Congressional Record: February 11, 2003 (Senate)
Page S2222-S2226

 
                  STATEMENTS ON SUBMITTED RESOLUTIONS 
				  
				  
                                 
      SENATE RESOLUTION 54--TO PROVIDE INTERNET ACCESS TO CERTAIN 
   CONGRESSIONAL DOCUMENTS, INCLUDING CERTAIN CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH 
SERVICE PUBLICATIONS, CERTAIN SENATE GIFT REPORTS, AND SENATE AND JOINT 
                          COMMITTEE DOCUMENTS

  Mr. McCAIN (for himself, Mr. Leahy, Mr. Lieberman, and Mr. Harkin) 
submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the Committee 
on Rules and Administration:

                               S. Res. 54

       Whereas it is the sense of the Senate that--
       (1) it is often burdensome, difficult, and time-consuming 
     for citizens to obtain access to public records of the United 
     States Congress;
       (2) congressional documents that are placed in the 
     Congressional Record are made available to the public 
     electronically by the Superintendent of Documents under the 
     direction of the Public Printer;
       (3) other congressional documents are also made available 
     electronically on websites maintained by Members of Congress 
     and Committees of the Senate and the House of 
     Representatives;
       (4) a wide range of public records of the Congress remain 
     inaccessible to the public;
       (5) the public should have easy and timely access, 
     including electronic access, to public records of the 
     Congress;
       (6) the Congress should use new technologies to enhance 
     public access to public records of the Congress; and
       (7) an informed electorate is the most precious asset of 
     any democracy; and
       Whereas it is the sense of the Senate that it will foster 
     democracy--
       (1) to ensure public access to public records of the 
     Congress;
       (2) to improve public access to public records of the 
     Congress; and
       (3) to enhance the electronic public access, including 
     access via the Internet, to public records of the Congress: 
     Now, therefore, be it
       Resolved, That the Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate shall 
     make information available to the public in accordance with 
     the provisions of this resolution.

     SEC. 2. AVAILABILITY OF CERTAIN CRS INFORMATION.

       (a) Availability of Information.--
       (1) In general.--The Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate, in 
     consultation with the Director of the Congressional Research 
     Service, shall make available through a centralized 
     electronic system, for purposes of access and retrieval by 
     the public under section 4 of this resolution, all 
     information described in paragraph (2) that is available 
     through the Congressional Research Service website.
       (2) Information to be made available.--The information to 
     be made available under paragraph (1) is:
       (A) Congressional Research Service Issue Briefs.
       (B) Congressional Research Service Reports that are 
     available to Members of Congress through the Congressional 
     Research Service website.
       (C) Congressional Research Service Authorization of 
     Appropriations Products and Appropriations Products.
       (b) Limitations.--
       (1) Confidential information.--Subsection (a) does not 
     apply to--
       (A) any information that is confidential, as determined 
     by--
       (i) the Director; or
       (ii) the head of a Federal department or agency that 
     provided the information to the Congressional Research 
     Service; or
       (B) any documents that are the product of an individual, 
     office, or committee research request (other than a document 
     described in subsection (a)(2)).
       (2) Redaction and revision.--In carrying out this section, 
     the Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate, in consultation with the 
     Director of the Congressional Research Service, may--
       (A) remove from the information required to be made 
     available under subsection (a) the name and phone number of, 
     and any other information regarding, an employee of the 
     Congressional Research Service;
       (B) remove from the information required to be made 
     available under subsection (a) any material for which the 
     Director determines that making it available under subsection 
     (a) may infringe the copyright of a work protected under 
     title 17, United States Code; and
       (C) make any changes in the information required to be made 
     available under subsection (a) that the Director determines 
     necessary to ensure that the information is accurate and 
     current.
       (c) Manner.--The Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate, in 
     consultation with the Director of the Congressional Research 
     Service, shall make the information required under this 
     section available in a manner that is practical and 
     reasonable.

     SEC. 3. PUBLIC RECORDS OF THE SENATE.

