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Sunday, February 24, 2008
Robert Bluey :: Townhall.com Columnist
Congress Operates in the Dark Ages
by Robert Bluey
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A congressional Web site devoted to spending reform may soon fall victim to a nearly 10-year-old House rule governing online activity. If the Web site is axed, it will serve as an embarrassing example of just how behind the times our lawmakers are.

The Web site in question, earmarkreform.house.gov, was established with much fanfare on Feb. 12 by House Minority Leader John Boehner. But less than two weeks later, the House’s chief administrative officer told Boehner he had to remove the site. The office now says it will review all similar Web sites, including Rep. Ed Markey’s (D-Mass.) globalwarming.house.gov, to determine their compliance with House rules.

Boehner launched the earmark reform site shortly after House Republicans challenged Democrats to place an immediate moratorium on earmarks -- the practice in which lawmakers stipulate exactly which favored company, group or individual will receive federal grants or contracts. The moratorium is to remain in effect until Congress reforms the out-of-control budget process.

The “offending” Web site focuses exclusively on earmark reform, featuring links to news stories, press releases and a YouTube video of Boehner making the case for a moratorium. Pretty tame stuff, actually.  But in this day and age of petty partisan politics, the Web site touched a nerve in the halls of Congress.

The House’s chief administrative officer, Dan Beard, approved the domain name on Aug. 18, 2007. But only days after the site was up and running, Beard told Boehner it would have to come down because it didn’t comply with rules regulating congressional websites established in 1999 by the House Administration Committee. 

The rules require that house.gov domains must “be recognizably derivative or representative of the name of the Member or the name of the office sponsoring the website.” Furthermore, domain names cannot be a slogan or imply an endorsement of a commercial product, commodity or service, according to the regulations.

Boehner is protesting Beard’s decision. The earmark site, he argues, is no different in nature from globalwarming.house.gov, a Democrat-run Web site that has been operating -- without objection -- since last year. 

Boehner also thinks there’s something fishy about the timing of the shutdown order. After all, there has been a spate of recent stories slamming Democrats’ abuse of earmarks. Citizens Against Government Waste last week named Rep. John Murtha (D-Pa.) its “Porker of the Year.” And two weeks ago, Taxpayers for Common Sense revealed House freshmen accounted for $263 million in earmarks; Democrat freshmen took home 90% of those pet projects.  In view of these developments, Boehner argues, Beard’s decision looks an awful lot like a “gag order.”

Because the site launched just days after Speaker Nancy Pelosi rejected the GOP’s offer to institute an earmark moratorium, Boehner believes the House majority is unfairly exerting its control.

“The leaders of both parties in the House have discussed the need for greater transparency and ‘sunshine’ in Congress, particularly with respect to the process by which our institution spends taxpayers’ hard-earned money,” Boehner wrote to Beard. “By serving as a public clearinghouse for real-time information on legislative efforts to reform the earmark practice in Congress, www.earmarkreform.house.gov contributes to this goal and helps to increase accountability in the use of taxpayer funds.”

The chief administrative officer rejected the notion that politics had anything to do with the decision. Spokesman Jeff Ventura said the office was reviewing all House websites for compliance with the nearly decade-old rule passed by the House Administration Committee.

Putting aside the partisan fighting over earmark reform, the conflict also focuses attention once again on Congress’ outdated policies relating to the Internet. Last year Pelosi and Boehner both endorsed the recommendations of the Open House Project, which devoted a chapter in its report to reforming outdated rules governing congressional Web sites. Leaders of the project encouraged lawmakers to establish new standards relating to members’ use of the Internet.

John Wonderlich, who oversaw the project for the Sunlight Foundation, said the conflict over the earmark reform Web site offers the House a perfect opening to update its rules.

“The Internet creates a new opportunity for members and staff to serve their constituents creatively online,” Wonderlich said. “Congress does need to address real issues like maintaining IT security, evaluating what Web use may imply official endorsement, and enforcing the line between electoral and official business.”

 Regardless of the issue or cause -- be it earmark reform or global warming -- Congress needs to get with the times when it comes to the online activity. The Open House Project outlined logical steps to increase transparency and give citizens greater access to government. Pelosi and Boehner should dust off the suggestions so situations like this one won’t happen again.

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About The Author
Robert B. Bluey is director of the Center for Media & Public Policy at The Heritage Foundation and maintains a blog at RobertBluey.com
 
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'It's always something'
Folks, unless you have been living in a cave, you know as well as I do the Congress doesn't want to fix this problem. Haven't you ever noticed that whenever something really important that might actually let some sunshine in 'the people's house' come to a vote, there is always some rule or reg that will pop up to derail it. Thus the criminals in congress get to say they were for for the change, but gosh darn it, their hands were tied, although rest assured, they will continue to fight for it at some later date.
We get the guvmnt we vote in folks. Time for fresh minds in the congress because none of the players today are worth your vote.

Can't they buy another domain name?
...like 'earmarksboehner.house.gov???



Great Marianas Turkey-Shoot
It doesn't matter to these ear-mark boobs whether they catch up or stay behind. With McCain-Feingold and incumbency, these reps know they have a better than 90% chance of being re-elected, so why give a d**n what the electorate thinks or wants. The American people, e.g., want the Death Tax and Capital Gains taxes eliminated [not reduced]. No problem, they wont be eliminated, roll the dice ... 90%+ chance of reelection so screw the voters.

So Typical of Dems
And yet they still claim conservatives are the one's trying to control everything and everyone!

yet another contradiction
While members of Congress are holding the office of the president to the holiest of transparency, (ie. Bolton and Miers refusal to comply with the Congressional witch hunt) they, themselves wish to hide under the cloak of secrecy when dealing with how they spend our tax money....
Throw the bums out!

Home owners in trouble
10 years ago i had a contractor build me a house to order. It cost me 15 or 20 per cent more than i could have sold it for, because of the expense of features important to me, but not to the general market. So for some years i lived in a house i couldn't re-sell and get out from under. No problem. I spent what i could afford and had no need to sell. The normal long term accrual of housing values cured the problem, and even with the latest re-trenching, i'd do ok if i had to sell. It is not the govt's function to bail out bad nvestments, or pick up the payments for people who want to drive a Lamborghini but can't afford it. When the govt pardons and supports the guilty and foolish, it is punishing the wise and prudent. What is rewarded increases. That's what we need --- more guilty fools and less prudence.

Set up a site
I would suggest that the congressman think outside of the box. He needs to use about $100 of his own money and set up the website with a private account. Or, perhaps he could go to blogspot and set up a blog (no cost).

I am always angered when pols think that the government has to do everything, including providing them with websites.

Rescues for Homeowners in Debt Weighed

Can we afford this?

NYT-Prodded in part by some of the nation’s biggest banks, the Bush administration and Congress are considering costly new proposals for the government to rescue hundreds of thousands of homeowners whose mortgages are higher than the value of their houses.

Not since the Depression has a larger share of Americans owed more on their homes than they are worth. With the collapse of the housing boom, nearly 8.8 million homeowners, or 10.3 percent of the total, are underwater. That is more than double the percentage just a year ago, according to a new estimate of the damage by Moody’s Economy.com.

Administration officials say they still oppose any taxpayer bailout for either people who borrowed more than they could afford or banks that made foolish loans during the height of the speculative bubble in housing.

READ MORE

http://controlcongress.com/uncategorized/rescues-for-homeow ners-in-debt-weighed

Beard is out of line!
As Daniel Beard is an employee of the House of Representatives and not a duly elected member of the House. Boehner need only remind Beard of his place in the hierarchy of the the "People's House." Employees don't tell their employers what they can and can't do.
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