CRS Reports: Information, Please

Information Please

The Congressional Research Service (CRS) was established in 1914 as Congress’s supplier of nonpartisan research and analysis. Its reports are neither classified nor copyrighted, but they’ve long been the exclusive property of lawmakers, who distribute them as they see fit. Taxpayers supply the agency’s $100 million annual budget, inspiring open-government groups and some lawmakers, including Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.) to push for public release of CRS reports.

“The Library of Congress is a national treasure. The public deserves ready access to the reports it prepares for Congress, and easy online retrieval is the obvious answer,” Leahy said. “We need to keep moving toward that goal.”

But each time the topic comes up, it runs into a wall erected by lawmakers such as Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), who “like many members of Congress, views CRS as an extension of his staff,” said Aaron Saunders, Stevens’s spokesman. If the reports were made public, “every time a member requests a particular document, the public may infer that he’s staking out a particular policy position.”

CRS’s director, Daniel P. Mulhollan, has left it to Congress to decide. “Once a report is produced for the Congress, it becomes the property of the Congress,” he said in a statement. “CRS itself has no public role and is prohibited by law from publishing its work.”

It’s up to members and committees, Mulhollan said, to release the reports “directly, by inclusion in congressional publications or through their own Web sites.”

Open-government groups have a problem with that: “CRS is Congress’s brain, and it’s useful for the public to be plugged into it,” says Steven Aftergood, an open-government advocate who runs the Federation of American Scientists’ Secrecy News blog.

Aftergood and others have fought back by posting every CRS report they can find on their Web sites. But watchdog groups have released only about 10 percent of the total, not enough to reveal the patterns that suggest what Congress might do next.

Source: Washington Post

Shirl’s note:
We keep an eye on a number of sources, and we try and post every CRS report on DocuTicker that we can find. It has long been one of my personal rants that these things are not made publicly available immediately upon release, since the taxpayers are picking up the tab. We generally group the reports together by topic in each post. The Congressional Research Service category link on DocuTicker will display all of them.

See also: You Pay for This Research. Why Can’t You See It? (Wired News)

See also: Free Press? Don’t Tell The Congressional Research Service (Austin American-Statesman)

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