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Congressional Dish

CD054: Hidden Data Act

Congressional Dish

Jennifer Briney

News, Congress, Government, Politics, Corporations

4.81.1K Ratings

🗓️ 23 November 2013

⏱️ 34 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A bill marketed as for "transparency" appears to keep information secret from the public and gut an oversight board. Taxpayers treat a group of Representatives to an expensive Summer getaway. Cocaine. HR 2061: passed the House of Representatives 388-1 on Monday, November 12, 2013. Section 3: The following information would be published on the : A "pilot program" will "consolidate reports" that agencies and companies who receive Federal money must turn in: The agencies and companies allowed into the pilot program must be worth at least $1 billion total; there's no limit to the number of participants. The Recovery Board would start investigating the Inspectors General: Section 5: Expands the amount of information that can be kept secret: Section 3 of the says: Section 5 of the DATA Act changes it to say: The "information protected" under the which the DATA Act would keep secret from the public is: Some information from the that the DATA Act would keep secret from the public is: The information from the that the DATA Act would keep secret from the public is: The Recovery Board investigates companies that are given government money - "recipients". [caption id="attachment_1065" align="aligncenter" width="336"] Quote by Rep. Darrell Issa, House Floor, November 18, 2013.[/caption] The DATA Act extends the Recovery Board but lets its functions and website expire six weeks from now: which passed the House in May 2013- is attached to the end of the DATA Act. Limits spending on conferences to $500,000. Extraordinarily detailed reports required for conferences over $10,000. Cuts agencies' travel budget by at least 30%. Congressional Travel Expenses Five Representatives and two staffers took a $179,938 six-day all expense paid-by-taxpayers trip to Singapore and Australia in Summer 2013. Representatives Discussed in This Episode was the only Representative to vote against the DATA Act. As a scientist, I know firsthand how important scientific conferences and meetings are. I opposed H.R. 2061, the Digital Accountability and Transparency Act, because it would cut by 30 percent the amount of travel federal employees could undertake for conferences, meetings, and other crucial events. - Rep. Rush Holt is on a leave of absence due to his . [caption id="attachment_1049" align="alignright" width="300"] Rep. Darrell Issa represents California's 49th district[/caption] Rep. Darrell Issa of California was the of the DATA Act. Darrell Issa is the in 2013. He has at least $430 million; he made $135 million in 2012 on Wall Street. Darrell Issa . Representatives Quoted in this Episode Additional Information Sunlight Foundation blog of HR 2061 Music Intro and Exit Music: by (found on ) by ) by Homework Watch

Transcript

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0:00.0

And the I am so damn tired of being like to.

0:15.0

I am so damn tired of being like to.

0:20.0

I don't think I can't deny it anymore.

0:27.0

You can't stick to your story if you think it flies

0:40.0

But I'm not going to buy it anymore.

0:45.0

Hello and thank you for listening to the 54th episode of Congressional Dish.

0:49.5

I'm your host Jennifer Briny.

0:51.0

If this is your first time listening to this show I'm reading all of the

0:54.1

bills that passed the House of Representatives and letting you know what's in them. I also

0:58.4

tend to go and let you know some other information that help us understand how these bills are being

1:04.0

passed as in who's paying the people who writes them and why they're being written and

1:09.1

all kinds of other details so you know don't fall asleep keep listening I think you

1:14.0

guys might enjoy this show now this week if I had covered all of the bills that

1:19.6

passed this week in one episode I think we would be here for at least an hour and so I'm

1:24.1

splitting this episode up into two. This is going to be the shorter of the two

1:28.3

episodes. I'm going to cover HR 2061 which 2061, which passed under suspension, and for those of you who don't speak

1:35.4

Congress, bills that pass under suspension are supposed to be uncontroversial.

1:40.4

And as far as Congress is concerned, this was uncontroversial.

1:45.2

It was controversial to me though.

1:47.4

And what's bizarre, and one of the reasons I feel the need to cover this in detail,

1:51.4

is because when I searched for you know what

1:54.1

other people are saying about the bill no one saw the things that I saw so had

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