Government Transparency and Secrecy: An
Examination of Meaning and Its Use in the
Executive Branch
Wendy Ginsberg
Analyst in American National Government
Maeve P. Carey
Analyst in Government Organization and Management
L. Elaine Halchin
Specialist in American National Government
Natalie Keegan
Analyst in American Federalism and Emergency Management Policy
November 8, 2012
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R42817
CRS Report for Congress
Pr
epared for Members and Committees of Congress
Government Transparency: An Examination of Its Use in the Executive Branch
Summary
From the beginnings of the American federal government, Congress has required executive
branch agencies to release or otherwise make available government information and records.
Some scholars and statesmen, including James Madison, thought access to information—
commonly referred to in contemporary vernacular as “transparency”—was an essential
cornerstone of democratic governance. Today, the federal government attempts to balance access
to information with the need to protect certain information (including national security
information and trade secrets) in order to achieve transparency. As a consequence, access and
protection are often in tension with one another.
Congress has the authority to determine what information can and should be publicly available as
well as what should be protected. Congressional powers that may be used to address federal
transparency include the powers to legislate, hold hearings, issue subpoenas, and control the
federal budget. Statutes that grant access to government information include the Federal Register
Act, the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), and the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).
Among the laws enacted to protect information are the Privacy Act and FOIA. Agencies also use
security classifications, which are governed largely by executive orders, to protect certain records
from public release. Records may be protected for national security purposes, personal privacy
concerns, or other reasons.
The Obama Administration has undertaken its own transparency initiative, known as the Open
Government Initiative, to make executive branch agencies more transparent, publicly accessible,
and collaborative than they have historically been. Watchdog organizations have offered mixed
reviews of the initiative’s ability to promote and institute government transparency.
Transparency may be defined as the disclosure of government information and its use by the
public. Transparency, under this definition, requires a public that can access, understand, and use
the information it receives from the federal government. This report first assesses the meaning of
transparency and discusses its scholarly and practical definitions. It also provides an analysis of
the concept of transparency, with a focus on federal government transparency in the executive
branch.
This report subsequently examines the statutes, initiatives, requirements, and other actions that
make information more available to the public or protect it from public release. It also examines
transparency and secrecy from the standpoint of how the public accesses government
information, and whether the release of government data and information may make operation of
the federal government more or, counter-intuitively, less transparent. Finally, this report analyzes
whether existing transparency initiatives are effective in reaching their stated goals.
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Contents
Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 1
What Is Transparency?..................................................................................................................... 3
Definitions ................................................................................................................................. 3
Measures .................................................................................................................................... 4
Transparency and Secrecy ............................................................................................................... 5
Congressional and Other Powers and Authorities Related to Transparency .................................... 9
Records Access, Meeting Access, and Transparency .............................................................. 10
Federal Rulemaking and Transparency ................................................................................... 15
Investigations, Oversight, and Transparency ........................................................................... 23
Government Procurement and Transparency .......................................................................... 26
Obama Administration’s Open Government Initiative ............................................................ 29
The Administration and Smart Disclosure ........................................................................ 30
The Evolution of Transparency in the Federal Government and Its Potential Effects on
Access and Participation ............................................................................................................. 31
The Federal Register and Administrative Procedure Act Formalize Access ........................... 32
The Freedom of Information Act and Post Hoc Access to Information .................................. 33
The Federal Advisory Committee Act and Direct Participation .............................................. 33
The Open Government Directive and Attempts at Proactive Transparency ............................ 34
Policymaking, Outside Influence, and Public Participation .................................................... 35
Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 36
Acknowledgments ......................................................................................................................... 36
Key Policy Staff ............................................................................................................................. 36
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Government Transparency: An Examination of Its Use in the Executive Branch
Introduction
From the inception of the American federal government, Congress has required executive branch
agencies to make certain information and records publicly available to make the actions and
information of the government transparent to the public. Some scholars and statesmen, including
James Madison, described information access as an essential cornerstone of democratic
governance. In an August 4, 1822, letter to William T. Barry,1 Madison wrote,
A popular Government without popular information, or the means of acquiring it, is but a
Prologue to a Farce or a Tragedy; or perhaps both. Knowledge will forever govern
ignorance: And a people who mean to be their own Governors, must arm themselves with the
power which knowledge gives.2
At the same time, Congress has protected other information from public release. Access to
government actions and information is often in tension with information protection.3 Certain
government actions and records are protected from public release for, among other reasons,
national security and personal privacy reasons.4
President George Washington, in a March 1796 speech in the House of Representatives, for
example, refused to provide the House with a copy of the instructions to the Minister of the
United States in the Treaty with the King of Great Britain, sending the chamber a message that
read as follows:
[t]he nature of foreign negotiations requires caution; and their success might often depend
on secrecy; and even, when brought to a conclusion, a full disclosure of all the measures,
demands, or eventual concessions which may have been proposed or contemplated would be
extremely impolitic: for this might have a pernicious influence on future negotiations; or
produce immediate inconveniences, perhaps danger and mischief, in relation to other
Powers.5
1 Mr. Barry served at various periods as a U.S. Representative, a state senator, and the U.S. Postmaster General. For
more information on Mr. Barry, see The Miller Center on Public Affairs at the University of Virginia, American
President, An Online Reference Resource, “William T. Barry (1829-1835): U.S. Postmaster General,”
http://millercenter.org/academic/americanpresident/jackson/essays/cabinet/181.
2 James Madison, Letters and Other Writings of James Madison, Fourth President of the United States, vol. 3
(Philadelphia, PA: J.B. Lippincott and Co., 1867), p. 276.
3 Although transparency and information protection are often discussed as being in tension, they can also work in
partnership. Scholar Thomas S. Blanton, for example, argues that government openness can lead to better national
security. He cites examples like the capture of the Unibomber after the publication of his manifesto in various
newspapers to demonstrate how openness can lead to a more secure nation. See Thomas S. Blanton, “National Security
and Open Government in the United States: Beyond the Balancing Test,” in Transparency and Secrecy: A Reader
Linking Literature and Contemporary Debate, ed. Suzanne J. Piotrowski (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2010), p.
26.
4 There are a variety of definitions for the term “national security.” In this case, national security is defined as the
“national defense or foreign relations of the United States.” This definition is taken from President Barack H. Obama,
“Executive Order 13526, Classified National Security Information,” December 29, 2009, 75 Federal Register 707,
Section 6.1, January 5, 2010. “Personal privacy” refers to the protection of an individual’s personally identifiable
information, including his or her Social Security identification, age, or other personal information. This definition is
taken from U.S. Department of Justice, Department of Justice Guide to the Freedom of Information Act, Exemption 6,
p. 424, at http://www.justice.gov/oip/foia_guide09/exemption6.pdf.
5 U.S. Congress, House, Annals of Congress, 4th Cong., 1st sess., March 1796 (Washington: Gales and Seaton, 1849), p.
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Among the congressional powers available to enforce federal transparency and to protect certain
other materials from public release are the powers to legislate, hold hearings, issue subpoenas,
and control the federal budget. Congress has, from time to time, used its legislative powers to
create and amend laws that affect the public’s access to government operations and records.
Among these laws are the Federal Register Act, the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), the
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), the Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA), the
Government In the Sunshine Act, and the Privacy Act.
Although there are laws that affect access to government information, there is no single definition
for what constitutes transparency—nor is there an agreed upon way to measure it. Social
scientists and practitioners have offered a variety of definitions for transparency; among them are
“active disclosure”6 and “the publicizing of incumbent policy choices.”7 These two definitions
convey that transparency is linked to the release of information to an interested public.
Transparency, however, may be defined as not only the disclosure of government information,
but the access, comprehension, and use of it by the public. Scholars and private organizations
have attempted to measure transparency by surveying citizens and journalists on their perceptions
of government openness as well as by examining executive branch implementation of FOIA.
These measures have sometimes relied on public perceptions of transparency or journalists’
accounts of information access. Each definition and measurement of transparency has strengths
and weaknesses.
Attempts to make the executive branch more transparent require Congress, the public, and the
executive branch itself to ensure that appropriate information is released and that the information
can be used and analyzed. Users of such released information, therefore, must have the time and
the tools to interpret and understand the data in order to hold government accountable.
Congress plays an active role in defining the balance between transparency and secrecy in
American democratic society. While openness in government is considered essential to
democratic operations and deliberations, secrecy can protect Americans from security threats,
privacy invasion, and economic harm. As agencies increasingly use new technologies to collect,
maintain, and release federal records and data, Congress may have an interest in ensuring that the
public has the ability to find and use the data properly. Additionally, Congress may choose to
determine whether agencies are inappropriately withholding documents or improperly releasing
sensitive materials.
Accordingly, this report assesses scholarly and practical definitions of transparency and provides
an analysis of the concept of transparency, with a focus on transparency in the executive branch
of the federal government. It also examines how the release of large amounts of public data may
make the operations of government more or, counter-intuitively, less transparent. Releasing vast
amounts of raw data, for example, could make it difficult for the public to find the information
they seek or to understand how to analyze data they find.
(...continued)
760.
6 Richard W. Oliver, What is Transparency? (New York: The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc., 2004), p. 2.
7 Justin Fox, “Government Transparency and Policymaking,” paper prepared for the Midwest Political Science
Association Annual Convention, Chicago, IL, March 14, 2005, p. 2.
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This report examines statutes, initiatives, and other items that seek to make information more
available to the public as well as those that seek to protect certain information from release to the
public. This report examines transparency and secrecy from the standpoint of how the public
historically has and can currently access government information. It also explores the statutes and
policies in place to ensure the protection of certain information from public release. The report
then describes existing powers, authorities, and initiatives that promote transparency or protect
federal records from public release. Finally, this report analyzes whether existing transparency
initiatives are effective in reaching their stated goals.
What Is Transparency?
As already noted, there is no single definition of what constitutes transparency or method for
measuring it. For the purposes of this report, transparency comprises not only the disclosure of
government information, but also the access, comprehension, and use of this information by the
public. Transparency, as such, requires a public that can acquire, understand, and use the
information that it receives from the federal government. This concept of transparency, however,
is not the only possible designation of the term.
Definitions
Richard W. Oliver, in his book What is Transparency? wrote that transparency has come to mean
“active disclosure.”8 Other scholars have defined government transparency as “the publicizing of
incumbent policy choices,”9 and “the availability and increased flow to the public of timely,
comprehensive, relevant, high-quality and reliable information concerning government
activities.”10
In addition to scholarly definitions of transparency, private organizations that serve as
government watchdog groups have put forth their own meanings. Transparency International, a
global civil society organization that seeks to fight government corruption, defines transparency
as “a principle that allows those affected by administrative decisions, business transactions or
charitable work to know not only the basic facts and figures but also the mechanisms and
processes.”11 The organization goes on to state that “[i]t is the duty of civil servants, managers
and trustees to act visibly, predictably and understandably.”
The Sunlight Foundation, a nonprofit organization “committed to improving access to
government information by making it available online,”12 does not offer a particular definition of
transparency. Instead, the foundation delineates 10 principles of government openness that
8 Richard W. Oliver, What is Transparency? (New York: The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc., 2004), p. 2.
9 Justin Fox, “Government Transparency and Policymaking,” p. 2.
10 David Ferranti et al., How to Improve Governance: A New Framework for Analysis and Action (Washington, DC:
Brookings Institution, 2009), p. 7.
11 Transparency International: The Global Coalition Against Corruption, “faq,” at http://www.transparency.org/
news_room/faq/corruption_faq.
12 The Sunlight Foundation, “The Sunlight Foundation uses cutting-edge technology and ideas to make government
transparent and accountable,” at http://sunlightfoundation.com/about/.
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provide access to data.13 These principles are “completeness, primacy, timeliness, ease of physical
and electronic access, machine readability, non-discrimination, use of commonly owned
standards, licensing, permanence and usage costs.”14
Measures
A number of different approaches have been used to attempt to measure or quantify transparency
or its effects. Some scholars and government practitioners may argue that defining transparency is
difficult, but they understand it in practice. Transparency International, for example, surveys a
variety of people and institutions on their perceptions of transparency in selected nations to create
a “Corruption Perceptions Index.” The index supposes that perceptions of corruption serve as a
proxy for transparency in government. Though the two may be related, it is unclear whether
corruption or perceptions of corruption provide a reliable measure of a particular government’s
efforts to be transparent.
Global Integrity, an independent, non-profit organization that tracks “governance and corruption
trends around the world,”15 uses journalists’ reports and structured surveys to create its Global
Integrity report, which measures “governance and corruption.”16 Like the Corruption Perceptions
Index mentioned above, however, this measure might capture only perceptions of openness and
perceptions of corruption, without capturing a nation’s efforts to be transparent, or reach
acceptable levels of transparency.
