
It’s crucial for the public to have data on transportation so they can be informed participants in government decision-making.
Continue readingIt’s crucial for the public to have data on transportation so they can be informed participants in government decision-making.
Continue readingA number of transit agencies face crises of public confidence, and greater transparency can help address this.
Continue readingOpen data can help you even if you know nothing about data, because it can power tools and resources that are usable by anyone.
Continue readingSunlight's in India for the Coalition Against Corruption Summit, but one of the most interesting ideas about corruption came to us as we tried to book train tickets.
Continue readingWhen we first reported about how we attempted to track down disappearmarks from the Federal Transit Administration, we recounted the difficulties in getting data in an electronic format. In response to our first Freedom of Information request, we were given a 121-page printout of a database, which in the end didn’t accurately include the information we sought: which SAFETEA-LU earmarks went unspent.
When our story ran, the FTA contacted us and said that one reason that FOIA requests are often returned in a printout and not a database form is to allow for the FOIA office to redact or ...
Each year, Congress allocates billions in earmarks that come in the form of annual appropriation committee requests or are attached to various bills that become law. The Sunlight Foundation thought it would be interesting to examine which earmarks, after all the Congressional debate and bluster has dispensed, actually get spent.
We thought a good example would be the $23 billion in transportation earmarks from SAFETEA-LU, The Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users. The act authorized spending on highways, transit systems, port facilities, bus routes and other projects from its passage in August 2005 to what ...