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- 137 Cong.Rec. E3241-01 1991 WL 196219 (Cong.Rec.)
-
- Congressional Record --- Extension of Remarks Proceedings and Debates
- of the 102nd Congress, First Session
-
- Material in Extension of Remarks was not spoken by a Member on the
- floor.
-
- In the House of Representatives Thursday, October 3, 1991
-
- IMPROVEMENT OF INFORMATION ACCESS ACT
-
- HON. MAJOR R. OWENS OF NEW YORK
-
- Wednesday, October 2, 1991
-
- Mr. OWENS of New York.
- Mr. Speaker, yesterday I introduced legislation (H.R. 3459) which
- is designed to assure that decisions by the Federal Government about
- the vast store of information it collects, maintains, and disseminates
- are fully accountable and responsive to the people who paid for that
- information in the first place-all Americans.
- H.R. 3459, the Improvement of Information Access Act, is based on
- the simple, irrefutable premise that Government information belongs to
- the people. Americans pay billions of dollars in taxes every year to
- support the Federal Government's enormous information-gathering and
- -disseminating enterprise and they must be heard in the critical
- decisions over access to that information. It is the people's
- information and all Americans must be given the opportunity to
- participate meaningfully in discussions concerning the collection, use,
- and dissemination of that information.
-
- A FRAMEWORK FOR DECISIONMAKING
-
- H.R. 3459 does not micromanage agency decisionmaking, and it does
- not resolve many policy disputes concerning access to Government
- information, including the extent to which such information should be
- privatized. What the IIA Act does do, however, is establish a framework
- for making policy on access to information resources which assures
- continuing public participation in these critical decisions. it
- emphasizes the process for making decisions, focusing on issues of
- paramount concern to data users, but does not dictate the results.
-
- WHAT H.R. 3459 WILL DO
-
- H.R. 3459 will encourage the use of modern information
- technologies, prevent agencies from using high prices to limit access
- to public information, emphasize the importance of standards in making
- Government information easier to obtain and use, and require Federal
- agencies to open dialogs with citizens about information dissemination
- policies and practices.
- It will require Federal agencies to store and disseminate
- information products and services in standardized record formats and
- disseminate
- information products and services through computer networks and other
- outlets, when appropriate. It would set the price of information
- products and services at the incremental cost of dissemination of the
- information. Royalties or fees for the redissemination of information
- are prohibited.
- H.R. 3459 will also require Federal agencies to carry out an
- ongoing dialog with the public about information dissemination policies
- and practices. Agencies will be required to issue annual reports which
- describe agency policies and practices on a wide range of information
- management issues, including plans to introduce or discontinue
- information products or services, the development and adoption of
- standards for file and record formats, software query command
- structures, and other matters which make information easier to obtain
- and use, the creation and dissemination of indexes and bibliographies
- that describe agency information products and services, the modes and
- outlets used to disseminate information to the public, and provisions
- for protecting access to records stored with older technologies.
- The public will be given an opportunity to review this report and
- provide the agency with comments on a number of items, including the
- types of information the agency collects and disseminates, the methods
- and outlets the agency uses to store and disseminate information, the
- prices the agency or other outlets charge for the information, and the
- validity, reliability, timeliness, and usefulness of the information.
- Federal agencies will keep these comments in a public file and will be
- required annually to summarize the comments and describe their
- responses.
- Finally, H.R. 3459 will also require the Archivist of the United
- States and the Director of the National Institute of Standards and
- Technology <NIST> to issue model standards for the timeliness by which
- agencies shall provide the public with copies of press releases, agency
- decisions, docket filings, and other public documents.
-
- A SENSIBLE LIMIT ON THE PRICING OF GOVERNMENT INFORMATION
-
- One of the central provisions of the IIA Act is its requirement
- that the price of Government information be limited to the incremental
- cost of dissemination. This provision is necessary because many Federal
- agencies have abandoned historic policies of charging the public no
- more than duplication and handling costs for information. In some
- cases, arrogant bureaucrats have set the price of Government
- information at a level which was specifically designed to discourage
- general public access; in other cases, agencies have tried to generate
- some extra income for themselves by selling Government information. The
- desire of some Government agencies to find new and creative gimmicks to
- raise additional revenue is understandable in these budget-conscious
- times. But nickel and diming taxpayers for Government information they
- have already bought and paid for is not the way. It's like buying a new
- car and then being asked to pay the car dealer anytime you want to
- actually drive it. Government information belongs to the people and
- they should not have to pay for it twice.
