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Agency information audits and indexes
From OpenCongress Wiki
Contents |
Introduction
Each agency is capable of publicly auditing all of their regulatory compliance data, to create a plan that reflects the agency's unique ability to lay out what is knowable about their work, and chart a course toward better disclosure of their core functions.
Blog Posts
- Sunlight's Priorities for the Next Administration (Nov. 5, 2012)
- Shaky Foundations of Federal IT (Aug. 23, 2012)
- Open Data Creates Accountability (July 6, 2012)
- Open Data Policy Guidelines (June, 29, 2012)
- New Federal Technology Strategy: Vision and Omission (May 24, 2012)
- The Missing Open Data Policy (March 22, 2012)
- Two Suggestions for the US National Action Plan (Aug. 31, 2011)
- New White House Memo on Regulatory Compliance (Jan. 18, 2011)
- What Open Government Plans Could Learn From Retail Management. (April 12, 2010)
- Agency Compliance with Data Requirement Mixed (April 8, 2010)
- Open Government: Idling in the driveway. (April 8, 2010)
- Agency Plans and Data. (April 7, 2010)
- Defining "High Value Data" is Hard. So Let's Not Do It. (March 19, 2011)
- Paperwork Reduction Act - both Irrelevant and Overbearing (Dec. 19, 2009)
Administration Guidance Documents
- Open Government Directive
- Building-Blocks of a 21st Century Digital Government
- Digital Government Strategy
- Executive Order 13563 -- Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
- Presidential Memoranda - Regulatory Compliance
- A good example of posting data sets at the Department of Transportation (DOT)
Sunlight Recommendations
- Guidelines for Open Data Policies
- Getting Past Groundhog Day: Auditing the Government's Open Data Policy - Daniel Schuman, 2/14/2013
Agency information audits and indexes - OpenCongress Wiki