Scholar Justin Fox, who studied levels of transparency within the United States, took the
approach of examining the integration of FOIA’s17 principles into the operations of executive
branch agencies.18 He examined whether FOIA was incorporated into each agency’s performance
plan, how much agencies spent on implementing FOIA, and whether the agency established
performance measures for implementation of FOIA. Mr. Fox’s research captured how agencies
respond to information requests, but did not address proactive transparency—a practice in which
agencies release records, datasets, or other information without it having to be requested from
someone outside the agency. Proactive, sometimes called pre-emptive, transparency would
eliminate the need that information be requested because the information would already be
publicly available. A person who submits a FOIA request, however, may need knowledge and
skills unique to that request. For example, the requester must know that a document exists in
order to request it. The requester must also know how to properly draft a FOIA request and to
13 The Sunlight Foundation, “Ten Principles for Opening Up Government Information,” at
http://sunlightfoundation.com/policy/documents/ten-open-data-principles/.
14 Ibid.
15 Global Integrity: Independent Information on Governance and Corruption, “Homepage,” at
http://www.globalintegrity.org/.
16 Global Integrity, “The Global Integrity Report: Methodology,” at http://report.globalintegrity.org/methodology.cfm/.
To create the report, Global Integrity uses qualitative journalistic reports on information access and merges the reports
with survey analysis that includes a set of questions related to openness and corruption. Among the questions asked is,
“Is the right of access to information effective?”
17 FOIA enables any person to request, without explanation or justification, access to existing, identifiable,
unpublished, executive branch agency records. FOIA also provides exemptions for certain records, prohibiting their
release. FOIA will be discussed in greater detail later in this report. Additional information about FOIA can also be
found in CRS Report R41933, Freedom of Information Act (FOIA): Background and Policy Options for the 112th
Congress, by Wendy Ginsberg.
18 Justin Fox, “Government Transparency and Policymaking.”
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where they should address the request. Requesters also must understand limitations on certain
information requests, including the possible denial of a request based on the government’s claims
that the release of a record or portion of a record could endanger national security, invade an
individual’s privacy, or cause harm to the economy. Mr. Fox’s measure of transparency assumes
FOIA requesters already know what records are available as well as how to use those records if
they are released. His study, therefore, may not measure U.S. transparency, and instead may
measure how effective the public is in using FOIA—a single tool of federal transparency.
Scholar Archun Fung examines “transparency systems,” or “government mandates that require
corporations or other organizations to provide the public with factual information about their
products and practices.”19 The effectiveness of these systems, Mr. Fung argues, can be measured,
in part, by how accessible and useful information is to the audience who receives it.
No matter how accurate or relevant new information is, it cannot provide a foundation for a
successful transparency system unless it is made available at a time, place, and in a format
that fits in with the way consumers, investors, employees, and home buyers make choices as
information users and the way corporations, government agencies, and other organizations
make decisions as information disclosers.20
For Mr. Fung, therefore, transparency can only be effective “when transparency systems provide
highly relevant and accessible information that users incorporate into the considerations that
determine their actions.”21 This is one of few considerations of transparency that require the
public to both access and use information.
In a January 2012 New York Times news analysis, journalist Elizabeth Rosenthal reinforced this
idea, arguing that disclosure of information was not the same as transparency.22
One fundamental problem is that disclosure requirements merely get information onto the
table, but themselves demand no further action. According to political theory, disclosure is
both a citizen’s right and a tool to ensure good government and consumer protection,
because it provides information that leads to informed decisions. Instead, disclosure has
often become an endpoint in the chain of responsibility, an act of compliance with the letter
of the law rather than the spirit of transparency.
Transparency and Secrecy
An accessible and transparent government is one goal of a functioning democracy, but access to
government information may not always be warranted or safe. Certain records may need to be
kept secret by the federal government to protect national security, personal privacy, or economic
19 Archun Fung et al., The Political Economy of Transparency: What makes disclosure policies effective?, Ash Institute
for Democratic Governance and Innovation at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, December 2004, p. 1, at
http://www.innovations.harvard.edu/cache/documents/67/6784.pdf.
20 Ibid., p. 4. Archon Fung discusses similar ideas in the following book: Archon Fung, Mary Graham, and David Weil,
Full Disclosure: The Perils and Promise of Transparency (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2007).
21 Ibid.
22 Elizabeth Rosenthal, “I Disclose ... Nothing,” New York Times, January 21, 2012, at http://www.nytimes.com/2012/
01/22/sunday-review/hard-truths-about-disclosure.html?pagewanted=all.
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security. Oftentimes, transparency and secrecy—both of which are inherent values of the
American republic—are in tension with one another.
For example, James Madison, one of the Founding Fathers and a primary contributor to the
American Constitution, wrote in the Federalist Papers about the need for government that could
be controlled by the people.
If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men,
neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary. In framing a
government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this:
you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it
to control itself. A dependence on the people is, no doubt, the primary control on the
government; but experience has taught mankind the necessity of auxiliary options.23
Madison argued that government needed to be controlled, and the people were the most powerful
tool to do so. Control over the government would come in the form of an informed citizenry.
Like Mr. Madison, Thomas Jefferson noted the importance of a vigilant citizenry in a January 16,
1787, letter to Edward Carrington.24
We have the greatest opportunity the world has ever seen, as long as we remain honest—
which will be as long as we can keep the attention of our people alive. If they once become
inattentive to public affairs, you and I, and Congress and Assemblies, judges and governors
would all become wolves.25
Although access to executive branch information has been of interest to America’s leaders from
the Founding Fathers to the present day, certain records may require protection from public
release. The meetings in Philadelphia at which the Founding Fathers drafted the Constitution, for
example, were held in secret. In The Federalist Papers, John Jay wrote of times when secrecy can
convince participants in a negotiation to be more open and frank in their discussion.
It seldom happens in the negotiation of treaties of whatever nature, but that perfect secrecy
and immediate dispatch are sometimes requisite. There are cases where the most useful
intelligence may be obtained, if the persons possessing it can be relieved from apprehensions
of discovery.26
In 2007, then-U.S. Comptroller General David M. Walker, for example, called transparency a
“key to our nation’s governing processes.”27 On January 21, 2009—his first full day in office—
President Obama issued an executive order that said he would commit his Administration to “an
23 Publius (James Madison), “The Federalist Papers, The Federalist No. 51,” Independent Journal, February 6, 1788, at
http://www.constitution.org/fed/federa51.htm.
24 Mr. Carrington was a Quartermaster General who served under General George Washington. He was also the
foreman of the jury that acquitted Aaron Burr of treason. See U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service,
“Lieutenant Colonel Edward Carrington,” at http://www.nps.gov/york/historyculture/carringtonbio.htm.
25 Thomas Jefferson, The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, ed. Julian P. Boyd et al. (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University
Press, 1950), pp. 48-49.
26 Publius (John Jay), “The Federalist Papers, The Federalist No. 64,” Independent Journal, March 5, 1788; also at
http://www.constitution.org/fed/federa64.htm.
27 U.S. Government Accountability Office, Government Auditing Standards, GAO-07-731G, July 2007, p. 1, at
http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d07731g.pdf.
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unprecedented level of openness” and to the establishment of “a system of transparency, public
participation, and collaboration.”28 Private watchdog organizations have had mixed reviews of
this initiative.
The tension between access and secrecy was typified after the public release of diplomatic cables
to the Wikileaks.org website.29 Diplomats who fear the information they write in such cables may
be released to the public may be “more cautious” about the contents. Such caution could lead to
less candid transfers of information between government officials.30 Secretary of State Hillary R.
Clinton called the Wikileaks.org release “not just an attack on America’s foreign policy interests.
It is an attack on the international community—the alliances and partnerships, the conversations
and negotiations, that safeguard global security and advance economic prosperity.”31 The
Wikileaks.org release may have made foreign diplomacy more visible in this case. The release of
documents may or and may not affect how foreign officials communicate with American officials.
In the future, however, diplomatic negotiations may be pushed further from public access because
of the leak. Diplomats may also struggle to conduct more candid conversations with world
leaders who are concerned that their conversations may be released to the public.32 Then-
Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates, however, reportedly said that the leak would not greatly
affect American diplomacy. At a November 30, 2010, press conference, Mr. Gates is reported as
saying the following:
Now, I've heard the impact of these releases on our foreign policy described as a meltdown,
as a game-changer, and so on. I think those descriptions are fairly significantly overwrought.
The fact is, governments deal with the United States because it’s in their interest, not because
they like us, not because they trust us, and not because they believe we can keep secrets.
Many governments—some governments deal with us because they fear us, some because
they respect us, most because they need us. We are still essentially, as has been said before,
the indispensable nation.33
The federal government may claim, for example, that the release of certain information will
endanger national security, violate the privacy of an individual, or affect an ongoing criminal
investigation. Mr. Madison, in Federalist 10, had foreseen the need for certain records
protections, writing that “[d]emocracies have been found incompatible with personal security or
the rights of property; and have in general been as short in their lives as they have been violent in
28 Executive Office of the President, “Transparency and Open Government,” 74 Federal Register 4685, January 26,
2009. The memorandum was released on January 21, 2009, at http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/
Transparency_and_Open_Government/.
29 For example, see Michele Keleman, “Ex-Diplomats Fear Leak Will Lead To Cautious Cables,” National Public
Radio: Morning Edition, November 30, 2010, at http://www.npr.org/2010/11/30/131686336/ex-diplomats-fear-leak-
will-lead-to-cautious-cables; and “Future of U.S. Ambassador to Libya Unclear,” UPI.com, January 6, 2011, at
http://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2011/01/06/Future-of-US-ambassador-to-Libya-unclear/UPI-35871294325982/.
30 Ibid.
31 Hillary Rodham Clinton, Remarks to the Press on the Release of Confidential Documents, Department of State,
Washington, DC, November 29, 2010, at http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2010/11/152078.htm.
32 See, for example, Howard LaFranchi, “Wikileaks ‘attack’: How damaging to foreign relations?” November 29, 2010,
at http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Foreign-Policy/2010/1129/WikiLeaks-attack-How-damaging-to-US-foreign-
relations.
33 See, for example, Mark Memmott, “WikiLeaks’ Impact On Foreign Policy ‘Fairly Modest,’ Gates Says,” National
Public Radio, November 30, 2010, at http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2010/11/30/131700348/wikileaks-impact-
on-foreign-policy-fairly-modest-gates-says.
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their death.”34 The American republic, therefore, has to balance access to government information
with protection of personal and national security interests.
Max Weber, a sociologist who studied bureaucracy in the late 1800s and early 1900s, wrote
extensively on public administration—with some focus on the role of public employees’
expertise. According to Weber, keeping employees’ expertise within the bureaucracy (as opposed
to sharing expertise with outside government officials or the public) gives an agency greater
autonomy and control of its mission. Federal employees may withhold information to ensure that
their agency maintains control and can avoid outside, sometimes political, influence. Mr. Weber,
for example, wrote the following:
Bureaucratic administration always tends to exclude the public, to hide its knowledge and
action from criticism as well as it can.… In facing a parliament, the bureaucracy fights, out
of a sure power instinct, every one of that institution’s attempts to gain through its own
means … expert knowledge from the interested parties. Bureaucracy naturally prefers a
poorly informed, and hence powerless, parliament—at least insofar as this ignorance is
compatible with the bureaucracy’s own interests.… The absolute monarch too, is powerless
in the face of the superior knowledge of the bureaucratic expert—in a certain sense more so
than any other political head.35
Throughout American history, public access to information has ebbed and flowed. Sometimes that
access has been based on the legal interpretations of individual presidential administrations.36
Other times, historical context modified how the federal government maintained, protected, and
released records.37 For instance, one scholar argued that the importance of federal government
transparency grew after World War II because of unprecedented growth in the size of the
bureaucracy and the emergence of the Cold War, which created a “highly secretive national
security complex.”38
Today, technology affects how the public interacts with the federal government as well as what
information people expect from it. Increasing ubiquity of the Internet and the rise of e-
government have given the public 24-hour access to certain government information and changed
some public perceptions and expectations about government operations. Some scholars have
found that e-government has increased the public’s trust in government by increasing access to
and dissemination of records and information.39
34 Publius, (James Madison), “The Federalist No. 10,” November 22, 1787; also at http://www.constitution.org/fed/
federa10.htm.
35 Max Weber, Economy and Society, ed. Guenther Roth and Claus Wittich, vol. 2 (Berkeley, CA: University of
California Press, 1978), pp. 992-993.
36 For example, under President George W. Bush, the Freedom of Information Act was interpreted differently than how
it is interpreted by the Administration of President Barack Obama. For more information, see CRS Report R40766,
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA): Issues for the 111th Congress, by Wendy R. Ginsberg (out of print; available upon
request).
37 The Government Accountability Office, for example, argued after the 9/11 terrorist attacks that the intelligence
community needs to move from a culture of “need to know” to “need to share.” See U.S. Government Accountability
Office, 9/11 Commission Report: Reorganization, Transformation, and Information Sharing, GAO-04-1033T, August
3, 2004, p. 5, http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d041033t.pdf. See also CRS Report R41022, The National
Counterterrorism Center (NCTC)—Responsibilities and Potential Congressional Concerns, by Richard A. Best Jr.
