[This alert is followed by a letter from more than 700 citizens to Reps. David Dreier and Newt Gingrich, outlining the issues in greater detail.] Congressional Reform Briefings September 24, 1996 Sources indicate that the House Oversight Committee may soon act on a measure to improve online access to Congressional documents. Legislative details are currently murky -- and apparently subject to behind-closed-door negotiations between House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-GA) and key members of the House Oversight Committee. Citizen pressure on two key House Oversight Committee members -- Reps. Bill Thomas (R-CA) and Vic Fazio (D-CA) -- is badly needed at this time. Currently, many important Congressional documents are not available via the Internet, including committee prints of bills, Congressional hearing records, texts of legislative amendments, and Congressional Research Service reports. This information lock-out places ordinary citizens at a great disadvantage in most Washington legislative battles, because most citizens do not have real-time access to the core documents of our democracy -- or the same access enjoyed by Washington special interest lobbyists. Congress is expected to declare final adjournment on September 27th. The next three days are very important. Please call or fax the Chairman of the House Oversight Committee, Rep. Bill Thomas, and the Ranking Minority Member, Rep. Vic Fazio, urging them to provide online access to the following Congressional documents: * Committee prints and discussion drafts of bills and Chairman's Marks * Verbatim transcripts (both corrected and uncorrected) from House Hearings * Prepared testimonies to House committees * Voting records of Representatives * Texts of legislative amendments * Congressional Research Service (CRS) Reports and Issue Briefs * Committee reports * Transcripts (both corrected and uncorrected) of House committee mark-ups * Federal Election Commission (FEC) reports * Lobbyist Disclosure reports * House Financial Disclosure reports * Statements of Disbursements of the House Following is contact information for Reps. Thomas and Fazio: Rep. Bill Thomas: Phone: (202) 225-2915 Fax: (202) 225-2908 Rep. Vic Fazio: Phone: (202) 225-5716 Fax: (202) 225-5141 For background on the issue of online access to Congressional documents, following is a letter from more than 700 citizens to Reps. David Dreier and Newt Gingrich. ------------------------------------------------------------- July 1, 1996 Honorable David Dreier Chairman, Subcommittee on Rules and Organization of the House House Rules Committee United States House of Representatives Washington, DC 20515 Honorable Newt Gingrich Speaker of the House U.S. House of Representatives Washington, DC 20515 RE: Requiring the House of Representatives to Provide Taxpayers with Access to House Documents via the Internet Dear Representatives Dreier and Gingrich: We are writing to urge the Subcommittee on Rules and Organization of the House to approve changes in House Rules requiring the House to provide the public with online access to House documents. As a part of The 21st Century Congress Project, the Subcommittee is considering issuing recommendations for new House Rules governing which House documents will be made available to the public via the Internet. We want to express the enormous gratitude of the American people and the Internet community for establishing THOMAS, which provides citizens with online access to some Congressional documents. Similarly, there is gratitude for the Speaker's repeated statements in support of providing access to Congressional documents via the Internet. For example, in a November 11, 1994 speech, Representative Gingrich said that "we will change the rules of the House to require that all documents and all conference reports and all committee reports be filed electronically as well as in writing and that they cannot be filed until they are available to any citizen who wants to pull them up. Thus, information will be available to any citizen in the country at the same moment it is available to the highest paid Washington lobbyist." And yet, as you know, many crucial House documents are still not available online. In spite of the Speaker's commitment, the Republican House and Senate leadership have followed in the same, old, discredited tradition of limited access to key legislative documents perfected under previous Democratic-controlled Congresses -- the same tradition that provides enormous political advantage to Washington lobbyists while leaving the American people without real-time access to the core documents of our democracy. We are growing increasingly frustrated with the failure of the 104th Congress to provide online access to these documents. We have repeatedly pointed out the effects of these anti-democratic policies during the 104th Congress. * In September, 1995 we wrote to Speaker Gingrich to protest the failure of the House Ways and Means Committee to provide online access to chairman's marks for a 700-page major tax bill involving billions of dollars. When we called the Ways and Means Committee to obtain a copy of those chairman's marks, we were told by Committee staff that we would have to purchase a printed copy from the Bureau of National Affairs (BNA). BNA told us the price of those chairman's marks was $27. * In January, during the debates over the telecommunications deregulation bill -- arguably the most important legislation approved in the 104th Congress -- the only source for the most up-to-date drafts of the legislation was not THOMAS or GPO Access but the Regional Bell Operating Companies Internet site. Committee prints and discussion drafts of the bill were not available through THOMAS or GPO Access. It is outrageous that citizens should have had to rely on telephone companies to obtain up-to-date drafts of bills produced by the United States Congress. * In May, we wrote to Senators Nancy Landon Kassebaum and John Warner regarding the failure of the Senate Labor Committee to provide online access to discussion drafts of legislation governing the privacy safeguards for medical records. We also have written letters to Rep. Vern Ehlers in December, 1994, to Speaker Gingrich in August, 1995, and to Senator Warner in March, 1996 requesting that this Congress provide online access to key Congressional documents. We have yet to receive a written response to any of these letters. Chairman Dreier has stated that the goal of The 21st Century Congress Project "is to develop and recommend changes in Congress' operations and legislative procedures that will allow technology to make the institution [Congress] more open, accountable and effective." That goal can only be met by requiring the House to make the following documents available to the public via the Internet: 1. Committee prints and discussion drafts of bills and Chairman's Marks. While citizens are examining the copies of bills which have been introduced and made available through THOMAS and GPO Access, Washington lobbyists are studying the paper copies of a committee print, discussion draft, or "chairman's mark" of a bill, which are the relevant documents for legislation. House policy currently prevents the U. S. Government Printing Office (GPO) from disseminating committee prints without permission of the chair of the Committee. We believe this policy is indefensible and should be changed immediately. We urge you to require that the GPO disseminate all versions of House bills electronically, including all committee prints, widely-disseminated discussion drafts, and chairmans marks. 