add Another Document’ drop down menu. If the document type you
need to upload is not included in the drop down list, simply select ‘Other
Document’ and specify the type of document that you are uploading, making sure
that it accurately reflects the content of the document.
4.5.17 Most of the information required will be automatically extracted from your
templated SI document, if you have used the correct SI template styles. Where
the information cannot be automatically extracted, you will need to enter it
manually, making sure it reflects the content of your SI. You also need to check
the information automatically extracted from your document. For example you
may need to check that the system has identified any subsidiary or advanced
numbers. If the extracted information is not what you expected, you can change
the SI document and re-upload it.
4.5.19 If you are submitting a draft SI, then you will need to provide an estimated date
for when you intend to lay the draft.
4.5.21 The system will provide you with suggested/estimated web and print publication
dates. You can change these to a later date, but you must contact the SI
Registrar if you need an earlier date, to request the authorisation code. The web
publication date will either be the document’s laid date (or estimated laid date) or,
in all other cases, will be 48 hours after the date of submission.
4.5.22 Lead times for registration, publishing online and publishing in print are detailed in
Table H. Please note that these are the minimum times required. You should
allow more time, if possible.
4.5.23 If your SI (this doesn’t apply to any Associated Documents) contains a colour
section, map, image or diagram, that needs to be published in colour, then you
should specify your requirements by selecting the appropriate options at Step 4 of
the publishing process. Step 4 gives you the option to include instructions to our
Publishing Contractor to reflect any specialised print, or other, requirements.
4.5.24 If your SI contains a headnote stating that it is to be issued free of charge to all
known recipients, you will need to indicate this at Step 4.
Valid SI template 1 working day ie 1 working day 3 working days 4 working days.
file by the same from from
time on the next registration. registration.
working day as
the time
submitted.
Invalid SI 1 working day ie May take more 3 working days 4 working days
template file by the same than 1 working from when plus the time
time on the next day from Publishing taken to resolve
working day as registration if Contractor validation
the time Publishing receives a valid issues.
submitted. Contractor is file.
fixing errors or
high impact
errors need to
be fixed by
Department.
Local print Our aim is for 3 1 working day if 3 working days 6 working days.
(i.e. published on working days or valid SI from
legislation.gov.uk as soon as is template registration.
and in print) practical. document. If
invalid see
above.
Local non print Our aim is for 3 1 working day n/a. 4 working days.
(i.e. only working days or (because it is
published on as soon as is published in
legislation.gov.uk) practical. PDF only).
4.5.26 Finally in Step 5, you must check and certify the SI you have uploaded as a true
copy of the instrument as signed/approved by the Minister. You do this by
checking the tick box at Step 5. Your certification is the authority by which we
proceed to register and publish the Queen’s Printer version of the SI. The system
records the fact of the certification, and the name of the person who certified the
SI, as part of the bundle audit trail.
4.5.28 The Publishing Contractor can also intervene by changing the SI Word
documents to resolve low impact validation errors, if you request this during the
submission journey, and are prepared to pay for the corrections. The Publishing
Contractor is not authorised to correct high impact validation errors. Any
intervention by the Publishing Contractor relating to a high impact error needs to
be approved by the SI Registrar. Such intervention will only be authorised in
exceptional circumstances.
4.5.29 The SI Registrar will not approve any intervention, post registration, that alters the
content, including paragraph numbering, or the visual appearance, layout or
format of the SI. Once an SI has been registered, such changes need to be made
by correction slip or corrected reprint.
4.5.30 The Publishing Contractor can also intervene to improve the XML data created
during the publishing process. These changes do not change the content or the
visual appearance of the document that has been made, registered and
published.
Does the bundle type used to submit the SI correspond to the SI Banner?
Do italic made, laid and Coming in Force (CIF) dates recorded in the system
match those in the SI?
Note: if more than one signatory then the date made equals the latest signature
date.
Are date references in the italic made, laid and coming into force dates, dates
within the commencement and citation provision and signature dates shown as
ordinal numbers (i.e. 1st January not 1 January) and are these in normal text and
not superscript?
Please note: Where there is a valid reason for a date not having an ordinal
number, for example when it is a date being inserted into primary legislation or is
the proper title of an EU Directive, users should state this in their "Message to the
SI Registrar" on Step 5 of the submission process.
Has the full title been extracted / input and recorded on the system?
(e.g. a laid date has not been input for a draft SI)
Has the same SI title been used within same calendar year?
Are dates laid and coming into force (CIF) present if required?