38 Ann Florini, The Right to Know: Transparency for an Open World, ed. Ann Florini (New York: Columbia University
Press, 2007), p. 7.
39 See Christopher G. Reddick, “Citizen Interaction with e-Government: From the Streets to the Servers?” Government
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Congressional and Other Powers and Authorities
Related to Transparency
The Constitution imbues Congress with an array of formal powers—for example, lawmaking and
impeachment—to hold the President and the Administration accountable for their actions or
inactions.40 Congress also has the power of the purse, which gives it the power to supply or
withhold appropriations to initiatives that would affect access to government information.41
In addition to explicit constitutional powers, implicit congressional responsibilities and powers
may be found in the Constitution. Oversight, for example, is an implicit constitutional power and
obligation of Congress.42 According to historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr., “it was not considered
necessary to make an explicit grant of such [oversight] authority. The power to make laws
implied the power to see whether they were faithfully executed.”43 Congress, therefore, can hold
hearings at which representatives from executive branch agencies describe and defend their
information access practices.
Constitutional oversight and statutes are not the only mechanisms that have shaped executive
branch transparency. Executive branch orders and initiatives as well as case law also have
affected access to federal operations and records. Although not an exhaustive examination of the
universe of authorities that affect access to government information, this report reviews and
analyzes significant government actions—including statutes, executive branch memoranda and
initiatives, and procurement policies—that scholars and practitioners commonly cite as providing
a foundation for public access to executive branch operations and records.
The statutes and initiatives are presented in three broad categories, and are not presented in
chronological order. Each category builds on some of the ideas introduced in the one before it.
The first category introduces statutes that provide the public presumed access to certain executive
branch records and meetings. The second category includes authorities that provide the public
access to and participation in certain parts of the regulatory process. The third category includes
authorities or initiatives in which transparency may not be the primary focus, but a component or
byproduct of is effects.
Records, Meeting Access, and Transparency
• The Freedom of Information Act (1966)
(...continued)
Information Quarterly, vol. 22, no. 1 (2005), pp. 38-57; Eric W. Welch and Charles C. Hinnant, Internet Use,
Transparency, and Interactivity Effects on Trust in Government, Presented at the 36th Hawaii International Conference
on System Sciences, 2003; Eric W. Welch, Charles C. Hinnant, and M. Jae Moon, “Linking Citizen Satisfaction with
E-Government and Trust in Government,” Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, vol. 15, no. 3 (July
2005), pp. 371-391.
40 U.S. Const. Art. I, §7; U.S. Const. Art. I, §2, cl. 15; U.S. Const. Art I, §3, cl. 16.
41 U.S. Const. Art. I, §8 cl. 1.
42 For more information on congressional oversight see CRS Report R41079, Congressional Oversight: An Overview,
by Walter J. Oleszek.
43 Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. and Roger Burns, eds., Congress Investigates: A Documented History, 1792-1974, vol. 1
(New York: Chelsea House, 1975), p. xix.
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• The Federal Advisory Committee Act (1972)
• The Privacy Act (1974)
• The Government In Sunshine Act (1976)
Federal Rulemaking
• The Federal Register Act (1935)
• The Administrative Procedure Act (1946)
• The Regulatory Flexibility Act (1980)
• The Paperwork Reduction Acts (1980, 1986, and 1995)
• The National Environmental Policy Act (1969)
• Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (1995)
• The Negotiated Rulemaking Act (1990)
• The E-Government Act (2002)
• Executive Order 12866 (1993) and Executive Order 13563 (2011)
Investigations and Oversight
• The Inspector General Act (1978)
• The Chief Financial Officers Act (1990)
• The Government Performance and Results Act (1993)
• The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (2009)
Records Access, Meeting Access, and Transparency
The federal government maintains a multitude of records in a variety of formats. These records
range from maps used to stage Revolutionary War battles to electronic health care records for
military veterans. Members of the public can request access to certain records, while other
records may be protected from public release because their publication could cause financial
turmoil, violate an individual’s privacy, or lead to a breach of national security. In addition to
records access laws, Congress enacted the Federal Advisory Committee Act, which governs
openness and participation of advisory bodies to the federal government as well as the Privacy
Act to protect individual privacy. This section of the report examines these information protection
laws and initiatives.
The Freedom of Information Act (1966)
Enacted in 1966 after 11 years of investigation and legislative development in the House—and
nearly six years of such consideration in the Senate—the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)44
44 5 U.S.C. §552.
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replaced the public information section of the Administrative Procedure Act. FOIA was designed
to enable any person to request, without explanation or justification, access to existing,
identifiable, and unpublished executive branch agency records.
FOIA exempts nine categories of records from the statute’s rule of disclosure:
1. Information properly classified for national defense or foreign policy purposes as
secret under criteria established by an executive order;
2. Information relating solely to agency internal personnel rules and practices;
3. Data specifically excepted from disclosure by a statute which either requires that
matters be withheld in a non-discretionary manner or which establishes particular
criteria for withholding or refers to particular types of matters to be withheld;
4. Trade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained from a person
that is privileged or confidential;
5. Inter- or intra-agency memoranda or letters that would not be available by law
except to an agency in litigation;
6. Personnel, medical, or similar files the disclosure of which would constitute an
unwarranted invasion of personal privacy;
7. Certain kinds of investigatory records compiled for law enforcement purposes;
8. Certain information relating to the regulation of financial institutions; and
9. Geological and geophysical information and data.45
Some of these exemptions, such as the one concerning trade secrets and commercial or financial
information, have been litigated and undergone considerable judicial interpretation.46 Pursuant to
FOIA, disputes over the accessibility of requested records may be settled ultimately in court.47
FOIA is a widely used tool of inquiry and information gathering for various sectors of American
society. Individuals or organizations must make a formal, written FOIA request for specific
records from an agency. Agency information management professionals are then responsible for
efficiently and economically responding to FOIA requests. Agencies may negotiate with a
requester to narrow a request’s scope, or the agency may explain and justify why certain records
cannot be supplied.48
FOIA has been refined with direct amendments in 1974, 1976, 1986, 1996, 2007, and 2010. In
addition to statutory modifications, each presidential administration has applied FOIA differently.
As recent examples, the George W. Bush Administration supported “full and deliberate
consideration of the institutional, commercial, and personal privacy interests” that surround any
45 5 U.S.C. §552(b).
46 For sources concerning judicial interpretation of FOIA, see Harry A. Hammitt, Marc Rotenberg, John A. Verdi and
Mark S. Zaid, eds., Litigation Under the Federal Open Government Laws: 2008 (Washington: EPIC Publications and
The James Madison Project, 2008); James T. O’Reilly, Federal Information Disclosure, third edition (Eagan, MN:
West Group, first published in 2000, with supplements); U.S. Department of Justice, Freedom of Information Act
Guide, March 2007 ed. (Washington, DC: GPO, 2007).
47 5 U.S.C. §552(a)(4)(B).
48 5 U.S.C. §552(a)(6)(B)(2).
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requests,49 while the Administration of Barack Obama encourages agencies “to adopt a
presumption in favor of disclosure.”50
On December 8, 2009, President Obama released his Open Government Directive—a
memorandum describing how agencies were to implement the open government and transparency
values he discussed in a January 2009 memorandum.51 The directive restated the Administration’s
commitment to the “principle that openness is the Federal Government’s default position for
FOIA issues.”52 The directive also encouraged agencies to release data and information “online in
an open format that can be retrieved, downloaded, indexed, and searched by commonly used
applications.”53 The information, according to the directive, should be placed online even prior to
a FOIA request, to preempt the need for such requests.54 Finally, pursuant to the memorandum,
agencies are required to put their annual FOIA report on their agency’s Open Government website
in an open format. Agencies with a backlog of FOIA requests are also required to reduce the
number of outstanding requests by 10% per year. The directive does not state how the
Administration will address agencies that do not comply with its requirements.
Federal Advisory Committee Act55 (1972)
Prompted by the belief of many citizens and Members of Congress that existing executive branch
advisory bodies were duplicative, inefficient, and lacked adequate oversight, Congress enacted
the Federal Advisory Committee Act in 1972 (FACA; 5 U.S.C. Appendix—Federal Advisory
Committee Act; 86 Stat.770, as amended). FACA mandated certain structural and operational
requirements for many federal advisory committees, including formal reporting and oversight
procedures.
Pursuant to statute, the General Services Administration (GSA) maintains and administers
management guidelines for federal advisory committees. FACA requires that advice provided by
these committees be objective and accessible to the public. All FACA committee meetings are
presumptively open to the public, with certain specified exceptions.56 Adequate notice of
49 U.S. Department of Justice Memorandum from John Ashcroft, Attorney General, Freedom of Information Act,
October 12, 2001, at http://www.doi.gov/foia/foia.pdf.
50 Executive Office of the President, Memorandum from President Barack Obama, Freedom of Information Act,
January 21, 2009, at http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/FreedomofInformationAct/.
51 Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, Open Government Directive, Washington, DC,
December 8, 2009, at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/assets/memoranda_2010/m10-06.pdf. This section discusses
only the part of the directive related to FOIA. The directive will be discussed in greater detail later in this report.
52 Ibid., p. 1.
53 Ibid.
54 Publishing FOIA information online is one suggestion that was repeated by several members of the public who
participated in the Open Government Initiative’s online collaboration. On June 19, 2009, for example, a user
identifying himself as Adam Rappaport from the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, wrote a blog
comment suggesting that “agencies could pro-actively disclose information and records on their websites that would
help avoid a FOIA request from even occurring.” Office of Science and Technology Policy, “OSTP Blog,” at
http://blog.ostp.gov/2009/06/10/transparency-access-to-information/comment-page-2/#comments.
55 For more information on the Federal Advisory Committee Act, see CRS Report R40520, Federal Advisory
Committees: An Overview, by Wendy Ginsberg.
56 These exemptions include entities created within the Central Intelligence Agency or the Federal Reserve System, or
created by any local civic group whose primary function is that of rendering a public service with respect to a federal
program, or any state or local committee, council, board, commission, or similar group established to advise or make
recommendations to state or local officials or agencies. (5 U.S.C. Appendix §4.)
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meetings must be published in advance in the Federal Register. Subject to the exemptions set
forth in FOIA, all papers, records, and minutes of meetings must be made available for public
inspection. Advisory committee membership must be “fairly balanced in terms of the points of
view represented and the functions to be performed,” and committees should “not be
inappropriately influenced by the appointing authority or by any special interest.”57
Privacy Act (1974)
The Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. §552a), enacted in 1974, is the principal law governing the federal
government’s information privacy program and the collection, use, and dissemination of a
“record”58 about an “individual”59 maintained by federal agencies in a “system of records.”60
Records protected by the Privacy Act must be retrieved by either an individual’s name or
individual identifier. The Privacy Act also applies to systems of records created by government
contractors.61 The Privacy Act does not apply to private databases.
The Privacy Act prohibits the disclosure of any record maintained in a system of records without
the written consent of the record subject, unless the disclosure falls within one of 12 statutory
exceptions. The act allows most individuals to seek access to records about themselves, and
requires that personal information in agency files be accurate, complete, relevant, and timely.62
The subject of a record may challenge the accuracy of information.
The Privacy Act requires that when agencies establish or modify a system of records, they publish
a “system-of-records notice” in the Federal Register.63 Each agency that maintains a system of
records is required to “establish appropriate administrative, technical, and physical safeguards to
insure the security and confidentiality of records and to protect against any anticipated threats or
hazards to their security or integrity which could result in substantial harm, embarrassment,
inconvenience, or unfairness to any individual.”64
The Privacy Act provides legal remedies that permit an individual to seek enforcement of the
rights granted under the act. The individual may bring a civil suit against the agency whenever an
agency fails to comply with the act “in such a way as to have an adverse effect on an
individual.”65 The court may order the agency to amend the individual’s record, enjoin the agency
from withholding the individual’s records, and may award monetary damages of $1,000 or more
to the individual for intentional or willful violations. Courts may also assess attorneys fees and
57 5 U.S.C. Appendix §5(2).
58 The act defines a “record” as any item, collection, or grouping of information about an individual that is maintained
by an agency and contains his or her name or another personal identifier. (5 U.S.C. §552a(a)(4).)
59 “The term “individual” means a citizen of the United States or an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence.”
See 5 U.S.C. §552a(2).
60 The act defines “system of records” as a group of records under the control of any agency from which information is
retrieved by the name of the individual or by an individual identifier. (5 U.S.C. §552a(a)(5).)
61 5 U.S.C. §552(m). Federal contracting and procurement will be discussed in greater detail later in this report.
62 5 U.S.C. §552a(e)(5).
63 The Federal Register notice must identify, among other things, the type of data collected, the types of individuals
about whom information is collected, the intended “routine” uses of data, and procedures that individuals can use to
review and correct personal information. (5 U.S.C. §552e(4).)
64 5 U.S.C. §552a(e)(10).
65 5 U.S.C. §552a(g)(1)(D).
