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Help Sunlight Open Up the Senate
Building on the achievements of the Open House Project, today we are launching a parallel initiative, the Open Senate Project. This bipartisan, collaborative project will study the Senate’s current information-sharing practices to recommend how to improve public access to the Senate’s work on the Web.
We hope that you to join us in figuring out what technological reforms we should recommend to the Senate so it can make its work more accessible and user-friendly online. You can do that by subscribing to Google group listed on the top right-hand corner of the Open Senate Project’s homepage. Through that online group, we’ll have an ongoing conversation and collaborative preparation of our recommendations.
John Wonderlich, program director for the Sunlight Foundation, will lead the effort in collaboration with project coordinators Josh Tauberer, creator of the nonpartisan Web site GovTrack.us, and Jon Henke, a former Senate staffer who now blogs at TheNextRight.com.
As John blogged recently, with your help, the Open House Project was successful in jumpstarting a public discussion that prompted the House of Representatives to make its work available online in new ways, including releasing legislative data in more user-friendly formats and establishing new rules that allow lawmakers to use Web services like YouTube and Twitter to communicate with their constituents.
But, we can’t do it without you. Together, we can open the Senate.
Posted: October 21st, 2008 Tags: Citizen Journalism, GovTrack, John Wonderlich, open house project, Open Senate Project, Senate, The NextRight.com, Transparency -
GovTrack.us Opens Source Code
Josh Tauberer, founder and creator of GovTrack.us (and Open House Project contributor), announced today that his site is now "officially totally open source." Josh’s broadened commitment to opening the code that runs his site is very exciting; GovTrack can now benefit from the same kind of public examination and participation that the site encourages from citizens in dealing with their national legislature.
While the database of legislative information is in the public domain, "the front-end and back-end are licensed under the new GNU AGPL license, which basically means that you cannot modify the files without making the modifications publicly available," writes Josh. Scott Wells, Sunlight’s administrator, and an enthusiastic open standards advocate, observed that this license is "the fun, new one", proving that Josh is as adept at licensing options as he is at screen-scraping and designing the semantic web.
Greg Elin, on the Sunlight Labs blog, suggests that everyone have at the source code. Josh deserves some reinforcements, after singlehandedly putting together such a complex site on which so many other sites rely.Posted: April 3rd, 2008 Tags: GovTrack -
Insanely Useful Sites: GovTrack.us

GovTrack.us is a perfect choice to be our first review as an Insanely Useful Website. GovTrack is one of the original web 2.0 type sources for government information: both an excellent example of a new model of political information distribution, and a compelling story of Web-programming genius expressed as an ambitious civic undertaking.Josh Tauberer, Govtrack’s creator and proprietor, has gone far beyond building a simple tool to help track congressional proceedings; Josh’s creation has become a fundamental fixture in terms of both government information and structured data, a result of his extensive knowledge of both advanced linguistics, and computer programming. Josh’s willingness to volunteer his expertise also led to him helping to form and author the recommendations of the Open House Project, a separate Sunlight project.
Here’s Josh Tauberer briefly telling the story of Govtrack: (click below to play)
http://www.sunlightfoundation.com/files/mp3/govtrack.mp3GovTrack’s user oriented design and creative combinations of different data sources have garnered praise from notable sources, including Peggy Garvin, The New York Times, and The Washington Post, and also help make GovTrack useful for a variety of different users.
There’s a lot more to this review; click below to keep reading…
Key to becoming an Insanely Useful Site is the ease of access to the site’s data for an amateur seeker of political information — or in Internet speak, a noob. GovTrack provides numerous tools to help amateurs find information that is relevant to their immediate interests in Congress, whether that be electoral (should I vote for my current congressperson?) or because of a specific interest in a particular bill. Usually the point of entry to government information for an amateur is a desire to learn about who represents them.
So, say I have a member of Congress, which, in reality, I don’t (D.C.), and let’s say I live in Newton, Massachusetts, which means that Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) is my congressman. But let’s pretend that I don’t know that. When I get to the home page of GovTrack I notice in the upper left hand corner that I can search for my representative. If I don’t know his/her last name I can click to a "zoomable district map". The "zoomable district map" — it takes a second to load — is a Google mash-up map with every Congressional district visible and clickable. I can zoom into Massachusetts and see that Newton is within the boundaries of the 4th CD of Massachusetts and therefore I am represented by Rep. Frank.Now that I’ve found my Representative I can click through to their individual page. GovTrack’s individual member pages are incredibly detailed and use supplemental information often not found on member’s official Web sites or easily accessible through the THOMAS Web site. Each individual page contains a list of recent votes, a link to past votes, sponsored and cosponsored bills, speeches on the floor of the House, committee membership, and links to campaign contributions and video clips. For someone simply searching for a way to easily track their member of Congress, GovTrack provides RSS feeds of all information related to your representative and the ability to receive e-mail alerts on your member of Congress’ activity.