Has the type of SI (e.g. Regulations, Order, Rules, Scheme, etc.) been used
consistently in the SI?
Particularly in the citation (This/These XXX may be cited as….) and the
Explanatory Note / Note as to Earlier Commencement Orders/Regulations (This
note is not part of the XXX).
Subject Heading Checks
Are enabling powers correctly cited and footnoted with a footnote for each Act/SI?
Is the enabling Act year and chapter or SI number at beginning of the footnote?
Footnote Checks
(i.e. Footnote should appear on the same page as the text reference to the
footnote.)
4.7.2 Where errors are not substantive, but ought to be corrected, there are a number
of procedures that may be followed, depending on the error. These are set out in
the following pages.
● The errors that can be rectified using a non-textual correction will not be
typographical or affect the textual content in any way. For example, a non-
textual correction may be used to correct spacing issues in a table; within
the text of a provision where two words have been run together; or to
rectify misaligned paragraphs.
● The correction slip is also circulated with new sales of the SI and to those
who are known to have already purchased it, drawing attention to the
error and the correction.
● Used to correct the type of error that could be corrected using a correction
slip (i.e. an error that does not obscure the sense of legislative intent but
ought to be corrected to avoid misleading readers), but where the needs
of the reader are best served by reprinting the SI, for example where there
are issues with layout or the legibility of the text (in a form, for example).
● To submit a corrected reprint SI, you simply need to use the ‘update an SI
already published’ button on the Registration service landing page on
legislation.gov.uk Publishing.
● The SI Registrar can withdraw the bundle from the system and you can
resubmit it. However, registration happens very quickly after submission
so this is only possible if you spot your mistake immediately.
4.7.9 If the SI document has been registered but not laid or published:
● The SI Registrar can withdraw the bundle and cancel the SI number. You
will need to resubmit the correct document as a new bundle using
legislation.gov.uk Publishing. It will be registered and given a new SI
number.
4.7.10 If the SI document has been registered and laid but not published:
● The SI Registrar can withdraw the bundle and cancel the SI number. You
will need to notify the Journal Office and the Printed Paper Office at the
House of Lords to withdraw physical copies, and you will need to resubmit
the correct documents as a new bundle using legislation.gov.uk
Publishing. It will be registered and given a new SI number.
4.7.11 If the SI document has been registered, laid and published online:
4.7.12 If the SI document has been registered, laid, published online and printed:
What to do if you have submitted an SI document that the Minister signed but
it contains a mistake
4.7.13 If the SI document has not been registered:
● It needs to be laid and published as a made SI, as it is, and you will need
to correct mistake(s) after publishing. The options available to you are set
out previously and will depend on the nature of the mistake(s).
● You will need to correct the mistake(s) according to the options set out
previously.
4.8 Laying
4.8.1 The first step in Parliamentary control is laying the SI or draft SI, and any
Associated Documents, before Parliament. the Statutory Instruments Act 1946,
section 41, contains general provisions about SIs that have to be laid.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/9-10/36/section/4
4.8.3 Some SIs, for example Special Procedure Orders, Public Bodies Orders and
Legislative Reform Orders, have different laying requirements.
4.8.4 If you are laying an affirmative instrument you will also need to write to the
Principal Clerk of the Table Office to ask that a motion for the instrument’s
approval is added to the Order Paper. This letter should accompany the laying
copies of the instrument and should be delivered to the Journal Office.
4.8.6 A reference to laying ‘before Parliament’ means laying the document before each
House of Parliament, unless otherwise stated. Before laying your SI document
you should check whether it needs to be laid before Parliament (i.e. both the
House of Commons and the House of Lords) or only before the House of
Commons.
4.8.7 SIs and documents should be laid ‘during the existence of a Parliament’. A
Parliament continues to exist during an adjournment or a recess, but does not
exist between the dissolution of a Parliament and the meeting of its successor
Parliament.
4.8.8 A document is considered to be formally laid before the House when a copy of it
is accepted by the Journal Office. Copies of the document(s) should also be
made available in the Vote Office shortly after laying so that copies can be made
available to Members.
4.8.9 It is generally helpful to lay as early in the day as possible, to allow Parliamentary
officials to complete the necessary post-laying processes well before the House
rises.
1
http://www.parliament.uk/documents/upload/laying-papers.pdf
2
http://www.parliament.uk/about/how/role/customs/
3
http://www.parliament.uk/briefing-papers/SN05593/sessional-orders
4.8.11 If you have any questions on laying before the House of Lords, contact the House
of Lords Printed Paper Office on 020 7219 1246. If your Department needs to lay
SIs outside standard hours, you must make special arrangements with the
Printed Paper Office or, in recess, with the duty clerk.