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costs.66 The act also contains criminal penalties; federal employees who fail to comply with the
act’s provisions may be subjected to criminal penalties.67
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is required to prescribe guidelines and regulations
for the use by agencies in implementing the act, and provide assistance to and oversight of the
implementation of the act.68
Government in the Sunshine Act (1976)
Enacted in 1976, the Government in the Sunshine Act (5 U.S.C. §552b) presumptively opens the
policymaking deliberations of collegially headed federal agencies—such as boards, commissions,
or councils—to public scrutiny. Pursuant to the statute, agencies are required to publish advance
notice of impending meetings and make those meetings publicly accessible.69 The act includes 10
conditions under which agency meetings would be exempted from the act.70 These exemptions
allow agencies to close meetings when an agency properly determines that such a portion or
portions of its meeting or the disclosure of such information is likely to
1. disclose matters that are specifically authorized by an executive order to be kept
secret in the interests of national defense or foreign policy and are properly
classified pursuant to such an executive order;
2. relate solely to the internal personnel rules and practices of an agency;
3. disclose matters specifically exempted from disclosure by statute (other than
FOIA), provided that such statute leaves no discretion on the issue, establishes
particular criteria for withholding, or refers to particular types of matters to be
withheld;
4. disclose trade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained from a
person;
5. involve accusing any person of a crime, or the formal censuring any person;
6. disclose information of a personal nature where disclosure would constitute a
clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy;
7. disclose investigatory records compiled for law enforcement purposes, or
information which, if written, would be contained in such records;
8. disclose information contained in or related to examination, operating, or
condition reports prepared by, on behalf of, or for the use of an agency
responsible for the regulation or supervision of financial institutions;
9. disclose information which, if prematurely disclosed, would in the case of an
agency which regulates currencies, securities, commodities, or financial
institutions, be likely to lead to significant financial speculation in currencies,
securities, or commodities, or significantly endanger the stability of any financial
66 5 U.S.C. §552a(g)(4)(A).
67 5 U.S.C. §552a(i)(1).
68 5 U.S.C. §552a(v); 40 Fed. Reg. 28976 (July 9, 1975).
69 5 U.S.C. §552b(e)(3).
70 5 U.S.C. §552b(c).
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institution; or in the case of any agency, be likely to significantly frustrate
implementation of a proposed agency action; or
10. specifically concern the agency’s issuance of a subpoena, or the agency’s
participation in a civil action or proceeding, an action in a foreign court or
international tribunal, or an arbitration, or the initiation, conduct, or disposition
by the agency of a particular case of formal agency adjudication.
Disputes over proper public notice of such meetings or the propriety of closing a deliberation may
be pursued in federal court.
Federal Rulemaking and Transparency71
Rulemaking is one of the ways in which the federal government implements public policy. When
Congress passes a statute to accomplish a legislative goal, the statute may contain some
delegation of authority to federal agencies that allows or requires them to issue regulations to
implement the law. Congress delegates rulemaking authority to agencies for a variety of reasons.
Rulemakers often have information or knowledge that adds to or complements that of Congress,
and delegation of rulemaking authority to agencies may intentionally or unintentionally remove
certain elements of legislation from congressional debate.72
Critics of the delegation of rulemaking authority have pointed to the fact that the individuals who
write rules cannot be held accountable to the public in the same way as Members of Congress,
who are electorally accountable. This concern has led to calls for greater transparency in the
rulemaking process, as well as greater participation among interested or affected parties. Many
developments in the rulemaking process, beginning with the passage of the Federal Register Act,
have addressed this desire to increase the transparency of and public participation in the
rulemaking process.
The Federal Register Act73 (1935)
The Federal Register Act74 was originally enacted in 1935 to establish accountability and
publication arrangements for presidential proclamations, executive orders, and federal agency
rules and regulations. Prior to the enactment of the Federal Register Act, the public was
sometimes unaware of or misunderstood existing federal regulations. In one instance, a lawsuit
against a regulation made it all the way to the Supreme Court before it was discovered that the
regulation in dispute did not exist.75
71 This section was written by Maeve P. Carey, Analyst in Government Organization and Management.
72 For more information on the federal rulemaking process, see CRS Report RL32240, The Federal Rulemaking
Process: An Overview, coordinated by Maeve P. Carey.
73 This section was excerpted from CRS Report RL30795, General Management Laws: A Compendium, by Clinton T.
Brass et al. This particular section of RL30795 was written by Harold C. Relyea, who has since retired from CRS.
Readers with questions about the Federal Register Act may contact Maeve P. Carey (mcarey@crs.loc.gov) or Wendy
Ginsberg (wginsberg@crs.loc.gov).
74 49 Stat. 500.
75 In one Supreme Court Case, Amazon Petroleum Corporation v. Ryan, Harold M. Stevens, assistant attorney general
in the antitrust division, argued against an executive order that never was in effect.
The specific provision that the Amazon Petroleum Company is charged with violating, and whose
(continued...)
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In many respects, the Federal Register Act of 1935 was a response to the increasing number of
regulations and related administrative actions of the New Deal era under President Franklin D.
Roosevelt. The expansion of the federal government during World War I resulted in the
presidential and agency issuance of a growing quantity of administrative requirements. Brief
experience with a gazette—The Official Bulletin—had been beneficial, but was of temporary,
wartime duration.76 Its disappearance led to one contemporary observer characterizing the
situation in 1920 as one of “confusion,”77 and another describing the deteriorating conditions in
1934 as “chaos.”78
The congressional response was to mandate the Federal Register, “the official daily publication
for rules, proposed rules, and notices of Federal agencies and organizations, as well as executive
orders and other presidential documents.”79 Produced in a magazine format, the Federal Register
is now published each business day by the Office of the Federal Register of the National Archives
and Records Administration (NARA).80
Two years after enacting the Federal Register Act,81 Congress amended it and inaugurated the
Code of Federal Regulations, a supplement to the Federal Register. This aggregation of the
(...continued)
constitutionality the company is now challenging (section 9(c) of Title I of the NIRA of June 16,
1933), was inadvertently omitted when it was sent to the printer. This means that the company is
charged with violating a provision that technically does not exist. More significantly, as the cases
moved through the lower courts, almost no one knew about the omission—not the plaintiffs
(Amazon Petroleum or Panama Refining), not the defendants (the Justice Department), and not the
courts, instead, all believe “it in full force and effect.”
See Lotte E. Feinberg, “Mr. Justice Brandeis and the Creation of the Federal Register,” in Transparency and Secrecy: A
Reader Linking Literature and Contemporary Debate, ed. Suzanne Piotrowski (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2010),
p. 78.
76 John Walters, “The Official Bulletin of the United States: America’s First Official Gazette,” Government
Publications Review, vol. 19, May-June 1992, pp. 243-256.
77 John A. Fairlie, “Administrative Legislation,” Michigan Law Review, vol. 18 (January 1920), p. 199.
78 Erwin N. Griswold, “Government in Ignorance of the Law—A Plea for Better Publication of Executive Legislation,”
Harvard Law Review, vol. 48 (December 1934), p. 199.
79 GPO Access, “Federal Register: About,” at http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/browse/collection.action?collectionCode=FR.
The Federal Register is available online at a website administered jointly by the Government Printing Office (GPO)
and the National Archives and Records Administration’s (NARA’s) Office of the Federal Register, at
http://www.federalregister.gov/.
80 For more information on the federal rulemaking process, see CRS Report RL32240, The Federal Rulemaking
Process: An Overview, coordinated by Maeve P. Carey. The Federal Register is printed in hard copy by GPO and is
available in electronic formats (online at http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/browse/collection.action?collectionCode=FR and
via CD-ROM). Individuals can also access and comment on regulations at Regulations.gov
(http://www.regulations.gov/#!home), which states that its mission is to improve “access to and participation in the
federal regulatory process.” On the site, individuals can
•
search for a regulation such as a proposed rule, final rule or Federal Register notice;
•
submit a comment on a regulation or on another comment;
•
submit an application, petition, or adjudication document;
•
sign up for e-mail alerts about a specific regulation;
•
quickly access regulations that are popular, newly posted, or closing soon-directly from the homepage; and
•
subscribe to RSS feeds by agency of newly posted Federal Register notices.
81 50 Stat. 304.
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instruments and authorities appearing in the gazette contains almost all operative agency
regulations and is updated annually.
Later, the general statutory authority underlying the Federal Register was relied upon for the
creation of a series of other publications—the United States Government Manual, which has been
available for public purchase since 1939; the Public Papers of the Presidents, which were first
published in 1960; and the Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents, which was first issued
in the summer of 1965.
In July 2010, NARA, in conjunction with the Government Printing Office (GPO), launched
Federal Register 2.0, an online, interactive presentation of the Federal Register.82 The website
divides the publication’s content into subject areas—including science and technology, money,
health, and public welfare. The most viewed Federal Register documents are available in a
“What’s Hot?” section of the site. The site also includes written blog posts and short videos from
federal officials and President Obama that discuss the Federal Register itself, the Federal Register
2.0 website, and particular regulations. Federal Register 2.0 is not an “official legal edition” of
the Federal Register, and instead uses graphic renditions of the official documents (published in
hard copy or available electronically at http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/browse/collection.action?
collectionCode=FR).83
Administrative Procedure Act84 (1946)
The Administrative Procedure Act (APA; 60 Stat. 237; 5 U.S.C. §551 et seq.), enacted in 1946, is
considered the seminal federal administrative legislation of the modern era. The major
contribution of the act was to establish—for the first time—minimum procedural requirements for
certain types of agency decision making processes. Its general purposes were to
1. require agencies to keep the public informed of agency organization, procedures,
and rules;
2. provide for public participation in the rulemaking process;
3. prescribe uniform standards for the conduct of formal rulemaking and
adjudicatory proceedings (i.e., proceedings required by statute to be made on the
record after opportunity for agency hearing); and
4. restate that the law provides for judicial review of agency action.
In general, the term agency refers to any authority of the government of the United States,
whether or not it is within, or subject to review by, another agency.85 Congress, the courts, and the
governments of territories, possessions, and the District of Columbia are excluded.86
82 The National Archives and Records Administration and the Government Printing Office, “The Federal Register: The
Daily Journal of the United States Government,” at http://www.federalregister.gov/.
83 According to NARA and GPO, “… FederalRegister.gov will remain an unofficial informational resource until the
Administrative Committee of the Federal Register (ACFR) issues a regulation granting it official legal status.” The
National Archives and Records Administration and the Government Printing Office, “The Federal Register: Legal
Status,” at http://www.federalregister.gov/policy/legal-status.
84 This section was excerpted from CRS Report RL30795, General Management Laws: A Compendium, by Clinton T.
Brass et al. This particular section of RL30795 was written by Morton Rosenberg, who has since retired from CRS, and
T.J. Halstead, Deputy Assistant Director/Specialist in American Law.
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The act imposes on agencies certain requirements for rulemaking and adjudication, with different
schemes of procedural requirements prescribed for each. Rulemaking is agency action that
formulates the future conduct of persons, through the development and issuance of an agency
statement designed to implement, interpret, or prescribe law or policy. It is essentially legislative
in nature because of its future general applicability and its concern for policy considerations.
Adjudication, on the other hand, is concerned with determination of past and present rights and
liabilities. The result of an adjudicative proceeding is the issuance of an order.87
Pursuant to rulemaking requirements within the APA, an agency must publish a notice of
proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register, afford interested persons an opportunity to
participate in the proceeding through the submission of written comments—or, at the discretion
of the agency, by oral presentation—and when consideration of the matter is completed,
incorporate in the rules adopted “a concise general statement of their basis and purpose.”88 A final
rule must be published in the Federal Register “not less than 30 days before its effective date.”89
Interested persons have a right to petition for the issuance, amendment, or repeal of a rule.90
Although the APA does not specify a minimum period for public comment, at least 30 days have
been traditionally allotted. More recently, Executive Order 1286691 suggested that covered
agencies should allow at least 60 days. Agencies are free to grant additional procedural rights, and
Congress has at times particularized requirements for certain agencies or programs.
The APA retains its preeminence as the general management law governing agency decision
making by means of rulemaking and adjudication. Essentially unamended by Congress since
1946, it has maintained its vitality in the face of vast and fundamental changes in the nature and
scope of federal government responsibilities.92 Administrative lawmaking was “democratized” in
a series of court decisions between 1965 and 1983 that expanded both the obligations of agencies
and the role of reviewing courts.
(...continued)
85 5 U.S.C. §551(1).
86 Ibid.
87 For more on rulemaking, see CRS Report R41546, A Brief Overview of Rulemaking and Judicial Review, by Todd
Garvey and Daniel T. Shedd.
88 5 U.S.C. §553(c). The APA contains some exceptions to the basic requirements for notice and comment. For
example, if an agency can establish “good cause,” it may choose to publish a final rule without first issuing notice or
taking comments.
89 5 U.S.C. §553(d).
90 5 U.S.C. §553(e).
