As stated in the note from the Sunlight Foundation′s Board Chair, as of September 2020 the Sunlight Foundation is no longer active. This site is maintained as a static archive only.

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Open Data Policy Evolution: San Francisco

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San_Francisco_Open_Data_Law_Announcement

Since the release of Sunlight’s Open Data Policy Guidelines last June, Chicago, Madison, Montgomery County, and Utah have all enacted open data laws, and the states of Hawaii and Ohio are both in the process of enacting open data legislation. However, the recent amendment of San Francisco’s two-and-a-half-year-old open data ordinance (ancient in the open data policy world) demonstrates a new frontier for these policies: Evolution.

San Francisco is unique in having been one of three cities to have an open data policy enacted before the federal Open Government Directive and in being the only city that has revamped their open data policy not once, but twice: first in 2010, expanding their bare bones 2009 executive order into a longer, more robust administrative code, and for a second time in late March 2013, amending the administrative code language.

Sunlight identified in our Open Data Policy Guidelines the importance of future review for potential changes to policy and law, and we were glad to see that San Francisco’s most recent amendment not only incorporated many more of Sunlight’s Guidelines, but also broke ground in the United States municipal open data policy world -- arguably taking the title from New York City. Of significance, San Francisco’s amended ordinance creates new oversight authority to review implementation of their open data policy requirements (Sunlight guideline #27) by creating the position of Chief Data Officer (CDO) and requiring the appointment of Department Data Coordinators (DCs) to assist in the implementation of San Francisco’s open data policy. The CDO is tasked with working with DCs to create an open data plan for each Department including: “a timeline for the publication of the Department’s open data and a summary of open data efforts” (#22) and “a summary description of all data sets under the control of each Department” (#18). The CDO is also responsible for creating an annual citywide implementation plan, while each department is delegated to conduct quarterly reviews of their progress, the combination of which sets up procedural expectations that help ensure data quality (#17). The amended language also calls on the CDO to produce analytics on the use of San Francisco’s data portal, DataSF, (as recommended by guideline #32 and incredibly important in determining usefulness and in cost benefit analysis), but unfortunately does spell out specific requirements of these analytics.

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Real estate investment trusts increasing lobbying profile

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As more businesses opt for a legal status known as "real estate investment trusts" (REITS) to qualify for tax breaks, they have an active champion in Washington, the trade group known as the National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts.

The group may not have the name recognition of some of the larger financial lobbies, such as the American Bankers Association or the Real Estate Roundtable, but it has a very active lobbying profile, primarily on tax bills. This week the group, known as NAREIT, reported spending more than $1 million during the first quarter of this year, almost doubling ...

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Jon Stewart Eviscerates Congress and President Obama for Gutting STOCK Act

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All hail Jon Stewart and those clever Daily Show writers for very adeptly (and hilariously -- though not in a very safe for work way) reporting last night how quickly and quietly Congress and President Obama combined forces to gut major transparency provisions of the STOCK Act passed last year. In an election year, they rushed to pass this reform legislation (and garner public kudos for doing so), but now with less of a spotlight on their actions, they rushed to undo the bill. Readers of our blog know that Sunlight's lobbyist, Lisa Rosenberg, has taken the charge to inform you about this as it happened nearly two weeks ago. As she put it, the Senate's action to approve the removal of STOCK Act transparency provisions was an epic failure on Thursday, May 11, especially since they did so invoking unanimous consent. Then the House followed suit and rushed the vote in mere seconds the next day, as most House members had already left Washington for recess. The House also completely lapsed on fulfilling their "read the bill" rule to wait three calendar days to deliberate on the legislation -- to, you know, actually give citizens time to know what their elected officials were voting on before it was a done deal. (This would have also given the press more time to inform Americans of these shenanigans.)

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2Day in #OpenGov 4/24/2013

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NEWS ROUNDUP:

  • In sad news: Common Cause President and former member of Congress Bob Edgar passed away yesterday at the age of 69. Edgar served in the House in the 1970's and 1980's and had led Common Cause since 2007. (Common Cause)
  • Most first quarter lobbying reports have come in and the results are not great for an industry that was hoping to take advantage of congressional movement on a number of issues to boost revenues that have been lagging. While spending on lobbying was down overall, gun groups, defense contractors, oil companies, and Facebook bucked the trend and boosted spending. (Roll Call, The HillPublic Integrity)
  • News Corp will start disclosing its corporate political contributions to shareholders as part of the settlement in a shareholder lawsuit alleging the company did not do enough to investigate its phone hacking scandal. (Roll Call)
  • With the addition of Max Baucus to the rolls of retiring Senators the group is collectively holding more than $10 million in campaign cash. Baucus, whose retirement announcement came somewhat out of the blue, has about half of that money. Tom Harkin of Iowa is also sitting on a serious $2.3 million. (Public Integrity)
  • Facebook's lobbying continued on an upward trend during the first quarter of 2013. The Internet giant spent more than $2.4 million between January and March, significantly more than during the same period last year. (The Hill)
  • Billionaire New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg cannon-balled into the national political spending pool last quarter, boosting his super PAC and Mayors Against Illegal Guns. By contrast, the company that made him a very rich man, Bloomberg LP, has been hesitant to spend large sums on lobbying, or file their disclosure reports on time, recently. (Roll Call)

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Citizen engagement matters for transparency initiatives. What makes it happen?

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As we begin to think about how to evaluate the impact of technology-driven transparency policies, we are keenly aware of the need to be honest and open about the challenges of implementation. This post is an attempt to practice the transparency we believe in by discussing one of the most formidable challenges facing organizations engaged in this work: Getting people to care. Our jumping off point here is a recent post from the engine room about 11 new initiatives that recently received an award from the Transparency International People Engagement Programme. As laid out by the engine room’s Susannah Vila, the challenges facing all of them sound remarkably similar.

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