       (a) In general.--The Secretary of the Senate, through the 
     Office of Public Records and in accordance with such 
     standards as the Secretary may prescribe, shall make reports 
     required under paragraph 2(a)(1)(B) and paragraph 4(b) of 
     Rule XXXV of the Standing Rules of the Senate available on 
     the Internet for purposes of access and retrieval by the 
     public within 10 days (Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays 
     excepted) after they are received.
       (b) Directory.--The Superintendent of Documents, under the 
     Direction of the Public Printer in the Government Printing 
     Office, shall include information about the documents made 
     available on the Internet under this section in the 
     electronic directory of Federal electronic information 
     required by section 4101(a)(1) of title 44, United States 
     Code.

     SEC. 4. METHOD OF ACCESS.

       (a) In General.--The information required to be made 
     available to the public on the Internet under this resolution 
     shall be made available as follows:
       (1) CRS information.--Public access to information made 
     available under section 2 shall be provided through the 
     websites maintained by Members and Committees of the Senate.
       (2) Public records.--Public access to information made 
     available under section 3 by the Secretary of the Senate's 
     Office of Public Records shall be provided through the United 
     States Senate website.
       (b) Editorial Responsibility for CRS Reports Online.--The 
     Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate is responsible for maintaining 
     and updating the information made available on the Internet 
     under section 2.

     SEC. 5. CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEE MATERIALS.

       It is the sense of the Senate that each standing and 
     special Committee of the Senate and each Joint Committee of 
     the Congress, in accordance with such rules as the committee 
     may adopt, should provide access via the Internet to 
     publicly-available committee information, documents, and 
     proceedings, including bills, reports, and official 
     transcripts of committee meetings that are open to the 
     public.

     SEC. 6. IMPLEMENTATION.

       The Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate shall establish the 
     database described in section 2(a) within 6 months after the 
     date of adoption of this resolution.

     SEC. 7. GAO STUDY.

       (a) In General.--Beginning 1 year after the date on which 
     the database described in section 2(a) is established, the 
     Sergeant-at-Arms shall request the Comptroller General to 
     examine the cost of implementing this resolution, other than 
     this section, with particular attention to the cost of 
     establishing and maintaining the database and submit a report 
     within 6 months thereafter. The Sergeant-at-Arms shall ask 
     the Comptroller General to include in the report 
     recommendations on how to make operations under this 
     resolution more cost-effective, and such other 
     recommendations for administrative changes or changes in law, 
     as the Comptroller General may determine to be appropriate.
       (b) Delivery.--The Sergeant-at-Arms shall transmit a copy 
     of the Comptroller General's report under subsection (a) to--
       (1) the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration;
       (2) the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and 
     Transportation;
       (3) the Senate Committee on the Judiciary; and
       (4) the Joint Committee of the Congress on the Library of 
     Congress.

  Mr. McCAIN. Mr. President, I am pleased to be joined today by 
Senators Leahy, Lieberman, and Harkin in submitting a resolution to 
make Congressional Research Service, CRS, reports, and other Senate 
documents, accessible over the Internet to the American people.
  CRS is well-known for producing high quality reports and issue briefs 
that are concise, factual, and unbiased--a rarity in Washington. Many 
of us rely on the work of CRS to make decisions on a wide variety of 
diverse legislative proposals, such as formulating policies on homeland 
security, determining the implications of war with Iraq, contemplating 
the future of the Internet, developing health care reform, and 
analyzing tax policy. Also, we routinely send CRS reports to our 
constituents in order to help them understand the important issues of 
our time.
  The sponsors of this resolution believe that it is important for the 
public

[[Page S2225]]