91 Executive Order 12866, “Regulatory Planning and Review,” 58 Federal Register 5173b, October 4, 1993.
92 Although Congress has never undertaken a comprehensive revision of the APA, it has always recognized that it
could do so, and with increasing frequency, it has supplanted the APA’s requirements with more explicit directives for
particular agencies and programs mirroring the above-described judicial innovations. Often this legislation has been
aimed at formalizing the procedural protections ensuring effective and meaningful public participation in agency
policymaking. Thus, certain health, environmental, and consumer protection statutes, for example, contain detailed
“hybrid-rulemaking” requirements and procedural as well as substantive changes. See, e.g., 42 U.S.C. §300g-1(d)
(requiring public hearing prior to the promulgation of regulations pursuant to the Safe Drinking Water Act); 15 U.S.C.
§2605 (providing for public hearing and opportunity for cross-examination of witnesses prior to promulgation of
regulations under the Toxic Substances Control Act); and 15 U.S.C. §2058 (providing for a public hearing before
promulgation of rules under the Consumer Product Safety Act).
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The Federal Register Act and the APA, together, gave the public and Congress access to the
regulatory process. Such access, however, requires motivated publics that can understand and use
the information provided in the Federal Register.
The printed version of the Federal Register is organized by agency, and each regulation is
required to include a title, a unique identifying number, and a brief description of the regulation
and why it was proposed. The regulatory process includes a public comment period in which
interested individuals can submit a comment, complaint, or concern about the proposed rule prior
to its application. The process, therefore, includes an opportunity for public input, and agencies
must acknowledge why or why not those comments were incorporated into the proposal.
Members of the public who choose to participate in the regulatory process, however, must know
where to find the Federal Register, how to search the Federal Register, and how to enter a public
comment.
Other Rulemaking Legislation with Transparency Elements93
After enacting the Federal Register Act and the APA, Congress passed a series of laws adding
further requirements to the rulemaking process. Among those laws are: National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA); the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) of 1980; the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act (UMRA); the Negotiated Rulemaking Act of 1990; and the E-Government Act of
2002. Many of these new laws placed requirements on agencies to conduct and make public
various types of impact analyses, which compel agencies to consider a certain issue or set of
issues while considering a regulatory action. The analyses also increase transparency because the
agencies publish the findings from the impact analyses in the Federal Register.94
The first impact analysis requirement was a component of the National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) of 1969.95 NEPA requires agencies to conduct an environmental assessment, considering
whether a proposed rule would have a significant effect on the environment. If they determine
that the rule will have a significant impact on the environment, the agency is further required to
prepare an “environmental impact statement,” which is to detail the direct, indirect, and
cumulative effects of the proposed action. This information is published along with the rule in the
Federal Register.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) of 1980,96 like NEPA, requires agencies to give
consideration to the effect their rules may have—though the RFA’s requirement is for the agency
to consider the rule’s effect on “small entities.” These small entities include small businesses,
small government units, and some non-profit organizations. The RFA requires an agency
considering a rule to determine whether the proposed rule would have a “significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities.”97 If so, the agency is required to complete an
“initial regulatory flexibility analysis” at the proposed rule stage and a “final regulatory flexibility
analysis” at the final rule stage.98 These analyses require the agency to describe why the rule is
93 This section was written by Maeve P. Carey, Analyst in Government Organization and Management.
94 Online access to the Federal Register is available at http://www.federalregister.gov/.
95 42 U.S.C. §§4321-4347.
96 5 U.S.C. §§601-612. For an overview and discussion of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, see CRS Report RL34355,
The Regulatory Flexibility Act: Implementation Issues and Proposed Reforms, coordinated by Maeve P. Carey.
97 5 U.S.C. §602(a)(1).
98 5 U.S.C. §603(c).
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being considered, how many and which small entities the rule would affect, what the estimated
compliance costs with the regulation would be, and whether there are any alternatives to the rule
that the agency might consider that could accomplish the same objectives while placing less of a
burden on small entities. The regulatory flexibility analyses are published in the Federal Register
along with the proposed and final rules.
Like NEPA and the RFA, the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)99 requires agencies to
perform analyses related to the cost of compliance when new requirements will be established
without any federal funding to support their implementation. The law requires analyses of federal
mandates that will result in the expenditure of $100 million or more in any year by state, local, or
tribal governments, or the private sector. Agencies must demonstrate that
• they identified and considered a reasonable number of regulatory alternatives,
with a justification of why the agency chose the option it did;
• they developed a plan to notify small governments that would be affected by an
agency’s action; and
• they developed a process to provide to local government entities input during the
development of regulatory proposals.
If applicable, this information is published in the Federal Register.
Another legislative measure that called for increased public participation in the rulemaking
process was the Negotiated Rulemaking Act of 1990,100 which encourages agencies to form a
rulemaking committee before developing a proposed rule. The rulemaking committees consist of
interested and affected parties, with a goal to generate proposed rules that are easier to implement
and could lead to less subsequent litigation.
Additionally, the E-Government Act of 2002101 established an Office of Electronic Government.
The office was created to oversee the implementation of an e-government program, requiring
agencies to increase public access to agency regulatory activities through their websites. The act
also requires agencies to accept public comments on proposed rules electronically. The Bush
Administration launched Regulations.gov in 2003 in a related effort that shared many of the same
transparency objectives as the E-Government Act. Regulations.gov provides a centralized,
government-wide rulemaking portal for the public. The site allows users to search for rules and
comment electronically on proposed rules. Visitors to the site can view other comments that have
been submitted regarding rules they may be interested in, and they can also view other agency
documents.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563102
Some presidents have also recognized the need for transparency in rulemaking, and have issued
executive orders that make the process more accessible to the public. Executive Order 12866,
99 2 U.S.C. §§1532-1538. For more information on UMRA, see CRS Report R40957, Unfunded Mandates Reform Act:
History, Impact, and Issues, by Robert Jay Dilger and Richard S. Beth.
100 5 U.S.C. §§561-570a.
101 44 U.S.C. §§3601-3606.
102 This section was written by Maeve P. Carey, Analyst in Government Organization and Management.
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issued by President Bill Clinton in 1993, is the primary executive order that governs the
rulemaking process.103 President George W. Bush and President Obama have both followed the
procedures in that executive order. In the preamble, President Clinton stated generally that he
wanted “to make the [rulemaking] process more accessible and open to the public.” Specific
provisions in the executive order also call for openness and transparency of the process. For
example, Section 6(a)(3)(E) calls for each agency to identify publicly the changes made from the
draft rule to the final rule, and Section 6(b)(4)(C) requires the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs (OIRA)104 to keep a publicly accessible log that provides the public with
information about meetings, telephone conversations, and other communications between OIRA
personnel, the regulating agency, and the public.
On January 18, 2011, President Obama issued Executive Order 13563,105 which reaffirmed many
of the principles contained in Executive Order 12866—including the transparency principles. The
new executive order added that agencies should provide online access to the rulemaking docket
on Regulations.gov, “in an open format that can be easily searched and downloaded. For
proposed rules, such access shall include, to the extent feasible and permitted by law, an
opportunity for public comment on all pertinent parts of the rulemaking docket, including
relevant scientific and technical findings.”106
Concurrent with Executive Order 13563, President Obama issued a memorandum107 for the heads
of the executive departments and agencies that tied the regulatory process to his Open
Government Initiative.108
The Unified Agenda109
In compliance with Executive Order 12866110 and the Regulatory Flexibility Act,111 the federal
government publishes the Unified Agenda of Federal Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions
(Unified Agenda) twice each year (in the spring and fall). The Unified Agenda is published by the
Regulatory Information Service Center, which is part of the General Services Administration, on
behalf of OIRA. The Unified Agenda obtains information from each executive branch agency
about its upcoming regulatory actions, which are classified into one of five stages of activity:
103 Executive Order, “Regulatory Planning and Review,” 58 Federal Register 51735, September 30, 1993.
104 The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs and its duties will be discussed in greater detail later in this report.
105 Executive Order 13563, “Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review,” 76 Federal Register 3821, January 21,
2011.
106 Section 2(b).
107 “Regulatory Compliance: Memorandum for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies,” 76 Federal
Register 3825, January 21, 2011.
108 The initiative will be discussed later in this report and is analyzed in detail in CRS Report R41361, The Obama
Administration’s Open Government Initiative: Issues for Congress, by Wendy R. Ginsberg (out of print; available upon
request).
109 This section was written by Maeve P. Carey, Analyst in Government Organization and Management.
110 The transparency requirement in E.O. 12866 resulting in the publication of the Unified Agenda can be found in
Section 4, which requires executive branch agencies to “prepare an agenda of all regulations under development or
review.”
111 The transparency requirement in the Regulatory Flexibility Act resulting in the publication of the Unified Agenda
can be found in Section 602, which requires agencies to publish a regulatory agenda semiannually in the Federal
Register that would identify regulatory actions that are under development and may have a significant economic impact
upon a substantial number of small entities.
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• prerules;
• proposed rules;
• final rules;
• long-term actions; and
• completed actions.
With each item, the agency provides the title of the rule, an abstract of the anticipated action, and
a projected date for each action.112 The Unified Agenda provides a way for the public and
interested parties to stay aware of what regulatory actions are under consideration in the agencies
and what actions the agencies are likely to take in the future.
Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA)113
OIRA is one of several statutory offices within the Office of Management and Budget (OMB),
and can play a significant—if not determinative—role in the rulemaking process for most federal
agencies. OIRA was created by Section 3503 of the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) of 1980 (44
U.S.C. Chapter 35). The PRA designated the OIRA Administrator as the “principal advisor to the
OMB Director on Federal information policy.” With regard to paperwork, the act generally
prohibits agencies from conducting or sponsoring a collection of information from the public
until they have submitted their proposed information collection requests to OIRA and the office
had approved those requests. The number and nature of OIRA’s reviews of these PRA requests
can be viewed by the public on OIRA’s website.114
Executive Order 12291, issued by President Ronald Reagan in 1981, greatly increased OIRA’s
responsibilities to include review of the substance of all agencies’ proposed rules, not just their
information collection requests.115 Executive Order 12866, issued by President Clinton in 1993,
superseded the 1981 order, but reaffirmed the concept of OIRA regulatory review.116 Under
Executive Order 12866, OIRA annually reviews between 500 and 700 “significant”117 proposed
and final rules developed by Cabinet departments and independent agencies (but not independent
regulatory agencies) before they are published in the Federal Register.118 OIRA can clear the
112 About three-fourths of the significant proposed rules that were published in 2008 had been listed as “proposed rules”
in the Unified Agenda. For these findings and more information about the Unified Agenda, see the archived CRS
Report R40713, The Unified Agenda: Implications for Rulemaking Transparency and Participation, by Curtis W.
Copeland.
113 This section was written by Maeve P. Carey, Analyst in Government Organization and Management.
114 Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, at http://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain.
115 Executive Order 12291, “Federal Regulation,” 46 Federal Register 13193, February 19, 1981.
116 Executive Order 12866, “Regulatory Planning and Review,” 58 Federal Register 51735, October 4, 1993. For an
electronic copy of this executive order, see http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/inforeg/eo12866.pdf.
117 The executive order defines a “significant” regulatory action as one that “is likely to result in a rule that may (1)
have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more or adversely affect in a material way the economy, a
sector of the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public health or safety, or state, local, or tribal
governments or communities; (2) create a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere with an action taken or planned
by another agency; (3) materially alter the budgetary impact of entitlements, grants, user fees, or loan programs or the
rights and obligations of recipients thereof; or (4) raise novel legal or policy issues arising out of legal mandates, the
President’s priorities, or the principles set forth in the Executive order.”
118 The PRA’s requirements cover public information collections issued by virtually all agencies, including Cabinet
(continued...)
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rules with or without change, return them to the agencies for reconsideration, or encourage the
agencies to withdraw the rules.119 Data on OIRA’s current and past reviews of rules can be viewed
by the public on OIRA’s website.
Investigations, Oversight, and Transparency
Although inspectors general are not always thought of as enforcers of transparency, their work
makes a variety of information and records available to the public. The research and
investigations conducted by these civil servants can expose waste, fraud, abuse, or simply make
the operations of federal agencies more accessible. Additionally, the executive branch is using the
Internet to make federal spending information accessible to the public in more user-friendly
formats than it has previously been offered. This section describes investigatory and oversight
mechanisms that provide access to government operations and information.
Inspector General Act of 1978120
Statutory offices of inspectors general (OIGs) consolidate responsibility for auditing and
investigations within a federal department, agency, or other organization. Established by law as
permanent, independent, nonpartisan, and objective units, the OIGs are designed to combat waste,
fraud, and abuse (5 U.S.C. Appendix).121 The earliest establishments of these offices occurred in
the wake of major financial and management scandals, first in 1976 in the Department of Health,
Education and Welfare—now Health and Human Services (90 Stat. 2429)—and in 1978 in the
General Services Administration (GSA). This later episode paved the way for OIGs in GSA along
with 11 other departments and agencies (92 Stat. 1101). Such offices now exist in nearly 70
federal establishments and entities, including all Cabinet departments and the largest federal
agencies, as well as many boards, commissions, government corporations, and foundations.
