Sunlight Foundation

Accounting for the current state of affairs will require transparency

In a post at The Big Picture, blogger Invictus writes about a recent report from New York State Attorney General and Democratic candidate for governor Andrew Cuomo's recent report on public pension padding. This might come as a surprise coming from a Democrat like Cuomo, whose party is often heavily backed by public employee unions, but public pensions are wildly underfunded and also tied up in huge corruption scandals (see: Rattner, Steve and Richardson, Bill).

As cities and states have to come to terms with their budgets during what appears to be a non-recovering, post-recession economy they will have to look at ways to fill this gap including pension and civil service reform.

Invictus' post mentions the SeeThroughNY site launched by The Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank in New York City, as a repository to research the spending done by the state:

This site is a remarkable repository of data detailing exactly where New Yorkers’ tax dollars are going, right down to the individual salaries of politicians, school administrators and teachers, law enforcement personnel and scores of other civil servants and public employees.  It also opens the kimono on contracts with vendors, as well as allowing for side-by-side comparisons, or “benchmarking,” of towns, villages, school districts, and counties.
As more and more attention focuses on the budget holes at the state and local level and where to raise revenues and cut costs sites that provide the public a clear accounting of the state's finances are going to become more and more important.

The same can said about databases that track the spending and might of the powerful. The cloak and dagger money spent in our elections, the lobbying of public officials, the contributions and the public trading of assets and contracts all need to be revealed and disclosed online.

Open Book New York

New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli's office launched Open Book New York, a new Web site that allows the public open access to details of the spending records of 113 agencies and 60,000 state contracts, Melissa Mansfield at Newsday reported yesterday. It's a USAspending.gov for the Empire State. DiNapoli is billing the site as a way for the public to follow how the state spends their tax dollars, and he said he hopes it will help to bring more accountability to New York state government. The site updates it contract information every day, while it updates spending figures once every quarter.  And they have plans to add contracts of all cities, towns and school districts as well. Good stuff.

The Albany Project blog links to an introductory YouTube video about the project. The blog compares Open Book to N.Y. Attorney General Andrew Cuomo's Project Sunlight, whose goal is to allow citizens to easily monitor government decision-making.  As Buffalo Pundit wrote about the Open Book, "The long crawl towards Albany transparency continues apace."

Sunlight's Catching

Imitation is the highest form of flattery.

Yesterday New York Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo announced "Project Sunlight," New York State's first-ever comprehensive Internet database that will track donors, lobbyists, special interests, state contracts, and elected officials, and the links between them.

Seems like the situation with information about New York politics is not unlike the federal scenario:

While many databases are currently public domain, they are difficult to navigate. Additionally, the current process of accessing public information can be burdensome and time consuming. Project Sunlight goes well beyond the existing systems in making public information accessible. By combining multiple databases into a single, easy-to-use Internet resource, New Yorkers will be able to quickly examine elected officials' voting records and campaign contributors, and find outwhich entities may have benefited from their actions

A long-time public interest advocate -- Blair Horner -- a 25 year veteran of NYPIRG and an authority on government ethics and reform will head the project.

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Imitation is the Highest Form of Flattery

Andrew Cuomo, who is running for Attorney General in NY, issues a press release today that sounds like it came from us:

ANDREW CUOMO PROPOSES "PROJECT SUNLIGHT" TO INCREASE GOVERNMENT TRANSPARENCY AND DISCLOSURE

....The Attorney General's Public Integrity Unit would for the first time integrate and improve existing databases so that campaign finance data, lobbying information and state contracts can be viewed and easily searched by concerned citizens. With Project Sunlight, a citizen frustrated by high drug costs would be able to use her computer at home,  type "prescription drugs" in a search box, and find out if her elected officials take money from drug companies, what drug bills they voted on, and even which companies ended up with lucrative state contracts.

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