- Even more importantly, the exorbitant pricing of Government
- information strikes at the heart of our democratic freedoms. The right
- to know is the essence of self-government. As Christopher Harvey of the
- Advocacy Institute once eloquently explained:
- The Founding Fathers created a constitutional system which mandated
- that
- knowledge and ideas be allowed to flow freely. They were idealists who
- believed that action flowed from knowledge, and that freedom required
- that no one interfere with the knowledge that informed such action. In
- short, they understood that informed citizens opinion was the
- cornerstone of democratic self-government.
- All Americans have the right to know-not just to those who can
- afford to pay for it.
- Instances in which agency pricing decisions have curbed public
- access to information abound. For example, researchers who want to
- study policies of Federal bank regulators must pay $500 for a Federal
- reserve quarterly "Bank Call Report," which is stored on a computer
- tape that costs around $10. One college undergraduate writing his
- senior thesis was told that 40 quarters of this information would cost
- $20,000. Researchers in economics say that the high price of this
- Federal information has greatly restricted academic research on the
- relationship between Federal regulation and bank failures. Taxpayers,
- who have been asked to spend hundreds of billions of dollars on
- bailouts for the savings and loan and commercial banking industries,
- should be concerned that information about bank liquidity has become
- very costly to obtain.
- Other Federal agencies are also attempting to cash in on public
- information that has market value. The Bureau of the Census now charges
- as much as $250 for a single CD-ROM of information, even though the
- cost of duplicating a CD-ROM is less than $2. In some cases, agencies
- use price to reward political friends and discourage political foes.
- For example, the U.S. Department of the Interior has told researchers
- that it would charge either zero or $250 for a tape of computer data on
- oil and gas lease sales, depending upon whether or not the researchers
- would agree to withhold criticism of the agency's policies.
- Congress needs to make clear to Federal agencies that the public
- should pay no more than the incremental costs of dissemination to
- receive Government information. A failure to do so will invite even
- more abuses than those already occurring. As the Federal government
- continues to deal with its perennial fiscal crisis, agencies will
- scrounge for additional citizen user fees, and the public will be
- nickeled, dimed and quartered for access to Government information.
- Agencies will be free to use price to limit public access to databases
- that are politically sensitive, and the public will be divided into
- those who can afford access to Government information, and those who
- cannot.
- Citizens, as taxpayers, will continue to pay the bulk of the
- expense for creating Federal information, but access to the information
- will be rationed to the most affluent. This outcome is outrageous and
- unfair.
-
- THE NEED FOR PUBLIC PARTICIPATION IN AGENCY DECISIONS
-
- Federal agencies are also often insensitive to citizen requests for
- new information products and services. For example, the Department of
- Commerce operates the Economic Bulletin Board <EBB>, which offers
- low-cost access to the public to more than 1,000 data files from dozens
- of Federal agencies. While the EBB is a fine service, there is always
- room for improvement. One user of the EBB recently asked the Department
- of Commerce to provide access to the appendices from the Economic
- Report of the President. The Department of Commerce not only ignored
- the request, it also refused to allow the user to post a message asking
- other users of the EBB to name economic data that they
- would like to see on the EBB. Subsequently, ninety economists and
- journalists asked that the EBB be expanded to include the Department of
- Commerce's National Trade Data Bank <NTDB>, a large database it
- currently sells on CD-ROM. The Department of Commerce asserted that
- this would be a difficult and costly task, despite ample evidence that
- electronic bulletin board systems can easily be modified to support
- CD-ROM technology.
- An academic research studying the impact of exchange rate movements
- on manufacturing employment has on three occasions paid $700 for a
- magnetic tape of county-level employment statistics from the Bureau of
- Labor Statistics < BLS>. The source of the information is the BLS
- ES-202 program, which collects information in connection with Federal
- support for unemployment insurance. The agency asserted the high price
- was justified by the costs of custom programming for the information.
- The researcher asked BLS to consider offering the county- level
- employment statistics as a standard product, which would lower the
- price of the information to around $70, a tenth of the present charge.
- The lower price would reflect the savings to BLS from avoiding custom
- programming.