The overwhelming majority of IGs are governed by the Inspector General Act of 1978, as
amended (hereinafter referred to as the IG Act),122 which has been substantially modified twice as
(...continued)
departments, independent agencies, and independent regulatory agencies and commissions. The term “independent
regulatory agencies” refers to agencies established to be independent of the President, including the Federal
Communications Commission, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the Consumer Product Safety
Commission. The term “independent agencies” refers to agencies that are independent of Cabinet departments but not
independent regulatory agencies (e.g., the Environmental Protection Agency and the Office of Personnel Management).
119 Information about OIRA’s review of rules and about the rules themselves can be accessed at OIRA’s website, at
http://www.reginfo.gov/public/.
120 This section was excerpted from two CRS Reports: CRS Report RL30795, General Management Laws: A
Compendium, by Clinton T. Brass et al.; and CRS Report RL30240, Congressional Oversight Manual, by Todd Garvey
et al. These particular sections of RL30975 and RL30240 were written by Frederick M. Kaiser, who has since retired
from CRS. Readers with questions about inspectors general may contact Wendy Ginsberg (wginsberg@crs.loc.gov).
121 In addition to statutory inspectors general, other temporary and permanent inspectors general or watchdog-type
organizations exist across the federal government. Some of these offices include the Government Accountability Office
(GAO), which describes itself as “an independent, nonpartisan agency that works for Congress … and investigates how
the federal government spends taxpayer dollars.” Additionally, a variety of federal agencies have federal ombudsmen
who may assist employees internally with workforce concerns or assist the public with operational or other concerns.
For more information on federal ombudsmen, see CRS Report RL34606, Federal Complaint-Handling, Ombudsman,
and Advocacy Offices, by Wendy Ginsberg and Frederick M. Kaiser.
122 5 U.S.C. App. Phyllis K. Fong, Department of Agriculture Inspector General and Chair of the Council of the
Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency (CIGIE), “The IG Reform Act and the New IG Council: Dawn of a New
(continued...)
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well as subject to agency-specific OIG amendments. The IG Act provided the blueprint regarding
IG appointments and removals, powers and authorities, and responsibilities and duties, and
created OIGs in 12 federal “establishments.”123 The Inspector General Act Amendments of 1988
created a new set of IGs in “designated federal entities” (DFEs), the usually smaller federal
agencies, and added to the reporting obligations of all IGs and agency heads, among other
things.124 The Inspector General Reform Act of 2008 established a new Council of the Inspectors
General for Integrity and Efficiency (CIGIE); amended reporting obligations, salary and bonus
provisions, and removal requirements; and added certain budget protections for offices of
inspector general.125
Three principal purposes or missions guide the OIGs:
• conduct and supervise audits and investigations relating to the programs and
operations of the establishment;
• provide leadership and coordination and recommend policies for activities
designed to (1) promote economy, efficiency, and effectiveness in the
administration of such programs and operations; and (2) prevent and detect fraud
and abuse in such programs and operations; and
• provide a means for keeping the head of the establishment and Congress fully
and currently informed about problems and deficiencies relating to the
administration of such programs and operations, as well as the necessity for and
progress of corrective action.
IGs have various reporting obligations—to the Attorney General, agency head, Congress, and the
public—with regard to their findings, conclusions, and recommendations for corrective action.
One such requirement is to report suspected violations of federal criminal law directly and
expeditiously to the Attorney General.126 IGs are also required to report semiannually about their
activities, findings, and recommendations to the agency head, who must submit the IG report
(unaltered but with his or her comments) to Congress within 30 days.127 These semiannual
reports, which contain a substantial amount of required information and data, are to be made
available to the public in another 60 days.128 IGs are also to report “particularly serious or flagrant
(...continued)
Era,” Journal of Public Inquiry, Fall-Winter 2008-2009, pp. 1-6; Paul Light, Monitoring Government: Inspectors
General and the Search for Accountability (Washington, Brookings Institution, 1992); Frederick M. Kaiser, “The
Watchers’ Watchdog: The CIA Inspector General,” International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence,
Spring 1989, vol. 3, pp. 55-75.
123 P.L. 95-452. Two other IGs, which served as models, pre-dated this broad enactment: in 1976, in the Department of
Health, Education, and Welfare, now Health and Human Services (P.L. 94-505); and in 1977, in the then-new
Department of Energy (P.L. 95-91).
124 P.L. 101-504.
125 P.L. 110-409. Pursuant to P.L. 110-409, federal agencies are required to provide a link to the website of the Office
of Inspector General of their agency on their agency’s homepage. Additionally, inspectors general are required to post
any report or audit produced by the agency on their website within three days of their public release.
126 5 U.S.C. App. §4(d).
127 5 U.S.C. App. §5(a), (b).
128 5 U.S.C. App. §5(c).
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problems” immediately to the agency head, who must submit the IG report (unaltered but with his
or her comments) to Congress within seven days.129
By means of the required reports and “otherwise,” IGs are to keep the agency head and Congress
“fully and currently informed.”130 Besides the prescribed reports, other means of communication
with Congress include OIG officials testifying at hearings, meeting with members and staff, and
responding to requests for information and reviews.
As a separate matter, the CIGIE is authorized (but not required) to “make such reports to
Congress as the Chairperson determines are necessary and appropriate.”131 By comparison to this
discretionary authority, the Chairperson is required to “prepare and transmit a report annually on
behalf of the Council to the President on the activities of the Council.”132
Each agency website, moreover, is to provide a direct link to the IG website, which, in turn, is to
make its reports on audits, investigations, and evaluations or inspections available to the public
(unless they are classified).133
The Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act and
USASpending.gov134
The federal government awards nearly $1.3 trillion a year in grants, contracts, and direct loans, a
sum which has grown significantly in recent years and which now represents more than a third of
the government’s budget.135 Given the scale of funds provided through federal assistance,
transparency advocates—including some Members of Congress—have long argued that award
data should be easily accessible by the public. Federal agencies would be less likely to make
“questionable” spending decisions, Senator Tom Coburn said, if agencies knew that the public
could monitor who received awards, and for what purpose.136 Similarly, Senator Thomas Carper
argued that providing the public with federal award data would “hold the government accountable
for its performance.”137 Moreover, transparency advocates have argued that, as a matter of
principle, the public “deserves to know where their money is being spent.”138
Data on federal awards have been available to the public for decades, but not in a user-friendly
environment. Grant and loan award data were made available through the U.S. Census Bureau’s
Federal Assistance Awards Database (FAADS) in 1981, while contract information has been
provided through the Federal Procurement Data System (FPDS)—which has been maintained by
129 5 U.S.C. App. §5(d).
130 5 U.S.C. App. §4(a)(5).
131 5 U.S.C. App. §11(c)(1)(G).
132 5 U.S.C. App. §11(b)(3)(viii).
133 5 U.S.C. App. §8L.
134 This section was written by Natalie Keegan, Analyst in American Federalism and Emergency Management Policy.
135 United States Bureau of the Census, Consolidated Federal Funds Report 2010, at http://www.census.gov/govs/cffr/.
136 Senator Tom Coburn, “Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act of 2006,” remarks in the Senate,
Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 152 (April 6, 2006), p. S3240.
137 United States Senate, “Senate Committee Passes Sen. Carper Bill to Help Taxpayers ‘Google’ Government
Spending,” press release, July 38, 2006, p. 1.
138Ibid.
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the General Service Administration, since 1977. Both FAADS and FPDS—which are still
operational—are considered difficult to use because they require familiarity with grant, loan, or
contracting terminology, and because searching their data demanded a level of skill exceeding
that of many potential users.139
To address some of these limitations on public access to federal award data, Congress enacted the
Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act (FFATA; P.L. 109-282). The FFATA
required OMB to ensure a new searchable website was established that provided the public with a
single, online source of federal grant, loan, and contract data. The act also required that the new
website provide specific information about each award in excess of $25,000, including the name
and location of the recipient, the amount awarded, and the purpose of the award. The FFATA also
required that the website allow users to perform simple searches for award data, such as by the
name of the recipient or the name of a federal agency. Other FFATA provisions required agencies
to update their award data every 30 days, and to verify the accuracy of their data. The searchable
website required by the FFATA, USASpending.gov, became operational in December 2007.
USASpending.gov is one of several websites that offer data directly to the public—before such
information is requested by the public. Other websites that offer access to raw, unanalyzed
datasets include Data.gov,140 a component of the President’s Open Government Initiative that
serves as a centralized clearinghouse where the public can access machine-readable datasets
created or used by executive branch agencies, and ITDashboard,141 a component of
USASpending.gov that aggregates data on the executive branch’s information technology
investments and provides tools that allow the public to manipulate and analyze the data.
Government Procurement and Transparency142
Generally, procurement involves agencies using appropriated funds to buy the goods and services
they need to carry out their missions. With the exception of procurements that entail the use of a
government credit card,143 most procurements involve the awarding of a contract. Initial tasks
undertaken by an agency include deciding what goods and/or services to buy, choosing a suitable
source selection method (e.g., sealed bidding or negotiated contracting), and drafting a
solicitation which it then posts on the federal government’s Federal Business Opportunities
website. Using this website, a business or other interested party identifies possible contracting
opportunities. Following the instructions provided in the solicitation and other related documents
or publications, companies prepare and submit proposals to the appropriate agency. Agency
personnel evaluate the proposals, using the evaluation factors and method described in the
139 For more information on the limitations of both FAADS and FPDS, see U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act 2006, report to
accompany S. 2590, 109th Cong., 2nd sess., September 8, 2006, S.Rept. 109-329 (Washington: GPO, 2006), at
http://www.congress.gov/cgi-lis/cpquery/R?cp109:FLD010:@1%28sr329%29.
140 Data.gov is available at http://www.data.gov/.
141 ITDashboard is available at http://it.usaspending.gov/.
142 This section was written by L. Elaine Halchin, Specialist in American National Government.
143 Generally, the micro-purchase threshold is $3,000. Under certain circumstances, which are specified in regulations,
the threshold is $2,000, $2,500, $15,000, or $30,000. A micro-purchase is “an acquisition of supplies or services using
simplified acquisition procedures, the aggregate amount of which does not exceed the micro-purchase threshold.” (48
C.F.R. §2.101.) A government credit card is one of the simplified acquisition procedures.
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solicitation, and make a source selection decision. Contract negotiations and the awarding of a
contract follow.
Scholar Steven L. Schooner identifies transparency as one of nine objectives frequently
associated with government procurement, and suggests that system transparency is one of the
three “pillars” that underlies the federal government’s procurement system.144 System
transparency exists when “a system employs procedures by which offerors145 and contractors (and
even the public at large) ensure that government business is conducted in an impartial and open
manner.”146 Examples of ways in which the federal government’s procurement system maintains
transparency include the following: statutes, regulations, and policies are publicized;147 an agency
makes its requirements publicly available so that anyone may view them;148 every solicitation
describes how offers will be evaluated;149 unsuccessful offerors receive contract award
information (e.g., the name of the successful offeror and the amount of the award) and may
receive an agency debriefing;150 bid protest procedures are in place and publicized;151 and offices
of inspector general provide oversight.152
Additional resources—notably websites and databases available on the Internet—that foster
transparency include the Excluded Parties List System (EPLS), which contains the names of
companies, individuals, and other entities that have been suspended or debarred by a federal
agency; the Central Contractor Registration (CCR), a website where current and potential
government contractors register; the Federal Procurement Data System (FPDS), which includes
information on contract actions; and USASpending.gov, which is described in detail in the above
section. New data collection efforts include the Federal Awardee Performance and Integrity
Information System (FAPIIS) and agencies’ inventories of their service contracts. FAPIIS
contains information expected “to enhance the Government’s ability to evaluate the business
ethics and quality of prospective contractors competing for Federal contracts.”153 Pursuant to the
144 Steven L. Schooner, “Desiderata: Objectives for a System of Government Contract Law,” George Washington
University Law School, Public Law and Legal Theory Working Paper No. 37, 2002, pp. 1-2, at http://papers.ssrn.com/
sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=304620&http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/Data_Integrity_Notice.cfm?abid=304620. The other
two pillars are procurement integrity and competition. (Ibid., p. 2.) Unless noted otherwise, all of the websites or
databases mentioned in this section are available to the public.
145 An offeror is a business, or other type of entity, that submits an offer (or proposal) to an agency in response to a
solicitation.
146 Schooner, “Desiderata: Objectives for a System of Government Contract Law,” p. 5.
147 For example, the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR), which is Title 48 of the Code of Federal Regulations, is
available at https://www.acquisition.gov/Far/.
148 Agencies post their solicitations on the government’s Federal Business Opportunities (FedBizOpps) website, which
is available at https://www.fbo.gov/.
