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Recovery.gov Not Very Transparent

Bob the Super Hamste writes "CNN is reporting that the page recovery.gov is not as transparent as it claims to be. The examples pointed out are: 1. The user is greeted by a large pie chart that show the breakdown of money spent by 2 categories, state government distributions and local government distributions. 2. Finding projects involves a complicated search, information on projects is not actually hosted on recovery.gov 3. The format of the information available is of poor quality (the article specifically mentions a PDF document that was created from a scanned sideways copy of roadwork projects from New York state). Given that this site was meant to make the spending of the new stimulus money more transparent to the citizens of the Unites States of America it seems oddly opaque. CNN does seem to praise the ability for government agencies to be able to exchange HTML based information between systems, which for government I would call a massive accomplishment. I tried to find information for my state and searched for Minnesota. I got 4 matches, 2 of which were generic ones: one was the Minnesota state certification that is required for a state to receive funds and one that lays out public transportation spending for all states of which Minnesota gets $94,093,115."

5 of 222 comments (clear)

  1. Check the timeline... by CoolCash · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you look at the time line you will see that July 15th, 2009 is when "Recipients of Federal funding to begin reporting on their use of funds."

    1. Re:Check the timeline... by tsm_sf · · Score: 4, Informative

      Here's a bit more of the timeline from the site... I seem to remember reading that there's no standard format defined for this data, so expect to see a bunch of garbage initially. If you want an easily manipulated database you might have to *shudder* get involved.

      July 15, 2009
      Recipients of Federal funding to begin reporting on their use of funds

      May 20, 2009
      Federal Agencies to begin reporting their competitive grants and contracts

      May 15, 2009
      Detailed agency financial reports to become available

      May 03, 2009
      Federal Agencies to make Performance Plans publicly available
      Federal Agencies to begin reporting on their allocations for entitlement programs

      March 03, 2009
      Federal Agencies to begin reporting use of funds

      February 19, 2009
      Federal Agencies to begin reporting their formula block grant awards

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  2. Re:What the fuck? by BountyX · · Score: 4, Informative

    They implemented drupal on a winders server. By default, drupal comes with htaccess files that protects against this; however, since this is IIS, the htaccess files are no in effect. The windows administrator on the site never set the correct permissions in IIS. So no it has nothing to do with the distribution of the Drupal framework.

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  3. Re:Yes they could make it much easier. by Mab_Mass · · Score: 4, Informative

    3D pie charts that show only 2 numbers are the devil's work.

    What this tells me more than anything else is that although they want to be transparent, the people who put this together know almost nothing about presentation of data.

    Please, everybody, read Tufte. Even if you don't agree with everything that he says, think about his points.

    Then, for the love of God, never, ever, create a 3D pie chart again.

  4. Re:Better than nothing by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 4, Informative

    Obama's CIO didn't "step down because of corruption in his home team". He stepped aside for a few days after someone in his "home team" was suddenly and without warning arrested for charges that had nothing to do with the CIO. An arrest that was somehow timed to happen days after the CIO started, though the investigation was going on for months.

    The CIO has no evidence against him, nothing indicating he ever did anything related to the arrest (which itself is not proof of that other guy's guilt). All he did was delay his start as CIO for a few days so that could all become clear. And now he's back, because it had nothing to do with him. Except perhaps he spent some time helping the investigation find its way around his old office, since he'd just been running it.

    I understand you're not American. But if you're following the rest of our thrashing as closely as you evidently followed the "America's CIO's rocky start" story, you should look closer before you jump to conclusions. Because you were pretty wrong on that one, and the other one is much more important, and much more complex.

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