Days when papers may be laid: Time when papers may be laid:
Wednesdays and Thursdays, and sitting 9:30 am until the rise of the House
Fridays
Note: Neither House Office can accept draft SIs (including Public Bodies Orders and
Legislative Reform Orders), Special Procedure Orders, or made SIs that require
approval before coming into force, on non-sitting days.
4.8.13 If at all possible, lay papers before 4: 00pm. If papers need to be laid after 4:00
pm, let the Journal Office know (020 7219 3320) as soon as you can. The Journal
Office will not accept papers after the rise of the House in any circumstance – so
4.8.17 You must lay the imprinted pdf produced by the legislation.gov.uk Publishing,
which includes the wording: ‘certified copy from legislation.gov.uk Publishing’.
Laying procedure
4.8.18 The laying procedure for documents is set out in the Journal Office Guide to
Laying Papers.
Notice of laying
4.8.19 Members are notified daily, in the House of Lords Business and in the Votes and
Proceedings of the House of Commons, about the laying of an SI or draft SI, and
the form of Parliamentary Control required.
4.9.5 Also send copies to the Chairs of the Joint Committee on Statutory Instruments
(JCSI and SCSI) and Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee (SLSC). The
only exception is if there is a vacancy for the office of Speaker of either House of
Parliament, whether occurring by death, resignation, dissolution of Parliament or
otherwise. In this case, you must send notification immediately after the vacancy
is filled (See Laying of Documents before Parliament (Interpretation) Act 1948,
section 22).
4.9.6 If laying after commencement, there is no set rule about the laying date, other
than that the SI should be laid as soon as possible. Generally, Scrutiny
Committees may comment if there is a delay of more than a few days between
making and/or coming into force and laying.
4.9.7 In SIs laid after commencement, the laying date in the italic date information goes
below the coming into force date. Laying SIs on the date in which they come into
force is sometimes required, but only where there is extreme time pressure, for
example where there are sanctions relating to foot and mouth disease. In such
circumstances, the laid date and coming into force date (and the made date and
signature, if made on the same day) must contain the time that each of these
events occur.
1
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200809/cmhansrd/cm090325/debtext/90325-0003.htm#09032538000004
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/11-12/59/section/2
4.10.2 Where an SI is required to be laid, laying must be confirmed by the Laying Offices
before it can be published. The Journal Office and the Printed Paper Office use a
dashboard on legislation.gov.uk Publishing to record when an SI has been laid.
Confirmation of laying triggers the publishing process. The delivery of printed
copies to the Vote Office and the Printed Paper Office will be on the print date
specified when submitting the SI (which should be the date of laying).
4.11.2 You must lay the same versions of the documents that have been registered. To
ensure this, the legislation.gov.uk Publishing service generates and sends you
pdf files for the documents that have been registered and numbered (where
applicable). You can then print out copies as required, and complete the relevant
laying letters. Please make sure that you have the latest version of the laying pdf
if bundles have been returned to you to correct low or high impact errors.
4.11.4 Copies of all print published SIs and draft SIs published and issued by our
Publishing Contractor are supplied to the Vote Office for the use of Members of
both Houses of Parliament. They are delivered by our Publishing Contractor
direct to each House in the quantities shown in Table L on the print publication
date.
4.11.5 Where an SI or draft SI is laid but print copies are not yet available for Members
from the Vote Office (for example where the specified print publication date has
not been reached), it is the Department’s responsibility to supply Parliament with
the correct number of SIs shown in Table L. Use the version containing the
imprint: ‘certified copy from legislation.gov.uk Publishing’ for this purpose.
SIs laid
4.11.6 If the number of required copies is changed at the request of the Vote Office, our
Publishing Contractor will ensure that the correct, updated, amounts are
produced and dispatched.
Publishing on legislation.gov.uk
4.12.1 SIs and any Associated Documents are published on legislation.gov.uk (and in
print if required) on the publishing dates entered into the legislation.gov.uk
Publishing service.
4.13.2 If you need to withdraw an SI that has been laid before the House of Commons
you must notify by letter the Clerk in Charge at the Journal Office in the House of
Commons.
4.13.3 You should also contact the Table Office so that they can withdraw any motion on
the Order Paper that relates to the SI.
