The House of Representatives will hold its second annual Legislative Data and Transparency Conference on Wednesday, May 22.
Continue readingCongress Should Require Presidential Libraries to Disclose Fundraising
Presidential libraries are the wild west of presidential fundraising. It takes place when presidents are the least accountable and involves tremendous amounts of secret money. Now's the time to fix this loophole.
Continue readingOpen Access to CRS Reports
Former Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan famously said that “everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts.”... View Article
Continue readingA Sunshine Week Call for Greater Transparency
As part of Sunshine week, I had the opportunity to testify at a House Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing to share a few of Sunlight's ideas about making the executive branch more transparent. Video and text of my opening statement are below. It almost goes without saying that we're very interested in the transparency bills the Oversight Committee will be marking up this Wednesday.
House Oversight Hearing on Open Government
Today at 10 a.m. I will be testifying about open government before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. The... View Article
Continue readingReally Read The Bill
Rep. Justin Amash has introduced a bill that would make it a lot easier for everyone to understand congressional legislation.... View Article
Continue readingHouse Republican Conference Has Most Transparent Rules in Congress
The House Republican conference has gone again where no party conference has gone before and published the rules under which it... View Article
Continue readingHouse Appropriators Embrace Webcasting
In a welcome turn toward transparency, House Appropriators are now set to webcast all public hearings starting this week. As... View Article
Continue readingWhy Are House Appropriators Not Webcasting Their Meetings?
The House Legislative Branch Appropriations Subcommittee just scheduled four budget hearings for next week, none of which will be webcast... View Article
Continue readingGPO is Closing Gap on Public Access to Law at JCP’s Direction, But Much Work Remains
The GPO's recent electronic publication of all legislation enacted by Congress from 1951-2009 is noteworthy for several reasons. It makes available nearly 40 years of lawmaking that wasn't previously available online from any official source, narrowing part of a much larger information gap. It meets one of three long-standing directives from Congress's Joint Committee on Printing regarding public access to important legislative information. And it has published the information in a way that provides a platform for third-party providers to cleverly make use of the information. While more work is still needed to make important legislative information available to the public, this online release is a useful step in the right direction. Narrowing the Gap In mid-January 2013, GPO published approximately 32,000 individual documents, along with descriptive metadata, including all bills enacted into law, joint concurrent resolutions that passed both chambers of Congress, and presidential proclamations from 1951-2009. The documents have traditionally been published in print in volumes known as the "Statutes at Large," which commonly contain all the materials issued during a calendar year. The Statutes at Large are literally an official source for federal laws and concurrent resolutions passed by Congress. The Statutes at Large are compilations of "slip laws," bills enacted by both chambers of Congress and signed by the President. By contrast, while many people look to the US Code to find the law, many sections of the Code in actuality are not the "official" law. A special office within the House of Representatives reorganizes the contents of the slip laws thematically into the 50 titles that make up the US Code, but unless that reorganized document (the US Code) is itself passed by Congress and signed into law by the President, it remains an incredibly helpful but ultimately unofficial source for US law. (Only half of the titles of the US Code have been enacted by Congress, and thus have become law themselves.) Moreover, if you want to see the intact text of the legislation as originally passed by Congress -- before it's broken up and scattered throughout the US Code -- the place to look is the Statutes at Large. In 2011, GPO published 58 volumes of the Statutes at Large, covering 1951-2009, but did not break the volumes down into their constituent documents. Up until that point, the public laws were available as individual documents on THOMAS from 1989 to present as HTML (and PDF in some instances), and from 1789 to 1875 as TIFF (unwieldy image) files from the Library of Congress. Even with this recent release, 76 years of federal law are still unavailable online in any format from any official source; and the files released for the years 1789 to 1875 by the Library of Congress are difficult to use.
Continue reading