THE
TREADMILL DESK
Dan
Critchett:
“How’s this for
one-upsmanship?”
☞
I love it! Not exactly clear to me how well I’d type while walking (and
aren’t you supposed to swing your arms when you walk?), but not a
problem: At $1,999, I’m not likely to find out.
good
news
Things
are getting better. We’re gradually getting our confidence back; GM has
paid off its loan 5 years early (thank you, Toyota); the health care reform
freight train is finally rolling; financial reform will pass next; energy
grants are being issued to encourage weatherization (once people see how much
their neighbors are saving, they’ll want to save, too); New York
City’s teacher “rubber rooms” are finally closing (just one
indication of the new energy in education reform); we’ve cut the
maintenance of 700 nuclear warheads from our budget; the Dow is up 70% from its
low (and many stocks are up three- and five- and ten-fold) – and lots
more.
But
I wouldn’t be surprised to see some stock market declines ahead.
It’s great for the long-term that the S.E.C. and Congress are finally
restoring some oversight and regulation and safeguards to the financial sector
– but I wouldn’t be surprised to see a short-term downdraft in
stock prices. It’s great for the long-term that we’ll soon be
restoring the Clinton/Gore tax rates for the top 2% – but the stock
market usually declines ahead of tax hikes. It’s great that the Dow is
up 70% from its low – but you can never rule out a down-draft after such
a run, especially when so many really tough problems remain (not to mention the
occasional earthquake, volcano, and hurricane).
TRANSPARENCY
I’m
a couple of weeks late bringing this to your attention, but I think it’s
another reason to thank you for voting for Obama:
THE
WHITE HOUSE
Office
of the Press Secretary
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 7, 2010
Obama
Administration Marks Major Open Government Milestone
All
Cabinet agencies release open government plans and highlight
flagship
initiatives on transparency, participation, collaboration
WASHINGTON, D.C. –
Today, President Obama hailed the release of open government plans by all Cabinet agencies – the latest milestone in
his Administration’s unprecedented efforts to erase the long-standing
barriers between the American people and the government. These plans are
the agencies’ strategic roadmap for making transparency, citizen
participation, and collaboration part of the way they work.
“For too long, Washington
has closed itself off from the oversight of the American public,
resulting in information that’s difficult to find, taxpayer dollars that
disappear without a trace, and lobbyists that wield undue influence,”
said President Obama. “That’s why my Administration is taking
concrete steps to build a government that’s more transparent, open and
accountable. And now that these plans are published online, we hope
the American people will play their part and collaborate with us to provide
oversight and improve upon this information. Together, we won’t
just build a more efficient and effective government, but a stronger democracy
as well.”
The plans released Wednesday
make agency operations and data more transparent, while creating new ways for
citizens to have an active voice in their government. In addition, each
agency has identified at least one “flagship initiative” – a
signature open government innovation in the agency. Examples include:
·
Department of Health and Human
Services’ Community Health Data Initiative:
This initiative will publish online a large-scale Community Health Data Set
– a wealth of easily accessible, downloadable information data on
community health care costs, quality, access, and public health. HHS will
work with outside experts and citizens to take advantage of the new data to
raise awareness of community health performance and spark improvements.
·
Department of Energy’s Open Energy
Information Initiative: DOE has launched Open Energy
Information (OpenEI.org), a new open-source web platform that opens DOE
resources and data to the public. The free, editable, and evolving
wiki-platform will help to deploy clean energy technologies across the country
and the world. OpenEI.org also will provide technical resources,
including U.S. lab tools, which can be used by developing countries as they
move toward clean energy deployment.
·
Department of Veterans Affairs Innovation
Initiative: The VA Innovation Initiative (VAi2) will invite VA
employees, private sector entrepreneurs, and academic leaders to contribute the
best ideas for innovations to increase Veteran access to VA services, reduce or
control costs of delivering those services, enhance the performance of VA
operations, and improve the quality of service Veterans and their families
receive. The VA Innovation Initiative will identify, prioritize, fund,
test, and deploy the most promising solutions to the VA’s most important
challenges.
·
Department of Housing and Urban
Development’s Homelessness Prevention Resources Initiative:
Many agencies and organizations struggle with the task of capturing information
about the homeless. Even more difficult is the task of predicting when
and where homelessness will strike. HUD believes that homelessness can be
averted by combining information from multiple agencies and using the data to
identify communities that may be at a tipping point towards increased
homelessness. HUD will work to develop a set of tools and processes to
help predict at-risk communities, allowing the Department to take proactive
steps to combat it.
The White House website tracks the progress of those agencies required to meet
the open government
milestones. Independent agencies are not
mandated to participate, though many, like the Peace
Corps and the Corporation for National and
Community Service, have taken on the challenge
to open their practices to greater transparency and public participation.
In addition to the Open
Government Plans, the Administration is releasing new policy guidance involving
the use of social
media and the Paperwork Reduction Act, improving
transparency in the rulemaking process, and
setting the process by which the government will collect and publish, for the
first time ever, subaward
data for all federal grants and contracts.
This last piece is in line with the Federal Funding Accountability and
Transparency Act, which then-Senator Obama coauthored in 2006 with Senator Tom
Coburn of Oklahoma.
Background on the
White House Open Government Initiative
The Administration’s
open-government efforts began on the President’s first full day in office,
when he signed a presidential memorandum that established transparency,
participation, and collaboration as the hallmarks of a more efficient,
accountable government. That same memorandum directed the Federal Chief
Technology Officer (CTO) to issue recommendations for creating a more
transparent, participatory, and collaborative government.
To that end, the White House
Open Government Initiative and the CTO partnered with the American people to
solicit expertise from outside of Washington. The three-phase public
consultation involved thousands of Americans commenting on and shaping policy
approaches that were incorporated in the December 2009 Open
Government Directive. The Administration
released an Open
Government Progress Report to coincide with the
Directive, outlining the steps that the federal government has implemented to
break down those barriers to public participation and agency transparency.
☞ Things are getting better.
APRIL
22
It’s
Earth Day. Try not to muck it up.