White House Gets Green by Putting Federal Budget Online 206
coondoggie writes "Looking to save $1 million, 20 tons of paper, or close to 500 trees, the White House said today President Bush's 2009 Federal Budget will for the first time be posted online. The E-Budget will be available for downloading at the Office of Management and Budget Web site on Feb. 4. Typically the White House has paper-bombed congress and anyone else who wanted to read the budget with a tome which can reach 3,000 pages and weighed multiple pounds each."
The page uses browser exploits (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:The page uses browser exploits (Score:4, Funny)
I'll give the government this, they have more imagination than me, I couldn't come up with 3000 pages of new ways to spend other people's money.
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I could. If I can't find a job, will you vote me ?
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> come up with 3000 pages of new ways to spend other people's money.
Oh, neither could they, but you don't seem to understand what a budget is. A budget is not a list of new ideas. It's a detailed accounting of where all the money is allocated. (This differs from a budget *report*, which is a detailed accounting of where all the money *went*, and how that differs from where the budget said it should go -- which, in the ca
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You must not have a wife to help you with that. I couldn't do it alone..
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Re:The page uses browser exploits (Score:5, Insightful)
Doing the math, it appears the Big Dig was about 1/70th the price of the Iraq war. (Oh, and did I mention tens of thousands of people not being slaughtered?)
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Re:The page uses browser exploits (Score:4, Funny)
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But knowing this administration, the paint would no doubt be lead-based...
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But knowing this administration, the paint would no doubt be lead-based...
So let me get this straight:
The White House, under President Bush, does something that just about everyone considers green, savings hundreds of trees, and is even a bit geeky, and the only thing you people can do is bash him?!? I have never seen a group of people who were more close minded and blinded
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There will be some self serving reason this has been done, whether to save money so it can be siphoned off elsewhere, or perhaps to increase bandwidth usage as people download instead (im sure bush has ties to isps/telcos, but doesn't stand to benefit from the government printing office having mo
The Journey of a Thousand Miles (Score:5, Insightful)
This is an exercise that is left to the reader.
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This is an exercise that is left to the reader.
Do you think your representative actually reads or crafts legislation?
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Or others to modify it en-route as you download it.
I think it's a step forward. I mean, these days money is electronic, based on thin air. So is the budget. And now voting too. It's good that they have finally given up pretending.
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That would be the democratic ideal, but the fact us none of us live in democratic countries. We will in representative 'democracies' where you vote for some arsehole who will lie to you, and then he ignores what he promised as he gets to be pretty much a dictator for the rest of his term.
Voting someone out of office is difficult as all our current systems favour incumbency, and in any case the other guy is just as bad because they receive money from the same contributors probably.
cash money (Score:5, Funny)
Really? I thought they got green by taking it out of your paycheck?
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Really? I thought they got green by taking it out of your paycheck?
Net Savings: $0 (Score:5, Informative)
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Because office lasers and related supplies cost more than a bulk printing center.
They could probably buy every member of congress a Kindle and still save in the end.
Actually.
Why DONT they buy every member of congress a kindle, that way they can get instant EVDO downloads of every bill that is ever submitted to congress, whenever, wherever they are? And search it.
Re:Net Savings: $0 (Score:5, Insightful)
Some states now require public online (Score:3, Insightful)
I believe Texas is one of them. It apparently does cause legislators a lot of grief to the point many try to find ways to eliminate or bypass the requirement.
If only we could force the US government to be totally open people might get disgusted with the current crop of Democrats and Republicans to maybe do something
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That anyone in congress actually cares about reading any of the bills.
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Re:Net Savings: $0 (Score:5, Interesting)
All joking aside, the ability to index and search the budget should make it more accessible for inspection. Theoretically, you could apply filters to the budget and print out many categorized versions that would make it easier to see just how much money is being spent on various things.
Now if they'd only release this information as a importable relational schema...