- According to the data user, the BLS ES-202 program is the only
- source of timely employment data at the country level, and there would
- be a substantial demand for the product if it was priced lower. BLS
- officials are still considering this request, but they have indicated
- that they do not feel obligated to create such products, regardless of
- public demand, since the provision of the information lar
- y to their primary mission, which is the administration of the
- ES-202 program. Indeed, the $700 charge for the custom tape seems to be
- far in excess of BLS's actual costs, and agency personnel privately
- concede it is used as a deterrent to those who would distract agency
- personnel from their primary mission.
- In another case, the Department of Commerce has long refused to
- make important changes in its annual survey of building permits.
- Specifically, the Department of Commerce has refused to include any
- questions about the square feet of building permits issued, even though
- the Department requires local governments to report the number and
- value of building permits issued. According to industry and academic
- research personnel, the square feet statistic is a far more useful and
- valuable statistic than either the number or the value of permits.
- Recently 33 real estate professionals and economists asked Congress
- to press for changes in the Department of Commerce's building permit
- survey. Officials from the Department of Commerce have since asserted
- that there has never been any interest in the square foot statistic,
- and furthermore, that the so-called Paperwork Reduction Act prohibited
- them from including questions about the square feet of building permits
- because that statistic is now provided by the private sector. What the
- Department of Commerce did not mention was that the private sector
- source of this statistic is a single firm, McGraw Hill's F.W. Dodge
- Company subsidiary, that copyrights the information, restricts
- disclosure of the data, and for a history of county-level statistics
- charges as much as $200,000.
- The failure of the Department of Commerce to provide a publicly
- available source for this statistic has denied virtually all academic
- economists and many business economists the opportunity to carry out
- even the most basic research into the supply and demand characteristics
- of commercial real estate markets. Real estate professionals claim that
- this limited availability of the data was
- a contributing factor to the disastrous crashes in commercial real
- estate markets in recent years. Research on energy consumption and
- conservation has also suffered.
- In yet another example, the Securities and Exchange Commission
- <SEC> is spending more than $50 million of taxpayer money to develop
- the Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis and Retrieval <EDGAR> system,
- which is the SEC's new computerized records system. Academic
- researchers would like to purchase elements of this database on CD-ROM
- to study problems in finance and industrial organization, but the SEC
- will only sell the records on paper or microfiche, which cannot be read
- by a computer. Journalists would like remote online access to the EDGAR
- system, but SEC officials have designed a system that will provide
- public access only in three public reading rooms. The SEC has never
- asked the public to describe the uses it has for the SEC's disclosure
- records or allowed the public the opportunity to debate the merits of
- remote access. As a result, the public and most Government officials
- will have to pay commercial firms to search this Government database.
- Dozens of Federal agencies spend the taxpayer's money to produce
- research abstracts. Most of these research abstracts could be searched
- by a single software program, if they were sold in standardized record
- formats. Despite enormous public demand for CD-ROM products and online
- searching services, most agencies disseminate the information only on
- computer tapes, which are difficult and expensive to use. Many agencies
- claim to be ignorant of the public interest in CD-ROM products or
- online searching services. The absence of a coordinated Federal effort
- to provide standards for publishing such research abstracts has led to
- fragmented marketing efforts, a confusing array of software interfaces,
- and high prices paid to commercial data vendors who repackage this
- taxpayer-funded information for sale to the public. The primary groups
- that pay these high prices are school and public libraries all over
- America, who are also being hit by declining state, local, and Federal
- support for library services. As a result, fewer Americans can afford
- to learn about research funded by their own tax dollars.
- The Patent and Trademark Office <PTO> is spending hundreds of
- millions of dollars to develop its Automated Patent System <APS>, which
- will provide online searching of U.S. and foreign patents to some 1,500
- Federal patent examiners. Lawyers who litigate patent disputes,
- scientists who want to study patented inventions and educators who want
- to use patents to teach science courses have all expressed interest in
- obtaining online access to this database, but the PTO has not made any
- attempt to survey the public's interest. As is often the case, members,
- of the public have no obvious way to provide public comments on the
- agency's policy restricting access to its databases.
