The House Rules Committee took a big step for open government today: The committee is publishing the text of the House Rules and eventually other related documents in an easy-to-use XML format.
Continue readingHow Sunlight updated Churnalism — and created a new tool in the process
Yesterday we told you we updated Churnalism with fresher Wikipedia content. Today, we'll tell you about the technical challenges involved — and about a new tool spawned from that effort.
Continue readingThe U.S. Code Arrives In XML
Good news: for the first time, the U.S. Code is being published in a usable, open format, directly from the government! Alex Howard tells the story here. This has been a long time coming; House leadership deserves enormous credit for making it a reality.
Continue readingHouse Begins Publishing Committee Data
The House of Representatives’ document portal, docs.house.gov, launched in January 2012 with a surprisingly rich and relevant set of data:... View Article
Continue readingHouse Approves Sweeping Open Data Standards
At a Friday hearing, the House of Representatives significantly raised the bar on open data by passing a resolution requiring that a wide variety of crucial House legislative information be published online, in open formats, and at permanent predictable URLs. Daniel Schuman covered this on the Sunlight Foundation blog on Friday.
The new standards create a new central website, run by the Clerk of the House, that will host all House bills, resolutions, amendments, and conference reports. These documents will be online on January 1, 2012, and will be in XML.
Beyond that, the standards require committees to post their amendments, votes, hearing notices, which bills and resolutions they're considering, and lots of other documents. The Clerk is charged with building tools for committees to post this information to the new website; in the meantime, committees must post them to their own website, in PDF. Committees are also encouraged to post this information in XML, and "should expect XML formats to become mandatory in the future".
This is hugely valuable information that, to date, has been extremely difficult to discover in a reliable way. To get House legislation, one either needs to scrape THOMAS.gov (a Sisyphean ordeal), or to rely on the good work of people who've already done it. Committee information is terribly fragmented, and in some cases there is often no way to get it at all (such as committee votes and amendments), short of hiring people to go sit in committee rooms and record what goes on (a practice that forms the basis for a number of business models here in DC). This is the beginning of bringing much needed order to chaos, and sunlight to the legislative process.
These standards demonstrate excellent leadership on the part of the House, and offers a modern vision for how a legislative body should view its responsibilities to the public. The Senate should hear the sound of a gauntlet being thrown. The Committee's action is in keeping with Speaker Boehner's and Majority Leader Cantor's April call for the House Clerk to release legislative data in machine readable formats. It is very gratifying to see this call taken so seriously.
Continue readingHouse To Be More Open: OKs Online Publication Standard
This morning, the House of Representatives took a tremendous step into the 21st century when the Committee on House Administration... View Article
Continue readingHouse Revamps Floor Feed
Yesterday, the House of Representatives massively improved its feed of live updates from the House floor. The House Clerk has been hosting a live floor feed for a long time, but this update breaks out related bills and votes more cleanly, adds times down to the second for each update, and drastically cleans up the HTML of the page.
But most wonderfully, the cleaner HTML doesn't really matter, because they also turned on a live XML feed.
Continue readingO Conan! Where art thou? Legal treatise a no-show
Seven months ago, the order was given for the legal treatise, known as the Constitution Annotated (or CONAN), to be... View Article
Continue readingMoving Congress Online: Modernizing Information Delivery in the House
by Eric Mill, Sunlight Foundation Developer, and Jacob Hutt, Policy Intern What would Congress look like with bill markups conducted... View Article
Continue readingCruching Numbers on the President’s Economic Report
James Jacobs (of Free Government Info) writes that the Economic Report of the President, which provides an overview of the... View Article
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