Book Description
OMB Watch's particular interests in federal capacity to protect the public through regulatory policy, free access to government information, and the public's right to know about the risks to which it is exposed have led us repeatedly to the Paperwork Reduction Act, the OMB Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs created by that act, and OIRA's implementation of paperwork and regulatory review. [...] It should be supplanted with a new mandate for the Information Age: as a requirement for OIRA to work with agencies on identifying ways to use information technology to reduce the burden of information collection without reducing the quantity, quality, or frequency of information for the public. [...] The 1995 reauthorization changed all that and included a new purpose: to "provide for the dissemination of public information on a timely basis, on equitable terms, and in a manner that promotes the utility of the information to the public and makes effective use of information technology." This theme is indicative of a significant change in thinking about the purposes and uses of government infor. [...] In the 1995 reauthorization Congress mandated the creation of the Government Information Locator Service (GILS) to assist agencies and the public in locating information and promoting information sharing and equitable access by the public. [...] Among these ideas: • "open peer review," or creating an end-run around the balance requirements of the Federal Advisory Committee Act by throwing peer review open to the Internet, and allowing the legions of industry-funded scientists to overwhelm scientific assessment of policy issues; • enshrining in law the executive order in which the White House arrogates to itself the power to interfere in a.