4.13.4 If the motion is on the day on which withdrawal is to take place, you must inform
the Government Chief Whips’ Office immediately and email the SI Registrar.
4.13.5 If you need to withdraw an SI that has been laid before the House of Lords you
must provide notification of this by letter addressed to the Clerk in the
Parliaments at the House of Lords. Two copies of the letter should be hand-
delivered to the duty staff in the Printed Paper Office who will receipt it in the
same way as for a paper being laid.
4.13.6 You should also contact the Lords Table Office so that they can withdraw any
motion on the Order Paper that relates to the SI.
4.13.7 If the motion is on the day on which the withdrawal is to take place, you must
inform the Government Whips’ Office in the Lords immediately and email the SI
Registrar.
1
https://www.tsoshop.co.uk/bookstore.asp?FO=38797
4.13.10 You can find more information about the IA template and BRE IA requirements on
the Tools and Guidance pages on legislation.gov.uk Publishing as follows:
● https://publishing.legislation.gov.uk/tools/ukia/drafting
4.13.11 The final IA is generally published at the same time as the SI, using the standard
SI submission and registration process. The Impact Assessment Manager tool
can be used by Parliamentary Clerks to publish an IA separately from an SI
bundle at the following stages:
4.14.2 The most common exemption from printing is for non-print local SIs. Often a local
SI will only apply to a very small designated area, or is temporary in nature, so
printing is not required. Some local SIs are printed though, particularly when a
wider local area is covered or where the subject is more general.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/1948/1/made
5.2 The Joint Committee on Statutory Instruments (JCSI) and the Select
Committee on Statutory Instruments (SCSI)
1
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/joint-select/statutory-instruments/role/
5.2.4 The JCSI can draw the special attention of both Houses to an instrument on
grounds specified in its Standing Orders; or on any other grounds which do not
impinge upon the merits of the instrument or the policy behind it (other
Parliamentary Committees are responsible for scrutinising the merits and
underlying policy of instruments).
5.2.5 If the JCSI intends to draw the special attention of both Houses to any SI,
Departments first have the opportunity to provide any oral or written explanation
that it wants to. This can add up to two weeks to the scrutiny process.
5.2.6 The JSCI considers, on average, 1,500 instruments per session and in a typical
session draws between 50 and 100 of these to the special attention of both the
House of Lords and the House of Commons, on a variety of grounds.
5.2.7 GLS Statutory Instrument Drafting Guidance section 4.6 sets out key drafting
points raised by the JCSI.
5.2.10 The SCSI is appointed to consider SIs made in exercise of powers granted by Act
of Parliament which are subject to the House of Commons scrutiny but not the
House of Lords. Instruments subject to the authority of both Houses are
considered by the JCSI.
1
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/commons-select/statutory-instruments-committee/role/
(a) copies of any SI or draft SI that fall within their respective Orders of
Reference, together with an accompanying Explanatory Memorandum
(EM). Where you have them, you should also supply copies of any IA and
any transposition note.
(b) two copies of all European documents cited in the instrument where the SI
gives effect to EU obligations; and
(c) a copy of any relevant map, plan, Schedule or other document not included
as part of the SI or draft SI, including any ‘external’ publications, and any
relevant local SI.
1
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/joint-select/statutory-instruments/contact-us/
(d) the enabling powers, though recited in the preamble, are difficult to follow
without further explanation;
5.2.17 You must let the Committee know who provided the EM and the date on which it
was provided.
5.2.18 Where there is more than one version of the EM make it clear to the Committee
which EM they are looking at. The initial EM laid with SI will always be the first
memorandum, so subsequent EMs will be the second, third etc.
5.2.20 The Department should not give the JCSI or SCSI Departmental files and other
official papers. When preparing evidence, bear in mind that it may be published
and ask the Committee to withhold from publication anything where disclosure
would be contrary to the public interest.
5.2.27 The JCSI also offer informal advance scrutiny of provisions in drafts of non-
affirmative SIs – see their guidance on the parliament.uk website3.
5.3.2 The full terms of reference for the SLSC are available from the Parliament
website5. Current membership is also available from the Parliament website6.