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revision history - accountability (Score:5, Interesting)
Serious. My team can't check in code without leaving a revision history, why should congressional staffers be able to modify legislation without leaving an auditable (revertable) trail? This would do wonders for our transparency and accountability problems in congress.
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Also, earmarks don't get added "after committee". A committee can't report a bill back to the floor without the committee voting on it, and the voted-upon version is what gets reported back. You might be thinking of conference committees, which are supposed to reconcile the differences between versions of a bill passed by the House and Senate. They do get
Still savings (and losses) (Score:2)
The big advantage is accessibility (Score:5, Informative)
The headline of the article implies that this is intended to be some kind of environmental decision, but nothing in the article appears to back it up. In fact, the guy quoted is primarily going on about the much-improved accessibility of the budget. It'll now actually be possible for people to get it (rather than forking out an impossible $200 just to read it), and being in an electronic form, it's much easier to search through and index, not to mention only reading or printing the bits you happen to be interested in.
At the moment I'm working at a government department (non-US) where we've been publishing information online for a while now, [smh.com.au]. People love it, both inside the organisation and those in the general public (journalists, opposition politicians, economists, and whoever else may have an interest). This is largely to do with the Official Information Act which, in New Zealand, basically states that government departments have to make available whatever information people ask for, unless there's a good reason not to. Over time it's resulted in most government entities publishing large amounts of information even when it's not requested, on the assumption that someone may ask for it sooner or later.
The annual budget is probably one of the most important blocks of information and it's also one of the hardest, because it tends to be full of massive amounts of tables and figures from all over the place and from all kinds of different sources and people who often like to do things in very different ways. Even in a small country it's a big logistical exercise. Recently redeveloping the website to make things more accessible was a 2 to 3 year job, simply because of the amount of historical data that had to be gone through and re-formatted with more accessible markup, with people either using scripts or just manually trawling through it. I guess the nice thing about it now, though, is that there are systems in place to make sure that new data gets marked up usefully in the first place.
Budgets are huge things to manage, as much because of the massive amounts of organisation that have to go into collecting the information and compiling it all together in a way that can be printed at all. Hopefully getting it out as a PDF would be the first step for the White House towards getting it more accessible.
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-matthew
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The reason is that printing shops can do the printing far cheaper and more green then your office printer.
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Surely the solution is obvious then: outsource the printing to a printing press. That way the White House is green because it doesn't print anything, the Congress gets printed copies, and the economy gets a boost from the money paid to the printing press. Environment and economy both benefit. It's a perfect scheme :).
Useful? Maybe not as much as you think... (Score:5, Funny)
-G
Re:Useful? Maybe not as much as you think... (Score:5, Funny)
Missing forest behind the trees (Score:2)
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Yep but they should start by looking for their local pork. And then tell your congressperson that you don't want it.
I already tried that with mine over the USS Forrestal (CV-59). On a good note it did get retired even over the objections of my Democratic Senator.
A Few Thousand Page PDF (Score:2)
that is 3,000.
THREE THOUSAND
Nobody is going to read it.
Re:A Few Thousand Page PDF (Score:4, Interesting)
Mission accomplished.
Did you see that scene in Fahrenheit 911 when they faxed the patriot act to congressmen overnight and then voted on it the first thing in the morning?
British politics may involve a lot of shouting and require people in strange wigs, but at least the read the laws and debate them and modify them several times before voting on anything.
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require people in strange wigs
Is the strange wig actually required as part of formal dress or do the MPs wear them just because they are an interesting, if somewhat archaic, piece of optional costume? I notice that foreign dignitaries, when speaking in parliament, never wear the wig. Apparently they don't keep any loaners in the cloakroom for visiting dignitaries so I guess it is "bring your own wig" (BYOW) or else do without. Is the whole wig gig were they get the term "big wig" from?
