You want honesty in
government, right? Enough to take 15 minutes out of your busy day
to encourage Uncle Sam to jumpstart an obscure but potentially
historic project that could shine more light on Washington than
ever before?
There is no formal name
for the project, which would require all federal departments and
agencies to post their billions of dollars worth of contracts on
the Internet for public review. Even so, supporters of the effort
know it could transform government transparency and accountability.
Now the government is inviting public comments on how to move
forward on the project.
The project was first
championed in the Bush administration by former Office of
Management and Budget Director Mitch Daniels, and has generated
support from a broad spectrum of advocacy groups and think tanks,
including The Heritage Foundation and the Consumer Project on
Technology, which first proposed the idea in 1999.
Why is putting federal
contracts on the Internet so important? Uncle Sam signs about
10,000 contracts annually, with a cumulative worth of more than
$200 billion. Those contracts are used to buy everything from
advice to zinc and every dollar spent under those contracts comes
out of your pocket and mine via taxes.
But just try to get a
copy of a typical federal agency contract under the Freedom of
Information Ac. It would be easier to rifle the safe in Col.
Sanders' old Kentucky home to get the recipe for Extra Crispy
Kentucky Fried Chicken.
Requiring federal
departments and agencies to post the full text of all contracts
paid with tax dollars would do more to clean up government and
restore public trust than any other single reform.
Why? There is no more
effective deterrent to wasteful or corrupt federal spending than
the certainty that it's all going to be "out there" in the public
domain where citizens - including reporters, congressional
investigators and officials from competing companies that lost the
contract bid -- can see the details and get the names of the
responsible officials.
How much waste is there
in the government? Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW), a
private citizens group that specializes in finding wasteful
government spending and proposing ways to eliminate it, estimate
that at least $180 billion could be saved this year and more than
$1.3 trillion over the next five years.
Think how much more
wasteful spending could be identified by groups like CAGW if all
those contracts were posted in the public policy sunshine via the
Internet instead of being locked away in the darkness of some
bureaucrats' file cabinet?
Eliminating waste in
the contracting process should make government more efficient, too.
Just as commercial advertising encourages businesses to compete and
lower prices, posting federal contracts on the Internet would force
government bidders to keep their bids as low as possible in order
to be remain competitive. And they would have to perform as
required under their contracts because everybody would know what
they promised in their bid.
If this sounds to you
like a worthwhile project, you can say so between now and Aug. 5 by
sending your comments to the General Services Administration's
Regulatory Secretariat at 1800 F Street NW, Room 4035, ATT: Laurie
Duarte, Washington, D.C. 20405. Or e-mail them to:
Notice.2003-N01@gsa.gov.
All comments received
by Aug. 5 will appear in The Federal Register. Federal officials
are especially interested in hearing your comments on how broad the
initial demonstration project should be. They also want to hear
your comments on how the project should handle issues such as
protecting a bidder's proprietary business information.
There is no limit to how long your comments
can be. Just be sure to mention Notice 2003-N01, which is
bureaucratese for the Internet contract-posting project at OMB. And
tell them to put as many contracts on the Internet as possible - as
soon as possible. You have a right to know.
Mark
Tapscott is director of media services and the
Guardabassi fellow for The Heritage Foundation.