5.3.3 Briefly, the SLSC examines the policy merits of SIs and other instruments that are
subject to Parliamentary procedure. IT draws attention to any that it regards as
1
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/joint-select/statutory-instruments/contact-us/
2
http://www.parliament.uk/documents/joint-committees/statutory-instruments/SCSI%20Scrutiny%20affirm%20-
%20updated%2011%20August%202016.pdf
3
http://www.parliament.uk/documents/joint-committees/statutory-instruments/JCSI%20Scrutiny%20Non-Affirm%20-
%20updated%20at%2011%20August%202016.pdf
4
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/secondary-legislation-scrutiny-committee/role
5
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/secondary-legislation-scrutiny-
committee/role/tofref/
6
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/secondary-legislation-scrutiny-
committee/membership/
5.3.4 The Committee also scrutinises Public Bodies Orders1 to consider whether they
meet the tests set out in section 8 of the Public Bodies Act 20112. Its guidance on
Public Bodies Orders3 gives information about how the committee scrutinises
PBOs and what it is looking for in an effective Explanatory Document.
SLSC reports
5.3.6 The Committee generally meets every Tuesday whilst the House is sitting and its
reports5 are usually published the following Thursday.
5.3.7 All SIs laid during the recess are considered at the first meeting after that recess.
However, Departments should avoid laying significant legislation when
Parliament is not in session.
5.3.9 You can contact the SLSC at the House of Lords. The most up-to-date contact
details are available on the Parliament website6.
1
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/secondary-legislation-scrutiny-committee/public-
bodies-orders/
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2011/24/Section/8
3
http://www.parliament.uk/documents/lords-committees/Secondary-Legislation-Scrutiny-Committee/Departmental-Guidance-
Public-Bodies-Orders-Secondary-Legislation-Scrutiny-Committee.pdf
4
http://www.parliament.uk/documents/lords-committees/Secondary-Legislation-Scrutiny-Committee/Departmental-Guidance-
Statutory-Instruments-Secondary-Legislation-Scrutiny-Committee.pdf
5
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/secondary-legislation-scrutiny-
committee/publications
6
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/secondary-legislation-scrutiny-committee/contact-
us/
5.4.5 Hybrid Instruments3 are subject to a special procedure in the House of Lords
which gives those who are specially and directly affected by them the opportunity
to present their arguments against the SI to the House of Lords Hybrid
Instruments Committee and then, possibly, to a select Committee charged with
reporting on its merits and recommending whether or not the SI should be
approved by both Houses of Parliament.
5.4.6 The hybrid instrument procedure is unique to the House of Lords and the process
must be completed before the SI can be approved by both Houses.
1
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/hybrid-instruments-committee
2
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/hybrid-instruments-committee/membership/
3
http://www.parliament.uk/business/bills-and-legislation/secondary-legislation/hybrid-instruments/
4
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/hybrid-instruments-committee/contact-us/
5
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2006/51/contents
5.5.3 For more information on the House of Commons Regulatory Reform Committee
see the Parliament website2.
5.5.4 Briefly, the work of the Committees starts when a Minister lays a proposal before
both Houses. Depending on the type of LRO, the two Committees then have
between 30 and 60 sitting days to report on whether the proposal is in the
appropriate form (i.e. negative/affirmative/super-affirmative) and whether it meets
the tests set out in the Act. The Committees report on whether they believe the
proposal should proceed/should proceed as amended/should not proceed.
5.5.5 The Minister must consider representations from Parliament, and in particular, the
reports from the Committees. If the Minister decides to proceed, the proposal is
laid as a draft Order (either in its original form or with amendments). The
Committees then have a further opportunity to report on the proposal and once
that process is complete the Order proceeds as a normal SI.
5.5.6 You can find current membership of the Delegated Powers and Regulatory
Reform Committee on the Parliament website3.
5.5.7 You can find current membership of the House of Commons Regulatory Reform
Committee on the Parliament website4.
Contacting the Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee and the
House of Commons Regulatory Reform Committee
5.5.8 You can email the Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee at:
[email protected].
5.5.9 Contact details for Regulatory Reform Committee staff are available on the
Parliament website5.
1
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/delegated-powers-and-regulatory-reform-
committee
2
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/commons-select/regulatory-reform-committee/
3
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-select/delegated-powers-and-regulatory-reform-
committee/membership/
4
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/commons-select/regulatory-reform-committee/membership/
5
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/commons-select/regulatory-reform-committee/contact-us/
5.6.2 The Committee rarely meets. Members are nominated by the Speaker of the
House of Lords and the Speaker of the House of Commons. In practice it consists
of the Lord Chairman of Committees, the Chairman of Ways and Means, and six
senior Officers of Parliament.