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True, but at least there is a chance for bad laws to be stopped. Tony Blair's first defeat was over the proposed 90 day detention for suspected terrorists that have not been charged with anything, a really bad idea because a 90 day prison sentence is a rather serious thing to give someone presumed innocent.
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Before: No one read it, and they wasted a small forest printing it.
Now: No one reads it, and the webserver wastes a few kilowatt-hours sitting idle.
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But you can safely bet that a lot of people will print it.
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Many more people read the relevant parts.
3000 page's for a document that covers that much detail isn't bad.
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You think they read it when it was printed out for them? This measure really is just about the environment since they know making all those bound copies was just busywork anyway.
Reading the whole thing isn't the point (Score:2)
And, yes, if the final budget is available the same way, with the revision history, you better believe I'm going to make sure that none of my congressmembers voted to cut funding on things I feel are worthwhile.
Wrong! (Score:5, Informative)
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I can understand that an approved document has to be put online, but this is bushes Proposal for 2009, which has yet to be approved IIRC.
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Have we really solved or saved anything? (Score:2)
What is stopping them from downloading it, and printing it themselves? Or giving it to an intern who runs off ten copies instead of having to open up just one from the regular post mail?
Have we really solved anything? Now, if the budget was in a PDF that prevented printing, NOW we'd be somewhere...
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Why would they? It's not like they read it anyway.
It's a start, the postal system should be next. (Score:2)
500 trees is a pittance compared to what could be saved.
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Green? (Score:3, Insightful)
The issue of going paperless to save the planet was always bogus. Driving a mile in a car has a much larger impact on the planet than printing a page.
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Explain how not printing a page can be equally, or more wasteful than printing one.
Driving a mile in a car has a much larger impact on the planet than printing a page.
How is this relevant? They are two completely separate actions. One will in no way affect the other, and one (driving a car) is generally known to be a very environmentally expensive thing to do anyway.
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What does your computer run on? (Score:2)
The first idea that comes to mind is electricity. The library of fiction books I read every year took a few hundred pounds of paper to print. I spend a few weeks each summer re-reading them. If you're going to be reading the same thing over and over, at some point the amount of electricity wasted in leaving the computer running exceeds the amount used to manufacture the same book.
Re:Green? (Score:4, Informative)
The issue of going paperless to save the planet was always bogus.
On the contrary, making something that will be widely read available online will have only a small effect of power usage. If you factor in the amount of power used by the machines that harvested and created the paper it WOULD have been printed on, I imagine there is a pretty big savings.
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That's not necessarily true. A cynic would cite the adage "they have to be seen to be doing something" to counter your reasoning.
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Some good points, but worth pointing out that that strawberries don't incur the environmental problems [wikipedia.org] associated with paper production before they arrive on your plate. Strawberries may not be the greatest example here, but you get the point.
The other issue is that paper is recyclable. That's "recyclable" as in you can, for the most part, put it
Open to all (Score:2)
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Not "doxnloadable" - should read "downloadable"
Time to wash the keyboard
Must be a short PDF... (Score:3, Funny)
Not quite... (Score:3, Insightful)
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You don't need to outspend every other nation in the world, combined, when you are surrounded by two friendly nations and the world's largest oceans.
I didn't see anything about education in that document so that is supposed to be left up to the states.
The Constitution grants the authority to Congress to promote the general welfare and make laws to that effect, and your general welfare is going to be pretty piss poor without
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Funny. Seems to me that defense is one of the top priorities, according to the constitution. I didn't see anything about education in that document so that is supposed to be left up to the states.
Sure, defense was one of the top priorities of the federal government, but that was when everything else was handled by the states. If the federal government had the kind of budget that it did when the constitution was written, then devoting such a large percentage of it to defense would be absolutely fine.
Re:Must be a short PDF... (Score:4, Informative)
Right...so the "no child left behind" mandates that have to be followed in order to get federal funds show that state governments run the schools how? The states can choose to receive no federal funds or follow federal guidelines and receive federal funds. Kind of a catch 22 the way I see it.
