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This initiative led by Beth Simone Noveck, U.S. Deputy Chief Technology Officer, aims to bring institutional innovation through transparency, participation, and collaboration in the public sector. Explore the impact of the First Executive Memorandum on Transparency and Open Government, early milestones achieved, and future plans for open policymaking, data accessibility, and citizen engagement. Learn how various government platforms facilitate a culture of openness and collaboration, driving national priorities forward.
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Beth Simone Noveck U.S. Deputy Chief Technology Officer & Director, White House Open Government Initiative Open Government: Taking Stock, Looking Forward Bringing Institutional Innovation to the Public Sector through Transparency, Participation, and Collaboration
Memorandum on Transparency and Open Government • First Executive Memorandum • Bringing change to Washington and breaking with 8 years of secrecy • Articulating 3 principles: transparency, participation, and collaboration • Transparency promotes accountability • Participation strengthens decisions • Collaboration enables others to help Jan. 21 Presidential Memorandum on Transparency & Open Government
Early Milestones“The Obama administration is well on course to be the most open in modern times.” -The New York Times • Nation’s First Chief Technology Officer and Chief Information Officer • White House Open Government Initiative to Drive & Coordinate • DOJ Issues Pro-Transparency Guidelines for Freedom of Info. Act • Recovery.gov to enable Americans to track the Recovery • Open for Questions and New Media driven engagement • Data.gov to bring more government information online • Open policymaking forums • Broadband.gov • HHS Launches Competition for H1N1 PSA • White House announces unprecedented release of visitor logs
Proliferating Opportunities for Open Policymaking Tapping the Intelligence and Expertise of the American People Open Government * Declassification * Cookies
Next Steps in Open Government: Unleashing Innovation Across Government Open Government Policy Open Government in Service of National Priorities Open Government Platforms
Next Steps in Open Government Policy Instilling a Culture of Openness and Transparency across Government Open GovernmentInitiative Coordinate policy on transparency, participation and collaboration Open Government Policy Require policy, legal, and technology leadership in every agency to develop Open Government Plans with public input Open Government in Service of National Priorities Drive distributed culture change Open Government Platforms
Open Government Directive • The thousands of ideas, blog posts and wiki entries have directly informed the crafting of an OMB Directive on Open Government • It will begin with an idea championed by the public during the brainstorm phase - instilling a culture of open government by requiring each agency’s leadership to develop its own Open Government plan • As called for by the public, those plans will be subject to public consultation and comment prior to drafting and subsequent to their implementation • The plans will require agencies to develop a schedule for publishing data online in raw, structured, machine-readable formats based on priorities and to undertake participation and collaboration initiatives • Establishes a comprehensive review of the Administration’s information policies • In short, the forthcoming Open Government Directive will represent another key milestone in the President’s ongoing strategy to bring change to Washington and innovation to government institutions
Achieving National Priorities Improving everyday living through open ways of working Transparency Patent Office data transparency builds businesses Open Government Policy Participation Consumer Product Safety consumer opinion forums; Redoing the Federal Register to enhance Open Government in Service of National Priorities Collaboration Apps for America!; Apple iTunes U Supports Continuity of Learning Open Government Platforms
Open Government Projects • Veteran Benefits: Veterans Administration challenges 19,000 employees to cut the backlog for Veteran’s benefits • Energy Independence: DoE supports 100 MPG X-Prize • National Security: Department of Defense launches Aristotle expert networking across the Department to connect scientists and technologists to solve problems • Healthcare: Department of Health and Human Services hosts first Code-A-Thon, bringing together open source developers to enhance and build upon CONNECT, a software gateway for nationwide health information • Entrepreneurship: Business.gov connecting the public to one another
Open Government Platforms Facilitate Open and Collaborative Ways of Working Open GovernmentPlatforms Policy Process Technology Open Government Policy Facilitate the reuse of best practices through a platform for open government tools Open Government in Service of National Priorities Open Government Platforms
Open Government Platforms to Instill a Culture of Openness 1 Open and Collaborative Practices Transition to open and collaborative ways of working. Open Data Open Spending Open Participation Open Expertise & Peer Review Open Grant-Making Platform Open Problem-Solving 2 Make it easy and cost-effective for any agency to implement open government priorities.
IT Dashboard Building a Culture of Accountability • Launched June 30, 2009 • 30 million+ hits since launch • Measures performance against “on-time”,“on-budget”, and CIO evaluation • Builds on the success of Shinseki review halting 45 current projects Source: www.whitehouse.gov & it.usaspending.gov
Open Policymaking Brainstorming Discussion Drafting
Why Open Government Matters: Connecting Institutions to Networks to Take Action and Solve Problems • Collaborative democracy at the center of the administration’s governing philosophy. • Institutional innovation to produce open ways of working. • Recognizing that government does not have all the answers and public officials need to draw on what citizens know. • Not to aggregate preferences but to divvy up roles and tasks and share in the hard work of governance together.
“I ran for President because I believe that we cannot solve the challenges of our time unless we solve them together.” –President Barack Obama, May 21, 2009 Source: ITIF Report “The Atlantic Century”, February, 2009
What Can You Do to Design 21st Century Democracy?: We are Just at the Beginning! • Transparency: Identify 5 data sets where transparency will achieve an important policy objective in the same way that the Toxic Release Inventory encourages companies to reduce their use and emission of toxic chemicals voluntarily; Create a document management system that will decrease FOIA requests while increasing access to information. • Participation: Design the best open policymaking platform for effective rulemaking; design the best processes for open grantmaking. • Collaboration: Design an IT-based system for managing chronic diseases such as diabetes and asthma that improves health outcomes while reducing costs by a third . Establish a prize for the best automated, online mentoring system to promote entrepreneurship.