149 A solicitation includes evaluation factors and other pertinent information regarding the source selection process.
150 See, for example, 48 C.F.R. §15.506.
151 The Government Accountability Office’s bid protest webpage is available at http://www.gao.gov/legal/
bidprotest.html.
152 Schooner, “Desiderata: Objectives for a System of Government Contract Law,” pp. 6-7.
153 U. S. Department of Defense, General Services Administration, and National Aeronautics and Space
Administration, “Federal Acquisition Regulation; Public Access to the Federal Awardee Performance and Integrity
Information System,” 76 Federal Register 4189, January 24, 2011. FAPIIS contains, for example, information
regarding a contractor’s involvement in a civil, criminal, or administrative proceeding that occurred “in connection
with the award or performance of a contract or grant with the Federal Government” and that resulted in a conviction
(criminal proceeding) or “a finding of fault and liability” (civil or administrative proceeding) which meets certain
criteria. (Section 872(c)(1) of P.L. 110-417.)
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Supplemental Appropriations Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-112) FAPIIS was made publicly available
April 15, 2011.154 Separate statutory provisions require the Department of Defense (DOD) and
civilian agencies to compile inventories of their service contracts.155 A link to DOD’s service
contracts inventory is available at the Defense Procurement and Acquisition Policy website.156
Civilian agencies’ inventories are available on their respective websites.157
Although, as described above, transparency in federal government procurement is maintained
through many different mechanisms and procedures, at the same time it is tempered by other
objectives and considerations.158 Notably, exemption 4 of FOIA permits “trade secrets and
commercial or financial information obtained from a person and privileged or confidential” to be
exempt from disclosure.159 Government contractors rely on this exemption to protect proprietary
and confidential information—such as their cost and price data—from public disclosure.
Releasing this information might compromise a government contractor’s competitive position,
particularly if competitors obtained the information. Concerns on the part of the private sector
extend to the FAPIIS database, which could contain information that is inaccurate or misleading,
or that is “easily misinterpreted by people not familiar with the intricacies of government
contracting or who view a contractor’s involvement in a routine business dispute as a negative
reflection on its integrity, attorneys said.”160 Turning to the government, the possibility that
agencies might be required, at some future date, to post contracts online provides insight into
agencies’ concerns.161 An agency’s ability to negotiate contracts effectively possibly could be
hampered by this proposal, unless the agency is permitted to redact certain information.162 An
154 U.S. Department of Defense, “Federal Awardee Performance Integrity and Information System,” at
http://www.fapiis.gov/. Initially, FAPIIS was to be available only to “appropriate acquisition officials of Federal
agencies, … other government officials as the Administrator [of General Services] determines appropriates, and, upon
request to the Chairman and Ranking Member of the committees of Congress having jurisdiction,” but Section 3010 of
P.L. 111-21 requires all of the information, except for past performance reviews, to be made available to the public
online. (Section 872(e)(1) of P.L. 110-417.)
155 Section 807 of P.L. 110-181 and Section 743 of P.L. 111-117, Consolidated Appropriations Act, FY2010,
respectively.
156 The URL is http://www.acq.osd.mil/dpap/pacc/index.html.
157 For example, see http://www.hhs.gov/grants/servicecontractsfy11.html (Department of Health and Human
Services), http://www.dhs.gov/xopnbiz/regulations/editorial_0504.shtm (Department of Homeland Security), and
http://csm.state.gov/content.asp?content_id=135&menu_id=71 (Department of State).
158 OMB’s Open Government Directive acknowledges, with the following statement, that valid reasons for placing
limits on transparency exist: “With respect to information, the presumption shall be in favor of openness (to the extent
permitted by law and subject to valid privacy, confidentiality, security, or other restrictions).” (Peter R. Orszag,
Director, U.S. Office of Management and Budget, “Open Government Directive,” memorandum M-10-06, December
8, 2009, p. 2, at http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/memoranda_2010/m10-06.pdf.)
159 5 U.S.C. §552(b)(4).
160 Jocelyn Allison, “Contractors Brace For Fallout From FAPIIS,” no date, Portfolio Media, Inc., at
http://www.mayerbrown.com/news/index.asp?nid=20&page=6&archive=Y.
161 On May 13, 2010, an “advance notice of proposed rulemaking” was published in the Federal Register. The notice
suggested that a requirement to post contracts online might be implemented in the future. (U.S. Department of Defense,
General Services Administration, and National Aeronautics and Space Administration, “Federal Acquisition
Regulation: FAR Case 2009-004, Enhancing Contract Transparency,” 75 Federal Register 26916-26917, May 13,
2010.) The Department of Defense, General Services Administration, and National Aeronautics and Space
Administration withdrew the advance notice in February 2011. The agencies commented that they would “take into
account, at a later date, [the comments and solutions provided in response to the May 2010 notice] in determining if the
FAR should be amended to further enhance transparency in Government contracting.” (U.S. Department of Defense,
General Services Administration, and National Aeronautics and Space Administration, “Advance Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking; Withdrawal,” 76 Federal Register 7522, February 10, 2011.)
162 The Civilian Agency Acquisition Council and the Defense Acquisition Regulations Council “are considering how
(continued...)
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agency’s negotiating position on the terms and conditions of a particular contract—such as the
size of an award fee or the details of the delivery schedule—could be undermined if the
contractor has information showing that the agency gave more favorable terms to other
companies. In short, some would argue that shielding certain information from public disclosure
before, during, or after the procurement process serves valid purposes and objectives.
Obama Administration’s Open Government Initiative
On his first full day in office (January 21, 2009), President Barack Obama issued a memorandum
for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies163 stating that the new Administration was
“committed to creating an unprecedented level of openness in government.”164 The memorandum
required the chief technology officer and the Director of OMB to issue, within 120 days,
recommendations for the Open Government Directive “that instructs executive departments and
agencies to take specific actions implementing the principles set forth in this memorandum.”165
On December 8, 2009, Peter R. Orszag, the Director of OMB, released the “Open Government
Directive” memorandum, that included more detailed instructions for departments and agencies
on how to “implement the principles of transparency, participation, and collaboration.”166 Among
the initiatives in the memorandum was a requirement to give the public access to “high-value”
datasets that were previously unpublished.167 As noted earlier, agencies were instructed to reduce
their FOIA backlogs by 10% per year, until any backlog is eliminated. In addition, the
memorandum required each agency to designate a “high-level senior official to be accountable for
the quality and objectivity of, and internal controls over, the Federal spending information” that
agencies currently provide to government websites like USAspending.gov and Recovery.gov.168
Each agency was also required to create an “open government plan … that will describe how it
will improve transparency and integrate public participation and collaboration into its
activities.”169 The memorandum set a series of staggered deadlines for each department and
agency to comply with the new requirements.
(...continued)
best to review the FAR to facilitate … posting [contracts online] without violating statutory and regulatory prohibitions
against disclosing protected information belonging to the Government or contractors.” (75 Federal Register 26916.)
163 Executive Office of the President, “Transparency and Open Government,” 74 Federal Register 4685, January 26,
2009. The memorandum was released on January 21, 2009, at http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/
Transparency_and_Open_Government/.
164 Ibid.
165 Ibid.
166 Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, Memorandum for the Heads of Executive
Departments and Agencies: Open Government Directive, Washington, DC, December 8, 2009, at
http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/assets/memoranda_2010/m10-06.pdf. It is unclear whether online forums influenced
the December 8, 2009, memorandum.
167 An attachment to the memorandum provided a definition of what would qualify as a “high value data set,” stating
“[h]igh value information is information that can be used to increase agency accountability and responsiveness;
improve public knowledge of the agency and its operations; further the core mission of the agency; create economic
opportunity; or respond to need and demand as identified through public consultation.” Executive Office of the
President, Office of Management and Budget, Memorandum for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies:
Open Government Directive, Washington, DC, December 8, 2009, Attachment, pp. 7-8.
168 Ibid., p. 3.
169 Ibid., p. 4.
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The directive aims to implement the initiative’s core values through four strategies:
1. Publish government information online.
2. Improve the quality of government information.
3. Create and institutionalize a culture of open government.
4. Create an enabling policy framework for open government.170
The Open Government Directive states that “[t]ransparency promotes accountability by providing
the public with information about what the government is doing.”171 In another examination of
transparency, the Administration added that “putting data online” is an essential component of
transparency.172 In its Open Government progress report, the Administration said
“[d]emocratizing data reduces cost and eliminates waste, fraud, and abuse; creates new jobs and
businesses, and improves people’s daily lives.”173
According to OMB, nearly every agency met each directive requirement.174 Private sector reviews
of the open government initiative, however, argue that agencies met the requirements with
varying levels of diligence. Some agencies released thousands of datasets and created user-
friendly websites, while others released minor datasets and appeared to make little attempt to
create websites that offered easy access to information.175
The Administration and Smart Disclosure
On September 8, 2011, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) released a memorandum to
agency and department heads entitled “Informing Consumers through Smart Disclosure.”176 In
the memorandum,177 smart disclosure was defined as “the timely release of complex information
and data in standardized, machine readable formats … that enable consumers to make informed
decisions.” The memorandum continued that smart disclosure requires that data are accessible,
machine readable,178 standardized,179 timely, adaptive to markets and innovation,180
interoperable,181 and protective of individuals’ privacy.182
170 Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, Memorandum for the Heads of Executive
Departments and Agencies: Open Government Directive, Washington, DC, December 8, 2009.
171 Ibid., p. 1.
172 Executive Office of the President, Open Government: A Progress Report to the American People, December 2009,
p. 2.
173 Ibid. It is unclear from the progress report how transparency creates new jobs. It is also unclear whether such jobs
would be public or private sector positions.
174 For OMB ratings of agency response to the OGD, see The White House, “Open Government Initiative: Around the
Government,” at http://www.whitehouse.gov/open/around.
175 One private entity’s examination of the OGD was OMB Watch’s, “Leaders and Laggards in Agency Open
Government Webpages,” February 23, 2010, at http://www.ombwatch.org/node/10785/.
176 Cass R. Sunstein, Informing Consumers through Smart Disclosure, Office of Management and Budget, Washington,
DC, September 8, 2011, http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20090221/AUTO01/902210372/1148.
177 Ibid., p. 2.
178 Pursuant to the memorandum, machine readable means the data are “stored in a format enabling the information to
be process and analyzed by computer,” for example, formats that could be “readily imported into spreadsheet and
database applications.” Ibid., p. 5.
179 Pursuant to the memorandum, standardization requires that information “be available in standardized vocabularies
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The Evolution of Transparency in the Federal
Government and Its Potential Effects on Access and
Participation
Public access to government information and operations has changed over time. Information
access is only a part of what may be referred to as transparency. As federal statutes and initiatives
have been implemented over time—from the Federal Register Act of 1935 to the Obama
Administration’s Open Government Initiative of 2009—the tools and skills needed for the public
to not only access, but also understand and use federal information and data have evolved.
Access to and use of government information may permit the public to make more informed
decisions about factors that could affect their lives.183 For example, parents may make more
informed decisions on which child safety seat to purchase using data from the National Traffic
Highway Safety Administration. In another example, residents may learn more about the air and
water quality in their neighborhoods using the Environmental Protection Agency’s My
Environment website.184 This acquired knowledge can further be used to help shape and form
policy debates, such as through participation in civic organizations or voting.
Although access can contribute to a more informed citizenry, the constitutionally-established
structure of the U.S. government authorizes federal officials, not the public, to determine and
execute federal policy. America’s federal government is a representative democracy, which means
that the people elect officials who are then authorized (by virtue of being elected) to enact laws
and make policy choices. James Madison, in Federalist 10, describes the differences between a
republic, or representative democracy, and a “direct democracy”:
The two great points of difference between a democracy and a republic are: first, the
delegation of the government, in the latter, to a small number of citizens elected by the rest;
secondly, the greater number of citizens, and greater sphere of country, over which the latter
may be extended.
The effect of the first difference is, on the one hand, to refine and enlarge the public views,
by passing them through the medium of a chosen body of citizens, whose wisdom may best
discern the true interest of their country, and whose patriotism and love of justice will be
least likely to sacrifice it to temporary or partial considerations. Under such a regulation, it
(...continued)
and formats … that allow for meaningful comparisons and other analyses across datasets.” Ibid.
180 Pursuant to the memorandum, market adaptation and innovation would require agencies to “periodically consult
with user communities … to review and adapt smart disclosure regimes so that the information conveyed remains
accurate and relevant.” Ibid. p. 6.
181 Pursuant to the memorandum, interoperable means that the data are more valuable if they “can be linked to other
sources of data” through “common identifiers … using consistent vocabulary.” Ibid.
182 Ibid, pp. 5-6.
183 Archon Fung, Mary Graham, and David Weil, Full Disclosure: The Perils and Promise of Transparency (New
York: Cambridge University Press, 2007), p. 40.
184 See National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, “Child Safety,” at http://www.nhtsa.gov/Safety/CPS; National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, “National Weather Service,” at http://www.weather.gov/; and
Environmental Protection Agency, “My Environment,” at http://www.epa.gov/myenvironment/.