2. Verbatim transcripts (both corrected and uncorrected) from House Hearings. Lobbyists can buy transcripts of House hearings from transcribers, but most taxpayers have to wait months or more than a year for printed hearing records. We urge you to support providing online access to verbatim transcripts -- both corrected and uncorrected -- of House hearings as soon as possible after the hearings have taken place. 3. Prepared testimonies to House committees. We recommend that it should be House policy to ask witnesses testifying before House committees to provide an electronic copy of their prepared testimony, and then require the testimony to be immediately placed online on THOMAS and GPO Access. In addition, all government officials should be required to provide electronic copies of their prepared testimonies for public dissemination. 4. Voting records of Representatives. While the votes on bills reaching the floor of the House are recorded in the online version of the Congressional Record, it is often time-consuming and difficult for citizens to find these votes without extensive browsing of the documents. Even worse, the online version of the Congressional Record only contains 1993-present. Previous votes are not available online through THOMAS or GPO Access. We recommend that you support providing online access to voting records of Representatives with an easily searchable database, indexed by member name, bill title, bill number, and bill subject. 5. Amendments. We urge you to support providing online access to the texts of House amendments, and that until a bill or amendment is online, it should not be considered "introduced." 6. Congressional Research Service (CRS) Reports and Issue Briefs. In September 1994, CRS announced a pilot project for the electronic distribution of CRS Reports and Issue Briefs to Congressional offices. However, the taxpayers are still without online access to CRS Reports and Issue Briefs. 7. Committee reports. GPO Access distributes numbered committee reports for the 104th Congress. But not all committee reports are officially "reported," and therefore not all committee reports are made available through GPO Access. In addition, House committee reports before the 104th Congress are not available online through GPO Access or any other government online service. We urge you to support providing online access to all House committee reports, including those not officially "reported." 8. Transcripts (both corrected and uncorrected) of House committee mark-ups. We urge you to provide online access to the corrected and uncorrected texts of committee mark-ups as soon as possible after the mark-ups have taken place. 9. Conference reports. Conference reports for the second session of the 103rd and the full 104th Congress are now available online by searching the online versions of Congressional Record. However, conference reports before the 103rd Congress are not available online. We urge you to support providing online access to conference reports before the 103rd Congress. 10. Federal Election Commission (FEC) reports. The Federal Elections Commission (FEC) reports on campaign contributions are of great interest to millions of Americans. Online access through THOMAS or GPO Access would greatly broaden the dissemination of this important information. We urge you to require the FEC to provide online access to the full history of FEC campaign contribution data searchable by candidate name, contributor, PAC, party, and campaign committee. 11. Lobbyist Disclosure reports. The Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995 requires collection of valuable information regarding the activities of lobbyists. Unfortunately, this information is only made available at the House Legislative Resource Center and the Senate Office of Public Records. We urge you to make lobbyist disclosure reports available online. 12. House Financial Disclosure reports. GPO Access provides online access to nearly all of the series of numbered "House Documents" in the 104th Congress. One egregious exception is House Financial Disclosure reports, which are not available online through GPO Access or THOMAS. 13. Statement of Disbursements of the House. During the 104th Congress, the House renamed, revised, and improved the old Clerk of the House reports, which document how each House member has spent their Member's Representational Allowance funds. These statements are not available either through GPO Access or THOMAS. We hope that The 21st Century Congress Project will recommend these documents be provided to the public via the Internet. If you have any questions about this letter, please contact Gary Ruskin at (202) 296-2787, or James Love at (202) 387-8030. Sincerely, Gary Ruskin, Director, Congressional Accountability Project James Love, Director, Consumer Project on Technology Jim Warren, Columnist, open-government advocate and GovAccess Editor Audrie Krause, Executive Director, Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility Lori Fena, Executive Director, Electronic Frontier Foundation Scott Armstrong, Executive Director, Information Trust Richard L. Ottinger, Dean, Pace University School of Law, former member of Congress James Neff, Chair, Access Committee, Investigative Reporters and Editors Marjorie Power, City Council Member, Montpelier, Vermont Ellen Miller, Executive Director, Center for Responsive Politics Peggy Cairns, Assistant Civil Librarian, U.S. Department of Justice Paula Collins, State Chair, United We Stand America, Massachusetts Shabbir Safdar, Co-Founder, Voters Telecommunications Watch Harry Martin III, Librarian and Professor of Law, Harvard Law School Roger Possner, City Librarian, Covina Public Library, California ----------------------------------------------------------------- For more information about online access to Congressional documents send e-mail to the Congressional Accountability Project at gary@essential.org or call (202) 296-2787. The Congressional Accountability Project is a Ralph Nader Congressional reform group. to subscribe to Congressional reform briefings send the message: subscribe cong-reform your name to listproc@essential.org PLEASE DISTRIBUTE WIDELY Gary Ruskin Congressional Accountability Project | Internet: gary@essential.org P.O. Box 19446 Washington, DC 20036 Phone: (202) 296-2787 Fax: (202) 833-2406