- In these and in many other cases, H.R. 3459 is needed to force
- agencies to consider the public interest in information management
- policies. The Federal government has grown large and complex. It is
- extremely difficult for a professor in Texas, a school teacher in
- Seattle, a journalist in New York, or an entrepreneur in Montana to
- find the individual, committee, or agency that has the jurisdiction to
- resolve information access issues or the inclination to listen to
- suggestions from the public. Citizens should not be required to belong
- to specialized trade associations or hire high-priced Washington
- lobbyists to make simple suggestions or comments on agency policies and
- practices related to public access to Government information.
-
- As stated in the findings of H.R. 3459, it is unnecessarily
- difficult for citizens to make constructive suggestions about agency
- policies on the dissemination of Federal information. Agencies are
- often ignorant of important issues regarding information dissemination
- technologies and standards, and the public interest in agency
- information resources. H.R. 3459 provides straightforward framework for
- the agencies and the public to communicate about agency policies for
- the dissemination of Federal information resources. The bill will
- ensure that Federal agencies take citizen concerns into consideration
- as they manage vast Federal information resources.
- H.R. 3459 is written to be flexible concerning rapidly emerging
- technologies. By requiring annual reports and public comments, H.R.
- 3459 will emphasize the need for ongoing attention to incremental
- changes in information management policies and practices, as markets,
- technologies, and standards change. It will be a tool to promote
- dynamic progress toward better information management policies.
- Agencies will be free to ignore public comments and suggestions for
- any reason they choose, including economic or technical feasibility,
- but they will require to engage in a debate over their policies. Under
- H.R. 3459 it will be much easier to the public to learn about and speak
- out about agency policies. I am confident that this process will lead
- to much broader public access to Government information.
- Finally, H.R. 3459 will address the problem of declining service
- for routine access to agency press releases, regulatory decisions,
- docket filings, and other public documents. While a decade ago it was a
- simple matter to ask a Federal agency for a copy of such documents,
- today it can be an ordeal. Some federal agencies take weeks to provide
- copies of documents by mail, forcing the public to rely upon
- high-priced private expediters for time information about Federal
- agency activities. This makes it far more difficult for citizens and
- public interest groups to monitor the activities of regulatory agencies
- and increases the risk that regulators will become captives of the
- industries they regulate. H.R. 3459 requires the heads of the National
- Archives and Records Administration <NARA> and the National Institute
- of Standards and Technology < NIST> to issue standards for the level of
- service to be provided to the public for access to such public records.
- These standards, benchmarks against which agency operations will be
- judged, will make it easier for citizens to press for improved agency
- policies and practices.
-
- HOW THE ACT WOULD RELATE TO OTHER LAWS AND REGULATIONS
-
- In closing I will offer a few comments about the relationship
- between H.R. 3459 and the Freedom of Information Act <FOIA>, OMB
- Circular A-130, and the Paperwork Reduction Act <PRA>.
- The Freedom of Information Act establishes the principle that
- taxpayers are entitled to have access to documents that are in the
- possession of Federal agencies, with limited exceptions due to privacy,
- law enforcement, trade secret, or national security grounds. Despite
- many attempts to weaken FOIA, it remains one of the most powerful
- legislative tools to prevent agencies abuses in the area of the
- public's right to know.
- As written, FOIA is not the solution to all problems concerning
- access to Government information, however. For example, courts have
- held that sections of
- FOIA do not apply to documents sold by Government agencies as
- publications. More important, however, is the fact that FOIA can only
- be used to request documents after they exist. The public's right to
- know depends greatly upon agency policies regarding publications. Press
- releases, newsletters, annual reports, and special periodicals are
- often key to understanding agency operations, policies and practices.
- It is far more difficult to obtain Government statistics under a FOIA
- request than to purchase a standardized report or publication that
- reports the information and provides explanations about the sources and
- methods of the information. It is one thing for the Department of
- Transportation to gather statistics regarding vehicle safety and yet
- another matter for the agency to disseminate the information in a
- usable format.
- H.R. 3459 specifically addresses the development of Government
- information products and services and allows citizens to have greater
- say over how agencies publish and disseminate information. H.R. 3459 is
- needed to develop better ways of insuring the public's right to know.
