Main

June 12, 2007

Defense Contractors Reap Windfall in 2005 Earmarks

From the Sunlight Foundation:

The nation's top defense contractors were also the biggest beneficiaries of congressional earmarks in 2005, an analysis by the Sunlight Foundation has found. Boeing, Northrop Grumman, Lockheed Martin and General Dynamics led the pack. Those four corporations collected a combined $1.09 billion in earmark awards. Overall, the top 20 corporate recipients of 2005 earmarks were all defense contractors.

The analysis was based on the database of earmarks from 2005 produced, and posted online, by the federal government's Office of Management and Budget. OMB collected the data from the agencies responsible for dispensing the money. The database does not include the names of members of Congress who asked for specific earmarks to be inserted onto the books, since members were not required to disclose this information.

The Sunlight Foundation standardized the data, linking subsidiaries to parents.

June 04, 2007

Review of H.R. 2316: Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007

H.R. 2316 was passed in the House on May 24th and is heading to the Senate. It would "provide more rigorous requirements with respect to disclosure and enforcement of lobbying laws and regulations, and for other purposes." Most encouragingly, it would mandate the creation of a new publicly available lobbying disclosure database.

The Open House Project has a review of the bill's highlights.

October 17, 2006

GCN Online forum with Bruce James and Mike Wash

October 18 Online Forum:

Government Printing Office chief executive officer and public printer Bruce James and chief technical officer Mike Wash will answer questions about how they moved the agency into the digital age. James, the GCN 2006 Civilian Executive of the Year, and Walsh will be available online on Oct. 18 from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. ET.

You can submit questions ahead of time at http://www.gcn.com/forum/qna_forum/42282-3.html. You will need to give your name and State OR your City and State. You can give your e-mail address if you want the host and/or guest to contact you directly. The Q&A will be archived.

October 12, 2006

New Congressional Research Service report

"The Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act: Background, Overview, and Implementation Issues" (pdf), October 6, 2006.

This report summarizes the legislative history and key provisions of P.L. 109-282 (S. 2590), compares it to H.R. 5060, and discusses challenges that are associated with implementing the new law’s proposed database and that may prove to be areas for future congressional oversight. This report will be updated as events warrant.

August 04, 2006

GPO Takes Major Step Toward Creating Digital Information Management System

GPO Press Release:

Today the U.S. Government Printing Office took a major step towards ensuring the American public has a one-stop site to access Government information that is authentic, version-controlled and permanently-available by announcing the selection of Harris Corporation to help develop a world-class Future Digital System.

July 10, 2006

Microsoft Relents to Pressure on OpenDocument Format

From the Wall Street Journal:

Microsoft will offer free software that will let Word, Excel and PowerPoint handle documents in the rival OpenDocument Format promoted by Sun Microsystems, IBM and others. Microsoft has been promoting a format called Open XML. Over the past year, the company's rivals have sparked a debate over the two technologies, arguing that documents, such as government archives, that need to be saved for many decades and beyond shouldn't be entrusted to a technology owned by a single company such as Microsoft.

April 10, 2006

Executive Branch Reform Bill

The "Executive Branch Reform Act of 2006," HR 5112, introduced by Government Reform Committee Chairman Tom Davis (R-VA) and Ranking Member Henry Waxman (D-CA), and unanimously supported by the Committee's members contains landmark reforms of the executive branch. Specifically, the Executive Branch Reform Act of 2006 (H.R. 5112) would:

• End Secret Meetings Between Lobbyists and Executive Branch Officials. The legislation stops the practice of secret meetings between lobbyists and Executive Branch officials by requiring all political appointees and senior officials in federal agencies and the White House to report the contacts they have with lobbyists and other private parties seeking to influence official government action.
• Close the Revolving Door Between Lobbyists and Government. For the first time, the legislation creates a federal ban to prevent lobbyists who enter government from handing out favors to their former clients. Under the bill, lobbyists and executives appointed to high government positions will be deemed to have a prohibited conflict of interest if they take official actions affecting their former clients or employers within two years of entering government.
• Close the Revolving Door Between Contractors and Government. For the first time, executives who worked for private contractors will be barred from awarding contracts to their former employers when they enter government. The bill also closes multiple loopholes in the law governing when government procurement officials can be hired by companies to whom they awarded contracts.
• Provide Protection to National Security Whistleblowers. The legislation would enact whistleblower protections for national security personnel. Currently, federal employees who work on national security issues have no effective recourse if they are the victims of retaliation after disclosing abuses. The bill would give these national security officials protections equivalent to those that other federal employees have.
• End the Use of “Pseudo-Classifications.” The bill advances the cause of open government by eliminating the use of unregulated “pseudo-classifications” such as “sensitive but unclassified” or “for official use only.” The legislation would require the development of regulations and standards governing the use of any information control designations by federal agencies.
• Ban Covert Propaganda. The bill addresses the growing problem of government-sponsored covert propaganda by requiring the federal government to disclose its role in funding or disseminating messages to the American public. There would be no more Armstrong Williamses if this bill becomes law.

http://www.democrats.reform.house.gov/story.asp?ID=1038