Open Government Initiative: Phase II
Open Government Initiative: Phase II
Beth Noveck, Deputy Chief Technology Officer for Open Government, brings us an update on the Open Government Initiative:

Last week, the White House launched an unprecedented online process for public engagement in policymaking. That process began with a week of Brainstorming, hosted by the National Academy of Public Administration.
Last week, the White House launched an unprecedented online process for public engagement in policymaking. That process began with a week of Brainstorming, hosted by the National Academy of Public Administration.
You have shared almost 900
submissions and 33,000 votes on ideas ranging from strategies for
making government data more accessible to legal and policy impediments
to transparency. Thank you!
The Brainstorming phase is drawing to
an official close tonight at midnight. We are reviewing all material
on the site in preparation for the Discussion Phase, which begins on
Wednesday June 3rd. We’ll be distilling both the ideas from the
Brainstorming and the comments from an online dialogue with government
employees that took place earlier this spring on the MAX federal wiki.
All comments from MAX will be publicly posted tomorrow on the Open
Government website.
Our goal is to use the ideas from
this first phase of the process as well as other input to inform deeper
discussion on the Open Government blog in the Discussion phase. While
the voting on the brainstorming submissions will be instructive, it
will not determine which topics are discussed in the second phase.
Rather, the Discussion is designed to dig in on harder topics that
require greater exploration or refinement.
While we are doing our analysis of
the first phase of brainstorming and moving on to the Discussion Phase
next week, the Brainstorming has been lively and productive. So we will
keep the Brainstorming site turned on for addition submissions through
June 19th. While new postings may not feed into the Discussion or
Drafting Phases, we’ll be on the lookout for interesting new posts.
At the end of the public engagement
process, all posted submissions will go up on the Open Government
website. (For you records management fans, the Open Government website
is run by the Office of Science and Technology Policy and subject to
the Federal Records Act.)
The tight schedule of this process is
designed to ensure that your ideas inform the development of open
government recommendations and the writing of subsequent policy and the
development of open government projects as soon as possible. So while
we are keeping the Brainstorming open, we will also move on to the next
phase of the process beginning on June 3rd.
Longer reports and papers can always be submitted through opengov@ostp.gov.
The process of crafting open
government policy will not end this week, this month, or this year.
This is an ongoing effort, and your participation has been and will
continue to be essential to its success.





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