If you want to go deeper into the Congressional process you can follow the committees on which your member of Congress sits. For this example, Barney Frank is chairman of the House Financial Services Committee. The committee’s page holds similar information about the committee that is available on member pages. Each committee page provides a list of members on the committee with pictures, all bills before the committee, all bills that have been enacted into law and bills that have not been enacted. RSS feeds and e-mail updates are also available for the committee. Unfortunately, quite a good deal of committee information is simply not released to the public either at all (committee votes) or in a timely fashion (committee transcripts), so GovTrack is not able to track these important pieces of committee data.
The best part about these member and committee pages is the intuitive design of each one and the ease of understanding the information. The data is not cluttered and confusing, as THOMAS often can be, and the information is presented in a thoughtful way, so that the amateur can find the information they need without wading through piles of irrelevant and aggravating information or doing multiple unsuccessful searches.
Legislative Detail
While GovTrack’s greatest asset is its accessible presentation of information and ease of use, the expert and political professional will find numerous features useful that the amateur may not be seeking.
The bill pages are an excellent example of GovTrack’s accessible presentation directed at expert users. For example, GovTrack presents bills with highlighted text to show which changes have been made as the bill makes its way through Congress. The recent bill for relief after the bridge collapse in Minneapolis is a perfect example. As you can see the colors red, yellow, and blue respectively denote removed text, changed text, and inserted text into the bill. GovTrack also provides all previous versions of the bill with highlighted text so you can track changes from introduction to passage. This allows any researcher or political expert to immediately look at a bill that they are following and know what was changed without having to spend fifteen minutes or an hour parsing the text.Another great feature of GovTrack for researchers is the ability to search votes all the way back to 1993. If you are trying to compile or compare information on particular members of Congress and their voting records, GovTrack is clearly the place to do your research.
A favorite feature is the ability to search by subject terms. While, unfortunately, you can’t add your own, there are a large number of subject terms to search by. Tracked events alerts are available for each subject term and are very useful for a busy researcher or blogger who needs immediate updates on bills in their issue area of choice.
Always important to anyone doing political work professionally is the ability to check primary sources. Each bill page provides a link to the original text on THOMAS if you need to check the information presented on GovTrack to that provided by the Library of Congress. (For example, just this morning we used GovTrack to find S.1, followed the link to THOMAS, and used THOMAS to find a good .pdf version for printing.)
The massive number of RSS feeds on vote, member, and bill information is also a great asset of GovTrack. Finally, GovTrack provides an RSS feed on all upcoming committee hearings. This is an excellent feature if you need to keep up on what’s happening on the Hill in coming weeks.Web Developers and Tech Enthusiasts
For developers and tech enthusiasts, GovTrack.us is a vast experiment in the political application of structured information. By converting the THOMAS versions of bills into RDF and XML, the data gains new uses, more easily mixed with other data sources. For example, OpenCongress.org takes GovTrack’s bill data and combines it with news feeds and blog coverage from technorati to provide further cultural context for legislative action. Whereabill.org uses GovTrack data to physically locate the bill in the Capitol complex, and highlight it on a google map.
APIs (Application Programming Interfaces) are the techincal mechanism by which database proprietors permit other servers to access their information. A well known example would probably be google maps. If you’ve ever used a "store locator" when shopping, and had the location appear in a google map, then the site where you entered the search also sent a query to the google maps database, and then combined your entry with the results from the google maps result.
GovTrack accesses APIs to function, and also creates APIs to empower other sites to build on the data sets that Josh is creating. For example, the zoomable district maps page is built on an API, and is then available as a new API for others to use.
Political and legislative information are becoming more useful as they become both more standardized, and also more decentralized (and easily distributed). These developments only happen when new data standards are developed and utilized, and the information released in its most useful form, without copyright restriction. GovTrack is a huge leap in that direction, implementing well conceived data standards and empowering web designers to integrate congressional data into their projects.
Written by John Wonderlich and Paul Blumenthal
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Legislative Sleuths
There are really a surprising number of Websites that track legislative activity, most of them the result of enterprising individuals. Probably the database with the biggest reach is the one maintained by the Washington Post. Project Vote Smart’s probably has the longest history. TechPolitics (which houses and mashes census data and other government information along with voting records and provides bill tracking) focuses on House votes and is headed by the very accomplished Ken Colburn. GovTrac, founded and run by linguistics’s graduate student Joshua Tauberer,has an automated system to track bills, issue-by-issue, Congress-wide.
Then there’s Congress Merge, Voter Information Services’ Congressional Toolbox, and Progressive Punch, the latter of which has a really friendly interface.
I’m guessing there are a lot more of these sites and I’d like to build a really comprehensive list. My sense is that a lot of these folks do not know one another and that there might be some kind of terrific synergy out there waiting to happen if Sunlight can connect them.
Let me know what I am missing so we can compile a comprehensive list. And of course, we’ll make it available.
Posted: May 5th, 2006 Tags: Congress Merge, GovTrack, Progressive Punch, Project Vote Smart, Sunlight, TechPolitics
