Compliance Public Resources and References
Navigating the compliance landscape requires access to authoritative, primary-source materials rather than secondhand summaries. This page catalogs the federal agency portals, statutory databases, and public education repositories that compliance professionals, legal teams, and organizations use to verify regulatory requirements across major US frameworks. The scope spans federal law, administrative rulemaking, and recognized standards bodies. Accurate sourcing at the point of decision reduces misinterpretation risk and supports defensible documentation practices.
Primary texts and databases
The foundation of any compliance program rests on primary legal texts — enacted statutes, codified regulations, and agency-issued guidance documents. Three interlinked federal databases cover the full federal regulatory corpus:
- United States Code (U.S.C.) — Office of Law Revision Counsel: The official codification of all general and permanent federal laws. Statutes such as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA, Title 42 U.S.C. § 1320d et seq.) and the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (15 U.S.C. § 6801 et seq.) are accessible here in their current enacted form.
- Code of Federal Regulations (eCFR) — National Archives: The eCFR publishes the continuously updated administrative rules that implement statutes. Title 45 CFR Parts 160 and 164 govern HIPAA Privacy and Security Rules; Title 16 CFR Part 314 governs the FTC Safeguards Rule for financial institutions. The eCFR distinguishes between "current" codified text and "unofficial" consolidated views, a contrast critical for audit citation.
- Federal Register — National Archives: Proposed and final rulemakings, agency notices, and executive orders appear here before codification. Monitoring the Federal Register is the standard method for tracking regulatory changes as they move through notice-and-comment periods, which can span 30 to 180 days depending on the rule complexity.
For international and cross-border standards, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Computer Security Resource Center publishes the NIST Special Publication (SP) 800 series, including NIST SP 800-53 Rev. 5 (Security and Privacy Controls) and NIST SP 800-171 (Protecting Controlled Unclassified Information). These publications are not law in most contexts but are incorporated by reference into federal contracts and frequently adopted as benchmarks by state regulators. See the compliance standards overview for a structured breakdown of how primary texts relate to secondary frameworks.
Agency portals
Federal agencies publish their own portals that consolidate guidance, enforcement records, and compliance tools specific to their regulatory domains. Key portals by sector include:
- HHS Office for Civil Rights (OCR): hhs.gov/hipaa — HIPAA enforcement guidance, breach notification resources, and the public breach portal (the "Wall of Shame"), which lists healthcare data breaches affecting 500 or more individuals.
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC): ftc.gov/business-guidance — Business compliance resources for the FTC Act Section 5, the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA, 16 CFR Part 312), and the Safeguards Rule.
- Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA): osha.gov/laws-regs — The full text of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 alongside current standards by industry classification code (SIC).
- Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC): sec.gov/rules — Final rules, proposed rules, and no-action letters relevant to public company disclosure obligations, including the 2023 cybersecurity disclosure rule (17 CFR Parts 229, 232, 239, 240, and 249).
- Environmental Protection Agency (EPA): epa.gov/laws-regulations — Consolidated access to the Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, and RCRA (Resource Conservation and Recovery Act) compliance resources.
Agency portals differ from the eCFR in one critical respect: portals include informal guidance, FAQ documents, and enforcement policy statements that carry interpretive weight but do not have the binding force of codified regulation. This distinction — codified rule versus agency guidance — is a foundational decision boundary in compliance analysis.
Public education sources
Standards bodies and nonprofit research organizations maintain publicly accessible educational materials that explain framework application without requiring paid membership:
- NIST Cybersecurity Framework (CSF): Available at nist.gov/cyberframework, the CSF 2.0 (released February 2024) provides a voluntary framework organized into six core functions: Govern, Identify, Protect, Detect, Respond, and Recover.
- CISA (Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency): cisa.gov/resources-tools — Free tools including the Cyber Resilience Review and sector-specific guides for the 16 critical infrastructure sectors designated under Presidential Policy Directive 21.
- IRS Tax Exempt and Government Entities Division: irs.gov/charities-non-profits — Compliance guides for tax-exempt organizations, including Form 990 filing requirements under IRC § 6033.
The process framework for compliance page maps how educational frameworks translate into operational compliance programs with discrete implementation phases.
Federal resources
Beyond agency-specific portals, the federal government maintains cross-agency compliance infrastructure accessible to the public:
- SAM.gov — System for Award Management: The authoritative federal source for contractor registrations, exclusions, and Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) clause applicability, including FAR 52.204-21 (Basic Safeguarding of Covered Contractor Information Systems).
- USASpending.gov: Tracks federal contract and grant awards, enabling organizations to verify compliance obligations tied to specific funding streams under the Single Audit Act (31 U.S.C. § 7501 et seq.).
- Government Accountability Office (GAO) — Government Auditing Standards (Yellow Book): The 2018 revision (effective for audits of fiscal years ending on or after June 30, 2020) defines independence, reporting, and fieldwork standards for federal program audits, providing the benchmark against which Single Audit findings are evaluated.
- Data.gov: Aggregates open federal datasets, including EPA enforcement and compliance datasets, OSHA inspection records, and FDA recall databases, which compliance analysts use for benchmarking and risk assessment.
📜 12 regulatory citations referenced · ✅ Citations verified Feb 25, 2026 · View update log
References
- Code of Federal Regulations (eCFR) — National Archives
- Data.gov
- Federal Register — National Archives
- Government Accountability Office (GAO) — Government Auditing Standards (Yellow Book)
- National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Computer Security Resource Center
- SAM.gov — System for Award Management
- USASpending.gov
- United States Code (U.S.C.) — Office of Law Revision Counsel