1
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/1948/1/Regulation/11/made
2
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/1948/1/made
2
28 day orders 2.8.3–2.8.4
A
advanced numbers 4.5.1–4.5.3
use of 2.2.1–2.2.4
bundles
selection 4.5.9
byelaws 1.4.27
C
citation 3.12.4–3.12.5
classes of SIs
commencement
dates
publication 4.5.21
directions 1.4.27
dissolution of Parliament
E
'enabling' Acts 1.2.1
enabling powers
footnotes 3.21.9
preambles 3.11.11–3.11.23
errors
European Union
preambles 3.11.5–3.11.10
exceptional procedure
purpose of 2.9.2
replacement 2.9.8
templates 2.9.5
Explanatory Notes
drafting 3.23.13–3.23.18
EU obligations 3.25.7
footnotes in 3.21.21
placing 3.23.1
scope 3.23.2–3.23.8
extent 3.13.1–3.13.8
F
Fire and Rescue Services Act 2004 2.4.16
definitions 3.21.3
EU instruments 3.21.25–3.21.32
form of 3.21.7–3.21.8
preambles 3.11.16–3.11.17
purpose of 3.21.1
headnotes
changes to 3.6.4–3.6.9
Class v) negative instruments and vi) and vii) Other procedure 3.5.14–3.5.15
form 3.5.4–3.5.5
position 3.5.3
types of 3.5.1–3.5.2
5.4.9
I
images
templates 4.3.6–4.3.9
J
Joint Committee on Statutory Instruments 1.5.5, 1.7, 2.4.8, 5.2.1–5.2.10, 5.2.13–5.2.28
L
lapsed SIs 3.14.2–3.14.3
laying of documents
definition 4.8.5–4.8.9
exceptions 4.9.8
guidance on 4.8.2
overview 4.1.2
procedure 4.8.18
bundles 4.2.8–4.2.9
developments in 4.2.12
passwords 4.2.5
personalising 4.2.6–4.2.7
services 4.2.1
SI template 4.3.5
preambles 3.11.29
N
National Archives 1.1.1–1.1.3, 1.6.3, 1.7, 3.21.5, 3.21.18, 4.1.1, 4.2.3
classes 2.3.2
use of 2.3.1–2.3.3
numbers
formatting 3.7.6–3.7.8
SI number 3.7.1–3.7.3
O
Office of Parliamentary Counsel (OPC) 1.7
orders 1.4.2–1.4.7
parentheses
Parliament
passwords 4.2.5
plans
prayers 2.3.16–2.3.19
preambles
printing
reprints 4.7.5
publication of SIs
classes of SI 2.8.9
overview 4.1.2
templates 4.3.1–4.3.23
validation 4.4.1–4.4.15
Q
Queen's Printer of Acts of Parliament 1.1.2
R
registration 1.2.1
overview 4.1.2
regulations 1.4.2–1.4.7
reprints 4.7.5
amendments 3.14.1–3.14.6
banners 3.6.1–3.6.3
citation 3.12.4–3.12.5
extent 3.13.1–3.13.8
footnotes 3.21.1–3.21.32
headnotes 3.5.1–3.5.23
numbers 3.7.1–3.7.15
preambles 3.11.1–3.11.33
revocations 3.14.1–3.14.6
signatures 3.20.1–3.20.12
resolutions 1.4.28
revocations 3.14.1–3.14.6
rules 1.4.2–1.4.7
S
schedules to SIs 1.4.29, 3.22.1–3.22.3, 4.6.1
schemes 1.4.27
scrutiny committees
House of Lords Select Committee on Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform 1.5.5, 1.7, 5.4.1–
5.4.9
Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee (SLSC) 1.5.5, 1.7, 2.4.8, 2.9.3–2.9.4, 3.23.26, 5.2.29–
5.2.37
Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee (SLSC) 1.5.5, 1.7, 2.4.8, 2.9.3–2.9.4, 3.23.26, 5.2.29–
5.2.37
shared 4.5.14
SI Hub 1.7
signatures 3.20.1–3.20.12
sub-headings 3.8.15–3.8.18
subject headings
listing 3.8.6
main 3.8.2
new 3.8.4
position 3.8.1
style 3.8.6
sub-headings 3.8.15–3.8.18
subordinate legislation
commencement 1.3.5
EU legislation 1.3.10–1.3.11
T
table notes 3.21.6
templates
SI template 4.3.3–4.3.12
titles of SIs
generally 3.9.1–3.9.2
parenthesis 3.9.8
byelaws 1.4.27
directions 1.4.27
resolutions 1.4.28
schemes 1.4.27
warrants 1.4.27
U
uploading documents 4.5.10–4.5.15
validation
submission 4.4.7–4.4.8