Do not print this out. (Score:2)
How many office printers are chugging away on this print job? (And probably not even printed in full duplex...)
This is Silly.... Congress paper bombs more. (Score:2)
Googling from 1988 to the present the office of the President has never submitted a 3000 page budget request. coondoggie is pulling that number out of his/her butt (or I'm using the wrong search terms).
Congress re-submitted a 2000+ page document to GWB in 2007.
The budget is a request for funds, granted by the constitution to the Presid
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The budget is a request for funds, granted by the constitution to the President of the United States.
No, it's not. It is granted by the Constitution to Congress. They have delegated by implicit consent (i.e. lack of objection) to the presidents of the 20th and 21st Century who have assumed the duty of wrangling the agencies and departments of the United States government and producing a request which Congress can ignore.
The president has no Constitutional powers over the budget; Congress is free to ignore the request and write one of their own. The difficulties in passage (getting the president's signa
good start (Score:4, Insightful)
I would like to see the government's bank statements on line. If the city gets the 7.5 billion CAD a year from the taxes, I would like to see the current balance, look at all expenses in detail. If a million is given away here [splatto.net], another million there [thestar.com], I would like to see the details of every transaction.
If the city mayor suffers a defeat on his crazy tax proposals (something he concocted instead of looking at balancing the budget the correct way, without immediately imposing new taxes the NDP way,) then the mayor wants to punish the city [theglobeandmail.com] with meaningless reduction in working hours of community centers and libraries, I want to see the savings in the budget. Of-course the truth is that there was no savings, since the union city workers are still sitting in those centers and libraries because the union will not allow the city not to pay these people and the only sufferers are the citizens who cannot use these public resources.
The government does not want the citizens to be able to see detail of every dollar that is spent, because if we did see these details, we would revolt.
Check again (Score:2)
2009? (Score:2)
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It'll be worse on the trees (Score:2)
Of course, we'll be able to grep through it, so it's cool.
Not green at all. Why? (Score:2)
Page 1: Preamble
Page 2: Several billion to blow shit up in middle east
Page 3: Perks for politicians. Lots of air travel etc.
Oh yeah. I like a green budget. Just because you put it online and maybe avoid printing a few copies, doesn't make it a green budget. That's like saying loggers that use the right bin for their recycling are conservationalists. In a few generations these few generations will be known as the scum that caused half of the problems being faced while making ourselv
Searchable (Score:2)
Instead, not a single person will ever read it, because Congress will develop billion-dollar software to automate the task. Eventually the budget will consist of the words "whatever, dude", though the inability of computers to analyze that will produce the same results as today: random money for arbitrary projects, as long as it's mor
Have AT&T mail the hardcopy... (Score:2)
Hmm... Just about the size of one of those iPhone bills from AT&T.
When did W get on the internet??? (Score:2)
Saving Trees! (Score:2)
Re:quick, somebody stick that on a wiki somewhere (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:quick, somebody stick that on a wiki somewhere (Score:4, Interesting)
Wikisource? (Score:2)
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The specs for a 1 person software development project that would take about a month of work could spawn anywhere between 5 and 100 pages.
Specs for just about anything (software or otherwise) are always much bigger than an average budget of the same scale.
Re:next debate question (Score:4, Funny)
Answer:"No I call the plumber to do all toilet repairs".
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Plus saving a million dollars is a good thing, and being able to get it in a digital form is cool, and useful.
Farming isn't magically green. (Score:3, Interesting)
Things aren't magically "green" just because they are farmed.
I'd be highly surprised if the energy used in viewing the pages you were interested in online (and probably selectively printing specific bits out) were to be more than the energy involved in getting 3000 pages of hardcopy from a seed to your desk.
Re:Paperless is good (Score:5, Funny)
Seriously. You know that trillion dollar deficit? Two words: Ink Cartridges.
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