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may well happen that the public voice, pronounced by the representatives of the people, will
be more consonant to the public good than if pronounced by the people themselves,
convened for the purpose.185
In a representative democracy, elected officials are to collect the preferences of their constituents
as a basis for lawmaking, oversight, and policymaking.186 These preferences may contribute to or
determine the decisions of a federal official.187
Transparency laws may allow the public to access and better understand the decisions made by
elected officials and federal employees. Certain other transparency-related laws formalize
methods for the public to participate in the policymaking process. But in a representative
democracy, federal officials must perform the functions of government. Transparency allows the
public to better determine whether elected officials are properly and appropriately performing
their elected or appointed tasks. Transparency does not replace the duties and functions of federal
officials or federal employees. Instead, transparency, if operationalized effectively, may aid
interested publics to hold the federal government more accountable for its actions or inactions.
The Federal Register and Administrative Procedure Act Formalize
Access
The Federal Register Act (FRA) and the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), for example, give
the public an opportunity to follow and participate in the regulatory process. The APA formalized
the public’s authority to comment on and legally challenge federal regulations. The FRA and the
APA each provide formal mechanisms for the public to access the daily operations of federal
government, to participate in certain policymaking procedures, and to challenge any policy
choices in court. To become a participant, however, one needs to know how and where to access
the Federal Register, the Code of Federal Regulations, FederalRegister.gov, or Regulations.gov.
Although these acts provide the public greater access to government information and operations,
the federal government retains considerable control over what information becomes publicly
available, when information becomes available, and at what point the public can participate in the
policymaking process. The public, for example, generally may be unable to formally participate
in the policymaking process prior to an agency first publishing a proposed rule in the Federal
Register.
185 Publius (James Madison), “The Federalist Papers, The Federalist No. 10,” Independent Journal, November 22,
1787, at http://www.constitution.org/fed/federa10.htm.
186 Rosenstone and Hansen provide an excellent demographic survey of who is more likely to participate in politics and
how that participation can affect public policy. Steven J. Rosenstone and John Mark Hansen, Mobilization,
Participation, and Democracy in America (New York: Pearson Education, Inc., 2003). See also, Richard F. Fenno Jr.,
Home Style: House Members in Their Districts (New York: Addison-Wesley Educational Publishers Inc., 2003).
187 See Mobilization, Participation, and Democracy in America. See also, Robert A. Dahl, Who Governs? (New Haven,
CT: Yale University Press, 1961).
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The Freedom of Information Act and Post Hoc Access to
Information
Like the FRA and the APA, FOIA provides access to information only after a record of activity is
created. FOIA does not allow the public to participate—in real time—in the policymaking
process. Instead, it provides individuals with post-hoc access to information by allowing the
public to retrace policymaking histories. For FOIA to be an effective tool of transparency, FOIA
requesters must know how to properly write and direct a FOIA request to the appropriate agency.
Requesters who do not receive their requested materials may choose to challenge an agency’s
withholding administratively or in court. If so, the requester may need additional knowledge
about FOIA’s exemptions and case law that may support or oppose the withholding.188
The Federal Advisory Committee Act and Direct Participation
FACA offers the public a direct avenue for participation in the formulation of public policy.
Private citizens and representatives of particular interests can serve on advisory committees,
provided the committee is required to adhere to FACA’s requirements.189 The public is provided
access to FACA committee meetings and records. FACA prohibits committees from performing
any function outside of advising—FACA committees may not implement any of their
recommendations and they cannot require the federal government to implement the
recommendations. In all cases, a federal officer must determine whether to implement FACA
recommendations.
Although FACA allows public participation in the policymaking process, it still requires the
public to attend meetings, which may be difficult or impossible for those who do not live in the
area where a committee meeting is held.190 FACA also provides post-hoc access to government
information, because a member of the public who is unable to attend the meeting can access
meeting records after it takes place. In some cases, federal agencies may be using new technology
to make meetings and records more accessible. For example, some agencies place committee
records online and make audio or video recordings of the meetings available online. Additionally
some departments or agencies, including Health and Human Services, webcast meetings and
permit online audience members to submit questions to committees in real time.191
188 For information and guidance on how a member of the public can use FOIA, the House Committee on Oversight
and Government reform published a citizen’s guide to using the Freedom of Information Act. See U.S. Congress,
House Committee on Government Reform, A Citizen’s Guide on Using the Freedom of Information Act and the
Privacy Act of 1974 to Request Government Records, 112th Cong., 2nd sess., September 20, 2012, at
http://oversight.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Citizens-Guide-on-Using-FOIA.2012.pdf.
189 FACA requires that at least one member of the committee not be a full- or part-time employee or officer of the
federal government. (5 U.S.C. Appendix §3).
190 These barriers to participation may be reduced as advisory bodies adopt new technologies, like streaming their
meetings online in real time.
191 Department of Health and Human Services, “Health Information Technology,” at http://healthit.hhs.gov/portal/
server.pt/community/healthit_hhs_gov__policy_meetings/1813.
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The Open Government Directive and Attempts at Proactive
Transparency
More recent government actions have adopted a more proactive form of transparency. As noted
above, the Open Government Directive requires agencies to release a variety of new datasets to
the public before they are requested.192 With a multitude of new datasets and other information
available to the public, the Obama Administration has stated it will be the duty of the public to
keep agency performance in check.193 This “crowdsourcing,” or using the collective opinions of a
mass, online audience, may improve the quality of data that are released to the public by allowing
more people to search through datasets. On Data.gov, for example, users can rate datasets using a
five-star scale.194 Moreover, users can click a link to “Contact Dataset Owner” and send the
administrator of the data an e-mail with thoughts or comments on the data. The public can also
“flag” the dataset for one of five reasons: copyright violation, offensive content, spam or junk,
personal information, or other.195 Individuals who contact agencies are asked to provide their e-
mail so they may receive a response from the contact point. It is unclear whether agencies are
required to respond to comments.
Crowdsourcing may improve data and operations, but only for agencies that read and respond to
comments and suggestions.196 Additionally, agencies need to make clear whether the data that are
made available are complete and list their limitations. The federal datasets may also provide
opportunity for nonpartisan scholars to access and analyze datasets and create new tools to help
the public better understand how government operates and provide oversight of federal data
creation. Crowdsourcing, however, may give those members of the public with more time and
resources more opportunity to review and analyze federal data.
Releasing these datasets to the public also assumes that the public will have the knowledge,
capacity, and resources to evaluate the data, offer valid insights, and reach replicable results and
verifiable conclusions. Inadvertent or purposeful manipulation of the datasets may allow certain
groups or individuals to present unclear or skewed interpretations of government datasets, or
reach questionable conclusions. As agencies release hundreds or thousands of datasets, users may
need specialized knowledge to identify appropriate datasets to meet their needs.
Counterintuitively, this releasing of datasets may decrease executive branch transparency. For
example, users may have to sift through thousands of datasets to determine which ones include
the information they seek. It may be difficult for a researcher to pinpoint the dataset he or she
needs in a collection of similarly titled datasets. Other data may be made available in a format
192 The three high value datasets that were to be published on January 22, 2009, were made available via Data.gov. The
directive also discusses the use of other public venues for government data, including USASpending.gov and
Recovery.gov.
193 At a December 10, 2009, Senate Budget Committee Task Force on Government Performance hearing, both the
federal CIO (then-Vivek Kundra) and the federal CTO (then-Aneesh Chopra) said that watch dog groups and members
of the public would enforce agency accountability. U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on the Budget, Task Force on
Government Performance, Data-Driven Performance: Using Technology to Deliver Results, 111th Cong., 1st sess.,
December 10, 2009, http://www.senate.gov/fplayers/CommPlayer/commFlashPlayer.cfm?fn=budget121009&st=1005.
194 See, for example, Data.gov Active Duty Marital Status, at http://explore.data.gov/Population/Active-Duty-Marital-
Status/r84k-m39h.
195 Ibid.
196 Pursuant to the Open Government Initiative, agencies are required to respond to public input electronically received
via their open government websites. As noted earlier, however, agencies have responded to the Open Government
Initiative’s directives with varying diligence.
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with which a researcher is unfamiliar. Making the data public without explicit user guidance does
not necessarily make the data more accessible.
The Administration’s focus on so-called “smart disclosure” may allow a greater proportion of the
public to both access and use federal data and information. The guidance does not require
agencies to employ smart disclosure strategies, but may encourage agencies to identify and
consider methods of releasing data and records in ways that are timely and comprehensible.
Congress may consider whether agencies should be required to implement certain smart
disclosure strategies. Oversight of the implementation of smart disclosure strategies, however,
could be difficult. Members of Congress may not be familiar with each of the vast amount of
datasets held by each agency, nor may they be aware of unique sensitivities of these data.
Additionally, there may be significant costs associated with adapting certain datasets and
vernacular to more standardized and accessible formats.
Policymaking, Outside Influence, and Public Participation
Congress or the public may also have concerns about both the abilities and the affiliations of
those who access government data, comment on federal regulations, or participate in federal
government meetings.197 Most public participation may come from special interest groups that
have the time, resources, and knowledge to engage with federal agencies. Using websites and
other technology to solicit public opinion may, therefore, strengthen relationships between certain
individuals or organizations and federal agencies—granting certain participants greater and faster
access to policymakers.
Congress may believe that executive branch policymakers should be more insulated from
organized, sometimes partisan interests. Scholars have found that lawmakers play a significant
role in creating or limiting the opportunities that private organizations have in accessing
administrative agencies.198 Yet other scholars have found that attempts to insulate policymakers
may result in restricted access for less-organized, smaller private organizations, while the
wealthier, larger groups maintain access.199
Collaboration with the public may generate new ideas that could promote cost savings, assist in
the distribution of benefits, or make the federal government more effective. Scholars have noted
that public access to federal records and meetings may also provide oversight of the
administrative process and increase “bureaucratic accountability.”200 Congress may decide that
the federal government already provides the proper amount of formalized access to administrative
agencies, and that private organizations are provided the proper amount of access to
197 For information on laws, regulations, or other requirements related to lobbying the executive branch, see CRS
Report R40947, Lobbying the Executive Branch: Current Practices and Options for Change, by Jacob R. Straus.
198 See, for example, Steven J. Balla and John R. Wright, “Interest Groups, Advisory Committees, and Congressional
Control of the Bureaucracy” American Journal of Political Science, vol. 45 no. 4 (October 2001), pp. 799-812, which
examines congressional control of advisory committees that include members from the public. Jonathan R. Macey
argues that Congress can control access to administrative agencies by how they choose to organize them. See
“Organizational Design and Political Control of Administrative Agencies,” Journal of Law, Economics, and
Organization, vol. 8 no. 1 (March 1992), pp. 93-125.
199 Christopher M. Reenock and Brian J. Gerber, “Political Insulation, Information Exchange, and Interest Group
Access to the Bureaucracy,” Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, vol. 18, no. 3 (2008), pp. 415-440.
200 Ibid., p 416.
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policymakers. As noted throughout this report, the public has opportunities to participate in the
regulatory process, to access certain federal records, and to attend certain public meetings. Many
times, however, these opportunities come only after the federal government makes a formal
proposal or takes formal action. Additionally, these opportunities require the public to have the
time and resources to ask for records or attend meetings.
Limiting public access to public records or agency meetings during the policymaking process
could increase the influence of groups that have the greatest resources while alienating groups
that may have interesting policy ideas but few resources. Conversely, limiting access could
provide policymakers the opportunity to work more efficiently and without as much partisan
influence. As noted above, however, limiting access would not provide all opinions equal access
to the policymaking process and could curtail public oversight of the administrative processes of
the federal government. Increasing access to various aspects of the policymaking process could
lengthen certain administrative processes, like the regulatory process, the operations of advisory
committees, or federal contracting. Increasing access could also distort the design of a
representative democracy by diminishing the role of the elected official “to refine and enlarge the
public views.”
Author Contact Information
Wendy Ginsberg
L. Elaine Halchin
Analyst in American National Government
Specialist in American National Government
wginsberg@crs.loc.gov, 7-3933
ehalchin@crs.loc.gov, 7-0646
Maeve P. Carey
Natalie Keegan
Analyst in Government Organization and
Analyst in American Federalism and Emergency
Management
Management Policy
mcarey@crs.loc.gov, 7-7775
nkeegan@crs.loc.gov, 7-9569
Acknowledgments
This table provides the names and contact information for the Congressional Research Service’s subject
matter expert for the topics addressed in this report.
Key Policy Staff
Area of Expertise
Name
Phone
E-mail
Records and Meeting Access
Wendy Ginsberg
7-3933
wginsberg@crs.loc.gov
Federal Rulemaking
Maeve P. Carey
7-7775
mcarey@crs.loc.gov
Federal Funding Accountability and
Natalie Keegan
7-9569
nkeegan@crs.loc.gov
Transparency Act (FFATA)
Procurement Elaine
Halchin
7-0646
ehalchin@crs.loc.gov
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