- OMB Circular A-130 is the administration's policy regarding the
- management of Federal information resources. This controversial
- circular is best known for its ill-advised requirement that Federal
- agencies place "maximum feasible reliance" upon the private sector to
- disseminate Government information. While the complete language of the
- circular is complex, the tone of the circular has been widely
- interpreted as a call to privatize the dissemination of Federal
- information resources. Among the mechanisms for doing so are
- requirements that Federal agencies ensure that existing and planning
- major information systems do not unnecessarily duplicate information
- systems available from the private sector. The singleminded focus of
- Circular A-130 on the issue of privatization was unfortunate, as the
- circular lacked a framework to resolve many other information
- management issues. Moreover, many Federal agencies were deterrent from
- solving even simple problems about data formats and standards, in order
- to avoid the appearance that the agency was considering policies that
- ran contrary to privatization.
- Three proposals to reauthorize the Paperwork Reduction Act <PRA>
- have contained sections that would mimic OMB Circular A-130's attempts
- to discharge federal agencies from competing with the private sector.
- These include H.R. 3695, which passed the House of Representatives in
- 1990, and S. 1044 and S. 1139, which were introduced this year. While
- the language of these proposals are often marginally different from
- that used in OMB's Circular A-130, they have been widely interpreted to
- accomplish the same purpose. For this reason, library organizations,
- such as the American Library Association, have opposed the information
- dissemination sections of these bills.
- Rather than focusing on issues related to privatization, H.R. 3459
- takes a broader, more balanced approach. H.R. 3459 addresses legitimate
- private sector concerns about adequate public notice of agency
- policies, but it broadens the occasions upon which public notice is
- given and comments are received. While A- 130 and the three bills to
- reauthorize the PRA only provide for public notice and comment when
- issues of privatization are at stake, H.R. 3459 makes public notice and
- comment an annual event. Moreover, the statutory language describes a
- broad range of issues that concern the public as users of Federal
- databases.
-
- WHO WOULD BENEFIT FROM H.R. 3459
-
- The constituency for H.R. 3459 should include all citizens and
- organizations who support the public's right to the best access to
- Government information that is technologically and economically
- feasible. If you believe, as I do, that the Federal Government has
- moved too slowly to adopt modern technologies to broaden public access
- to Government information, you should support H.R. 3459. The approach
- outlined in this legislation is needed to jump-start a revolution in
- citizen access to public records.
- As a librarian, I am proud of the leading role professional library
- organizations, such as the American Library Association, have played in
- focusing attention on the important role that agency publishing efforts
- play in protecting the public's right to know. This role has come
- naturally to the library community, because its very mission is to
- serve the public and promote the spread of knowledge. Libraries are
- also the largest consumers of information products and services. They
- are keenly aware of the impact of ill- advised privatization schemes
- that save a few dollars in direct publishing expenditures, at the cost
- of large increases in indirect expenditures on data purchases. H.R.
- 3459 will make it easier for this group to lend their considerable
- expertise to debates over Federal information management policies.
- Another important group that has sought to expand the public's
- right to know is the Center for Study of Responsive Law's Taxpayer
- Assets Project. This project was started by Ralph Nader to investigate
- the management of public assets, including Federal information
- resources. The Taxpayer Assets Project has investigated a large number
- of cases where citizen access to Government information has been
- frustrated by poorly thought-out privatization initiatives and failures
- to develop standards and use innovative information technologies. These
- investigations have added a much needed economic analysis to the debate
- over Federal information management practices, and they have changed
- the way many experts think about policy options. Among the many
- important contributions this group has offered is the insight that the
- Federal Government itself is often a consumer of its own information,
- and that the same policies that have led to access barriers for the
- public have made it difficult and expensive for Government employees to
- search their own records. The Taxpayer Assets Project will undoubtedly
- use H.R. 3459 to ask agencies about waste and inefficiencies that often
- occur when Federal agencies are forced to buy back their own data from
- commercial vendors.
- Of course, many commercial firms that redisseminate Federal
- information with value-added enhancements have also been strong
- supporters of agency efforts to use new and innovative methods to
- deliver government information to the public. The Department of
- Commerce's Economic Bulletin Board is widely used by private firms that
- need immediate access to time-sensitive information. Firms that sell
- databases on real estate markets will use H.R. 3459 to prod federal
- agencies to improve Government-funded surveys on these topics.
- Developers of Geographic Information Systems will use H.R. 3459 to
- encourage agencies to adopt common standards for cross-referencing
- tabular data by its geographic coordinates. Small businesses will use
- H.R. 3459 to identify better ways to obtain access to the National
- Trade Data Bank, Customs records, transportation tariffs, IRS rulings,
- and other useful Government records.