to have access to these CRS reports. The American public paid over $81 
million to fund CRS's operations in fiscal year 2002 alone. The 
informational reports covered by this resolution are not confidential 
or classified, and the public deserves to have access to them.
  By making these reports publicly available, the Senate will better 
serve an important function in helping to inform their constituents. 
Members of the public will be able to read these CRS products and 
receive a concise summary of issues that concern them. These reports 
also will help voters make decisions and petition their legislators on 
how to best represent them.
  Currently, corporations, universities, and other well-heeled entities 
often hire former Members of Congress as lobbyists to get access to 
these reports. However, the general public does not have access to 
these reports. Instead, the public has to obtain these reports through 
independent companies, such as Penny Hill Press, which charges almost 
$30 for each report. Otherwise, they must search through a variety of 
government and non-government web sites for outdated reports or get 
them from their Members of Congress through the mail. It is not fair 
for the American people to have to pay a third party or search all over 
the web for products for which they have already footed the bill.
  This resolution is drafted to set up a system for distributing CRS 
Reports that is similar to a pilot program ongoing in the House of 
Representatives. Under our resolution, the Senate Sergeant-at-Arms 
would establish and maintain a system for distribution of CRS 
documents. The public would only be able to access these documents 
through Senators' or Senate Committees' web pages. This system would 
allow Senators and Committee Chairmen to be able to choose which 
documents are made available to the public through their web page.
  This resolution also includes other safeguards to ensure that CRS is 
able to carry out its mission. Confidential information and reports 
done for confidential research requests would not be made available to 
the public. The resolution provides authorization for the Senate 
Sergeant-at-Arms to remove the names of CRS employees from these 
products to prevent the public from distracting CRS employees. In 
addition, the Senate Sergeant-at-Arms would be authorized to remove 
copyrighted information from the publicly-available reports. This 
resolution would ensure that the CRS' mission is not altered in any 
way, and that it cannot be open to liability suits.
  Finally, we recognize that cost concerns had been raised about prior 
versions of this legislation introduced in past Congresses. Yet, our 
understanding is that the House system of distribution has been 
achieved at a relatively low cost. We have designed this resolution to 
eliminate the cost burden to CRS by shifting the operation and 
maintenance of the system over to the Senate Sergeant-at-Arms. In 
addition, the Senate Sergeant-at-Arms is directed to ask the General 
Accounting Office, GAO, to evaluate the program after one year to 
explore how to make the operations more cost-effective.
  The resolution also would require the Senate Office of Public Records 
to put other selected documents related to Members' receipt of 
honoraria and travel reimbursement on the Internet. We have already 
voted to make this information available to the public. Unfortunately, 
the public can only get access to this information by personally 
visiting an office in the Hart building. This resolution would allow 
our constituents throughout the country to access this information more 
readily.
  This resolution has been endorsed by many groups, including the 
Project on Government Oversight, the Congressional Accountability 
Project, Intel, Computer & Communications Industry Association, the 
Center for Democracy and Technology, the American Library Association, 
SeeBeyond Technology Corporation, and others. I ask unanimous consent 
that these letters of support be printed in the Record.
  I urge my colleagues to support this resolution. The Internet offers 
a unique opportunity to allow the American people to have everyday 
access to important information about their government.
  There being no objection, the letters were ordered to be printed in 
the Record, as follows:

                                                    SeeBeyond,

                                    Reston, VA, February 11, 2003.
     Senator John McCain,
     Chairman, Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, 
         U.S. Senate, Washington, DC.
       Dear Chairman McCain: We are writing to express our support 
     for the Congressional Openness Act that allows constituents 
     easier and faster access to information through the Internet, 
     and to urge quick Senate passage of the bill.
       SeeBeyond is a software technology company that enables 
     Government agencies to communicate and share vital 
     information in real time to other federal agencies, state and 
     local Governments and most importantly constituents.
       The bill allows better ways for the Government to share 
     information, documents and proceedings, including bills, 
     reports and transcripts of committee meetings that educate 
     the public, and we commend your efforts to further the 
     Federal Government's work in this area.
       We are pleased to offer you our support of this legislation 
     and to encourage its swift passage by the full Senate.
           Sincerely,

                                               Sam Maccherola,

                                    Vice President, Public Sector,
     SeeBeyond Technology Corp.
                                  ____

