The Government Accountability Office concluded that major projects funded through the E-Gov Fund “could potentially lead to benefits including cost... View Article
Continue readingE-Gov Funding Up for Consideration by Senate Approps on Wednesday
This Wednesday, the Senate Appropriations Committee will markup legislation that appropriates funding for the electronic government fund. The e-gov fund... View Article
Continue readingH. Approps OKs E-Gov Funding at $13m, Bill Advances to House
The Electronic Government Fund would likely receive around $13m for FY2012 if Congress agrees with today’s 27-21 vote by the... View Article
Continue readingE-Gov Markup Set for Thursday by Full H. Appropriations Committee
The House Appropriations Committee will markup the Financial Services Appropriation Bill, which sets funding levels for the Electronic Government Fund,... View Article
Continue readingProvide public access into your meetings with automated meeting minute creation
We welcome Daniel O’Leary as our guest blogger today. Daniel is the Vice President of Global Solutions for LincWare,... View Article
Continue readingSave the Data 2012: the budget fight over transparency begins
This Thursday will be a important test of the House of Representative’s commitment to fund key transparency programs like USASpending.gov,... View Article
Continue readingThe Consequences of the e-Gov Cuts
If you haven't already, please be sure to check out my colleague Daniel Schuman's post over at the main Sunlight Foundation blog, where he details the consequences of the cuts to the e-Gov fund. The short version: in a letter to Sen. Carper, federal CIO Vivek Kundra is reporting that the cuts will negatively affect upgrades to a broad variety of executive branch transparency- and good-government-related websites; lead to the cancellation of FedSpace and the Citizen Services Dashboard; and hinder efforts at improving data quality.
There's no doubt this is bad news -- that the administration is already making excuses for not following through on fixing data quality is particularly discouraging. But there's also no question that things could have been worse. This fight isn't over yet, but our community has already made a big difference.
So thanks for your help, and for sticking with us as we try to ensure that our government doesn't stagger backward from its early, tentative steps into the online era.
Continue readingSenator Carper Writes To Vivek Kundra About E-Gov Cut Implications
Calling the cuts to the e-gov fund potentially “penny-wise and pound-foolish,” Delaware Senator Tom Carper wrote yesterday to federal CIO... View Article
Continue readingCutting The e-Gov Fund Would Be A Disaster
Yesterday evening I posted a message to the Sunlight Labs mailing list that discussed the looming cuts to the e-government fund -- drastic cuts that could mean that sites like data.gov, USASpending.gov, apps.gov, paymentaccuracy.gov and the Federal IT Dashboard go offline altogether.
Before I go any further, let me catch the tl;dr crowd and send them here. These cuts would be a very, very bad thing. We need your help to stop them.
But it's probably worth talking about this in more depth. A few folks have responded to the news by asking: what's the big deal? Won't the data on data.gov still be available on agency sites? Won't the FAADS PLUS spending data on USASpending.gov still be obtainable through a FOIA? Won't we still be able to grab contracting data from fpds.gov?
Well, yes and no. Although agencies have been encouraged to rely heavily on data.gov for hosting, it does seem unlikely that defunding will result in data being outright deleted. Agencies will still collect information; departments will still track their spending; and I've been assured that the nuclear batteries that power Todd Park are good for at least another ten years.
Still, while nobody's going to be setting fire to filing cabinets, it would be a terrible mistake to simply shrug these cuts off. Yes, you might still be able to FOIA for a lot of this data. Is that what we want? It often takes months to have a FOIA request fulfilled. How are you going to update a project on an ongoing basis if it relies on government data and FOIA is your only tool? There's no system for distributing FAADS PLUS data other than USASpending.gov -- even that site's bulk downloads are only a few months old (before that, Sunlight was shipping hard drives back and forth to Maryland to get the data). There's no bulk download capability at all on fpds.gov. Moving back to FOIA would be hard enough for organizations like Sunlight. For many other citizens and watchdog groups, it would mean the data wouldn't be used at all.
And let's not forget the effect that these projects have had within government -- arguably, this has been even more important than the sites themselves. Are data.gov and usaspending.gov everything that we want them to be? If you follow Sunlight's blogging at all, you know that the answer is "not yet." There's still plenty of work to be done before these sites live up to their potential. But there's no question that it's been useful to tell agencies that they need to get their data in order and make it available to the public. There's no question that code written on the public dime ought to be shared within government and with the public. There's no question that citizens should be able to see how their tax dollars are being spent.
The projects made possible by the e-gov fund have helped to formalize these responsibilities. I'll be the first to admit that the work isn't yet complete: that's why public servants, organizations like Sunlight, and concerned citizens have been pushing for better data quality in USASpending and more data availability on data.gov. But the progress we've made is real. To have the clock turned back now would be tremendously disappointing -- and, given the money-saving and economic potential of some of these projects, an act of tremendous irresponsibility by Congress.
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