- Data vendors, citizen groups, and academic researchers will use
- H.R. 3459 to tell Federal agencies about the scientific and social
- value of information contained in federal computer databases, and will
- encourage
- agencies to provide new standardized information products and
- services. Many Federal agencies do not appreciate the value of the
- information they possess. Often Federal agencies collect information
- for one purpose, without any appreciation of the uses of that
- information to others. For example, some citizen groups will be
- interested in asking the Department of Transportation to develop very
- specific information products that organize vehicle safety data in a
- more meaningful way. Labor unions may ask the Occupational Safety and
- Health Administration <OSHA> for information products that will be used
- to investigate particular relationships between worker health problems
- and job or employer characteristics. The Internal Revenue Service may
- be asked to publish regular reports that show trends in income
- distribution, stratified by race, gender, age or other characteristics.
- As more and more Government records become automated, new and
- exciting questions should be asked about the information products and
- services that should be available from Federal agencies. These new
- technologies should lead to new ways of looking at information, because
- more will be possible. Not only will it be cheaper and easier to
- produce new information products and services, but the staggering drop
- in the costs of computing and data storage have made it possible to
- manipulate these data in ways that were unthinkable a decade ago.
- If Federal agencies are required to price Government information
- products and services at no more than their incremental costs of
- dissemination, and if the public is free to redisseminate the
- information, there will always be an important role for firms that
- provide value-added services. We know this is true, because for the
- past 200 years, the first amendment to the U.S. Constitution has been
- the best protection in the world for the information industry.
- Attempts to privatize the dissemination of Government information
- have not led to increased public access to information. Rather, these
- efforts have led to a paralysis in the Federal Government. Every time
- there is an opportunity to use computer technologies to disseminate
- Government information, there is first a fear the agency will be
- criticized. This has crippled initiative, deterring agencies from
- opening dialogs with the public. Agencies anticipate severe constraints
- on their mandate to disseminate information, and they are embarrassed
- to acknowledge these constraints to data users. By opening a public
- dialog, H.R. 3459 will overcome this shame and bring the debate back to
- the genuinely interesting questions about the management of Federal
- information resources.
- If, as I expect, H.R. 3459 leads to a proliferation of new agency
- information products and services, it will also lead to many new
- opportunities for firms that use, analyze, and add value to the
- information. It will benefit the private information industry. It will
- also benefit the public who receives the information, regardless of
- whether the information is obtained directly from Federal agencies or
- >from private concerns that offer value-added enhancements.
- No group in America has a stronger interest in the passage of H.R.
- 3459 than the news media. Reporters are intensive users of Government
- information, and they rely upon sources who need access to Government
- information. The free flow of information is a vital ingredient to a
- free press. I encourage professional news organizations to endorse H.R.
- 3459 and other efforts to make Government information easier and less
- expensive to
- obtain.
- I look forward to working with all of these constituencies to
- further refine H.R. 3459 and to press for its enactment into law.
- The text of H.R. 3459, the Improvement in Information Access Act,
- follows:
-
- H.R. 3459
-
- Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
- United States of America in Congress assembled,
-
- SECTION I. SHORT TITLE.
-
- This Act may be cited as the "Improvement of Information Access Act
- of 1991".
-
- SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
-
- The Congress finds the following:
- (1) A well-informed citizenry is essential for the well-being of a
- democratic society.
- (2) Access to Government Information is essential for citizens tho
- seek to make the Federal Government accountable for its actions.
- (3) The public should have timely, complete, equitable, and
- affordable access to Government Information.
- (4) Federal agencies should use modern information technology for
- the benefit of citizens of the United States.
- (5) Government information is a national resource that should be
- treated as a public good.
- (6) Government information is a valuable economic asset that
- belongs to the public.
- (7) Taxpayers pay for the creation, collection, and organization of
- Government information and should not be required to pay excessive fees
- to receive and use that information.
- (8) It is unnecessarily difficult for citizens to provide federal
- agencies with comments and suggestions on Federal information policies.
- As a result, many Federal agencies do not take into account the public
- interest in the information resources they manage.