                                      Congressional Accountability


                                                      Project,

                                  Portland, OR, February 11, 2003.
     Senator John McCain,
     U.S. Senate, Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, DC.
     Senator Patrick Leahy,
     U.S. Senate, Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, DC.
       Dear Senators McCain and Leahy: We heartily endorse your 
     resolution to place useful congressional documents on the 
     Internet, including Congressional Research Service (CRS) 
     Reports and Issue Briefs, CRS Authorization and Appropriation 
     products, and Senate gift disclosure reports. This resolution 
     is a simple and inexpensive way to improve our democracy.
       Citizens need access to congressional documents to 
     discharge their civic duties. Regrettable, the 20th Century 
     has come and gone, and yet Congress still has not put many of 
     its most important documents on the Internet. Your resolution 
     will help fix this problem.
       The Congressional Research Service is a taxpayer-funded 
     research arm of Congress. Their research materials are among 
     the best produced by the federal government. They explain, 
     with fairness and clarity, the controversies and complexities 
     surrounding the most pressing issues of our day. This 
     research belongs on the Internet. Taxpayers deserve easy 
     access to the documents we pay for.
       We applaud the resolution's directive that Senate 
     committees should ``provide access via the Internet to 
     publicly-available committee information, documents and 
     proceedings, including bills, reports, and official 
     transcripts of committee meetings that are open to the 
     public.''
       In 1822, James Madison explained why citizens need such 
     information: ``A popular government,'' he wrote, ``without 
     popular information, or the means of acquiring it, is but a 
     Prologue to a Farce or a Tragedy; or, perhaps both. Knowledge 
     will forever govern ignorance: And a people who mean to be 
     their own Governors, must arm themselves with the power which 
     knowledge gives.''
           Sincerely,
         American Association of Law Libraries; American Library 
           Association; American Society of Newspaper Editors; 
           Association of Research Libraries; Center for Democracy 
           and Technology; Center for Digital Democracy; Center 
           for Responsive Politics, Common Cause; Computer & 
           Communications Industry Association; Computer 
           Professionals for Social Responsibility; Congressional 
           Accountability Project; Consumer Federation of America; 
           Consumer Project on Technology; Electronic Frontier 
           Foundation; Electronic Privacy Information Center.
         Federation of American Scientists; Friends of the Earth; 
           Green Party of the United States; Medical Library 
           Association; National Federation of Press Women; 
           National Security Archive; National Taxpayers Union; 
           National Newspaper Association; OMB Watch; Project on 
           Government Oversight; Public Citizen; Reporters 
           Committee for Freedom of the Press; Society of 
           Professional Journalists; Taxpayers for Common Sense; 
           Union of Concerned Scientists; U.S. Public Interest 
           Research Group (USPIRG).

   Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, I am pleased to join today with Senator 
McCaine to submit our bipartisan resolution to make Congressional 
Research Service products available over the Internet to the American 
people. I also want to thank the Project on Government Oversight for 
its excellent report on the need for access to CRS information.
  The Congressional Research Service has a well-known reputation for 
producing high-quality reports and information briefs that are 
unbiased, concise and accurate. The taxpayers of this country, who pay 
millions of dollars a year to fund the CRS, deserve

[[Page S2226]]

speedy access to these public resources and have a right to see that 
their money is being spent well.
  The goal of our bipartisan legislation is to allow every citizen the 
same access to the wealth of CRS information as a Member of Congress 
enjoys today. CRS performs invaluable research and produces first-rate 
reports on hundreds of topics. American taxpayers have every right to 
have direct access to these wonderful resources.
  Our legislation ensures that private CRS products will remain 
protected by giving the CRS Director the authority to hold back any 
products that are deemed confidential. Moreover, the Director may 
protect the identity of CRS researchers and any copyrighted material. 
We can do both--protect confidential material and empower our citizens 
through electronic access to invaluable CRS products.
  The Internet offers us a unique opportunity to allow the American 
people to have everyday access to this public information. Our 
bipartisan legislation would harness the power of the Information Age 
to allow average citizens to see these public records of the Senate in 
their official form, in context and without editorial comment.
  All of these reports are ``public'' for only those who can afford to 
hire a lawyer or lobbyist, or who can afford to physically travel to 
Washington to visit the Office of Public Records in the Hart Building 
and read them. Indeed, the Project on Government Oversight reports that 
over 150 registered lobbyists are former Members of Congress who have 
automatic access to CRS documents. That is not very ``public,'' and 
does almost nothing for the average voter in Vermont or the rest of 
this country who does not have easy access to Washington.
  We can do better, and this resolution does better. Under our 
resolution, any citizen in any corner of this country with access to a 
computer at home, at the office or at the public library will be able 
to get on the Internet and get these important congressional documents 
under our resolution. It allows individual citizens to check the facts, 
to make comparisons, and to make up their own minds.
  I commend the senior Senator from Arizona for his leadership on this 
and similar issues. I share his desire for the American people to have 
electronic access to many more congressional resources. I look forward 
to working with him in the coming days to let the information age open 
up the Halls of Congress to all our citizens.
  As Thomas Jefferson wrote, ``Information is the currency of 
democracy.'' Our democracy is stronger if all citizens have equal 
access to at least the ``congressional-type'' of currency, and that is 
something in which Members on both sides of the aisle can celebrate and 
join.
                                 ______