Affecting and amending other laws
Most policies deal with matters that have been
the subject of one or more previous laws. A new measure must be
carefully related to earlier laws to produce, as far as possible, a
consistent body of law that will achieve the policy without producing
unintended consequences.
Always ask: In what way does the new
policy relate to existing law? The answer will have a major effect on
how you draft, and you can't be sure of the answer until you have a
thorough understanding of the policy and the existing law.
You
might even find that the policy is already realized, in whole or in
part, by existing law. Or that the lawmaker did not have a full
understanding of what existing law is. Every once in a while, you find
that the law has already been changed to fit the policy, someone else
already achieved it, perhaps so recently that your lawmaker hadn't yet
heard.
Then again, you might find that the policy can be
achieved only by amending or otherwise affecting existing law. If so,
you have some important choices to make about which law to amend (or
otherwise affect) and precisely how to do so.
You must decide
how best to position the new provisions so that they will have the
effect, and the relationship with other laws, that suits the lawmaker's
needs. In deciding this, you must consider whether to draft a
freestanding law or an amendatory law or, perhaps, a law that contains
both freestanding and amendatory provisions.
