Sunlight Foundation

Sen. Begich Posts His Daily Schedule

During the 2008 campaign, Mark Begich promised that, if elected, he would post his daily schedule to his Senate web site. Well, what do you know, he's posting his daily schedule to his Senate web site and it just happens to be one of the best examples of a schedule posted by any member of Congress.

Begich's schedule, unlike all of the others, is archived on his site and searchable by month. So far, he has only posted in one month (April), but this should provide a great resource for constituents in the future to be able to go back and see who he is meeting with throughout his six-year term. Any lawmaker posting their schedule should take note of Begich's and provide a similar archive of daily meetings.

Congressional Transparency on a Map

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"We can never understand [a House member’s] Washington activity without also understating his perception of his various constituencies and the home style he uses to cultivate their support…" states Richard Fenno in Home Style: House Members in Their Districts. Fenno understands that the work of members of Congress is more than committee meetings and votes but is also people they meet with from the district. The work in the district builds trust constituents need to send them to Washington and to accept the decisions they make there. Fenno’s makes the point that the work of lawmakers done in the district is not an exhibition but the yang to Washington’s Ying.

This trust that lawmakers create in the district extends to who they meet with in Washington. The Punch Clock motto has always been “Members of Congress work for us, and we should know what they do every day.” Fenno made this point a different way, “Trust is, however, a fragile relationship. It is not an overnight or one-time thing. It is hard to win; and it must be constantly renewed and rewon. "

In this spirit, Sunlight has decided to help out by creating a trust-building tool. This tool, the Punch Clock Map, is a Google map mashup with corresponding RSS feeds that lets citizens see for themselves just how elected officials spend their time and how they serve their district’s needs.

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