- (9) Federal agencies have been slow in developing standards for
- record and file formats, software query command structures, and other
- important topics that will make Government information easier to obtain
- and use.
- (10) Many Federal agencies do not provide timely access to
- Government information at reasonable costs.
-
- SEC. 3. IMPROVED PUBLIC ACCESS TO GOVERNMENT INFORMATION.
-
- Section 552 of title 5, United States Code, is amended by adding at
- the end the following:
- "(g) Each executive department, military department, and
- independent establishment shall prepare by not later than February 1 of
- each year, and make freely available to the public upon request and at
- no charge, a report which
- describes the information dissemination policies and practices of the
- department or establishment, including-
- "(1) plans of the department or establishment to introduce new
- information products and services or discontinue old ones;
- "(2) efforts of the department or establishment to develop or
- implement standards for file and record formats, software query command
- structures, and other matters that make information easier to obtain
- and use;
- "(3) progress of the department or establishment in creating and
- disseminating comprehensive indexes and bibliographies of information
- products and services, including coordinated efforts conducted with
- other agencies;
- "(4) the methods to be used by the public for accessing
- information, including the modes and outlets available to the public;
- "(5) provisions for protecting access to records stored with
- technologies that are superseded or obsolete;
- "(6) methods used to make the public aware of information
- resources, services, and products; and
- "(7) a summary of the comments received from the public under
- subsection (h) in the year preceding the report, and the response of
- the department or establishment to those comments.
- "(h)(1) Not later than February 1 of each year, each executive
- department, military department, and independent establishment shall
- publish in the Federal Register, and provide in such other manner as
- will notify users of information of the department or establishment a
- notice of-
- "(A) the availability of the report prepared under subsection (g),
- and
- "(B) a period of not less than 90 days for submission by the public
- of comments regarding the information dissemination policies and
- practices of the department or establishment, including comments
- regarding-
- "(i) the types of information the department or establishment
- collects and disseminates,
- "(ii) the methods and outlets the department or establishment uses
- to store and disseminate information,
- "(iii) the prices charged by the department or establishment, or
- such outlet, for the information, and
- "(iv) the validity, reliability, timeliness, and usefulness to the
- public of the information.
- "(2) Comments received under this subsection by a department or
- independent establishment shall be available for inspection to the
- public.
- "(i) Before discontinuing an information product or service, an
- agency shall-
- "(1) publish in the Federal Register, or provide by other means
- adequate to inform users of information of the agency, a notice of a
- period of not less than 120 days for submission by the public of
- comments regarding that discontinuation,
- "(2) include in that notice an explanation of the reasons for the
- discontinuation, and
- "(3) consider comments received pursuant to the notice.
- "(j) Each agency shall-
- "(1) disseminate information in useful modes and through
- appropriate outlets, with adequate documentation, software, indexes, or
- other resources that will permit and broadenr public access to
- Government information;
-
- "(2) store and disseminate information products and services in
- standardized record formats; and
- "(3) use depository libraries, national computer networks, and
- other distribution channels that improve public access to Government
- information.
- "(k)(1) Except as specially authorized by statute, an agency shall
- not-
- "(A) charge more than the incremental cost of disseminating an
- information product or service; or
- "(B) charge any royalty or other fee for any use or redissemination
- of Government information.
- "(2) For purposes of this subsection, the incremental cost of
- disseminating an information product or service does not include any
- portion of the cost of collecting, organizing, or processing
- information disseminated through the product or service.
- "(l)(1) The Archivist of the United States and the Director of the
- National Institite of Standards and Technology shall jointly issue and
- periodically revise model performance standards under which agencies
- shall be encouraged to provide access to public records.
- "(2) Standards issued under this subsection shall include the
- establishment of a period within which an agency, upon request, shall
- provide by mail or other means a copy of any decision, rule, notice,
- docket filing, press release, or other public document of the
- agency.".
-
- SEC. 4. STANDARDS FOR ACCESS TO PUBLIC RECORDS.
-
- The Archivist of the United States and the Director of the National
- Institute of Standards and Technology shall jointly issue model
- performance standards for providing access to agency records, under
- section 552(1) of title 5, United States Code (as added by Section 3),
- by not later than 1 year after the enactment of this Act.
- 137 Cong. Rec. E3241-01, 1991 WL 196219 (Cong.Rec.) END OF DOCUMENT
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