‘Bama Docs

A look at government information from the Yellowhammer State.

Archive for the 'Congress' Category


How Much is Your Congressman Worth?

Posted by Valerie on May 13, 2008

Today the Sunlight Foundation launched Fortune535 -  a way to track the net worth of your Members of Congress (as taken from their financial disclosure statements).  As the site says, “So take what follows with a boulder-sized grain of salt: It’s all based on information from the seriously flawed disclosure system used by members of Congress.”

However, it’s still fun to play with - the Alabama lawmakers are listed in order of their 2006 net worth (from highest, Sen. Richard Shelby, to lowest, Rep. Artur Davis.)  Their 2006 net worth is compared with their 1995 net worth (if available) - and if their first disclosure form was filed before 1995 and after 1978, that information is available as a PDF. (Note: they weren’t required to type the forms, so some of the handwriting can take a bit of time to interpret!)

Posted in Alabama, Congress | Tagged: , | No Comments »

What Difference Does It Make What Congress Published? - conference program

Posted by Valerie on May 24, 2007

ALA GODORT’s 2007 Conference Program is entitled ‘What Difference Does It Make What Congress Published? American History in the Earliest Congressional Documents’

2007 ALA Annual
GODORT Program
Washington, D.C.
Monday, June 25, 2007
10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.

It is not known, for certain, what Congress published during the early years of the Republic, especially prior to the 15th Congress (1817).
Although many Congressional publications from the period 1789-1817 are reproduced in the American State Papers, an indeterminate number are not included, some of which are known from scattered individual library collections. Others appeared with historically significant textual variations from the officially reprinted versions in the American State Papers, or are known through contemporary newspaper or later secondary bibliographic citations. Still others remain undocumented, scattered in individual library collections, unbeknownst even to their collection managers. As a result of the burning of Washington by British armed forces on August 24, 1814, which resulted in the complete destruction of the Library of Congress as it existed at that time, this problem is all the more acute for these very early documents. Due to the pre-eminent importance of Congressional publications as primary sources of information concerning the early history of the United States, establishing a complete inventory of all Congressional publications from this period is a task of basic importance.

The 2007 GODORT Program, co-sponsored by the RUSA-History Section and the ACRL - Rare Books and Manuscript Section, will examine the origins of this state of affairs, the mystery concerning what Congress published prior to the 15th Congress, the variability in the text of individual surviving publications, the consequences for librarians and scholars, and the implications for an understanding of the earliest American history. A presentation by August A. Imholtz, Jr., will address “pre-Serial Set” publications which are not included in the Gales and Seaton American State Papers, and the importance of examining individual library collections, to locate and identify otherwise unknown fugitive early publications of Congress. A presentation by Fred Beuttler will focus on one significant early Congressional publication concerning the “John Jay Treaty,” and the historical repercussions for the longer term of the debate which it inaugurates. Finally, a presentation by Jessie Kratz will discuss early archival material and its implications for an understanding of early Congressional publications and related issues in the early history of the United States. These will be preceded by a Keynote Address by U.S. Congressman Rodney P. Frelinghuysen.

List of Speakers

Hon. Rep. Rodney P. Frelinghuysen, United States House of Representatives Keynote Address

Mr. August A. Imholtz, Jr., Vice President, Readex Digital Documents Division “The American State Papers: The Incomplete Story, or What Was Selected and What Was Omitted”

Dr. Fred Beuttler, Deputy Historian, United States House of Representatives “The Early House and the Early Presidents: Conflict and Compromise”

Ms Jessie Kratz, Archives Specialist, National Archives and Records Administration “Recovering the People’s Voice: Unpublished Petitions and Their Impact on Publications, Legislation, and History”

Update, June 7, 2007:

I am afraid that I have some bad news - Congressman Rodney Frelinghuysen will not be able to speak at the annual GODORT Program, co-sponsored by the RUSA/History section and the ACRL/Rare Books and Manuscripts section, “What Difference Does It Make What Congress Published? American History in the Earliest Congressional Documents.” The Congressman has business back in his district that requires his presence and will not be in town.

However, as every cloud has a silver lining ours is the exciting news that Professor Charlene Bickford, director of the First Federal Congress Project has agreed to step into the breach.

In addition to her work as Director of the First Federal Congress Project Dr. Bickford is affiliated with The George Washington University’s History Department, has been an editor on 17 volumes of the Documentary History of the First Federal Congress, 1789-1791.   She is he co-author with Kenneth R. Bowling of Birth of the Nation: The First Federal Congress, 1789-1791 and the curator of an exhibit of the same name.  She has authored several articles and lectured on many topics relating to the First Federal Congress.  Known as an advocate for history programs and funding at the federal level, Bickford has also served on the Congress’s Committee on Congressional Records and as president of the Society for History in the Federal Government and of the Association for Documentary Editing.

I hope that you will join us on Monday, June 25th (10:30-12:30 p.m.) in the Renaissance Mayflower Hotel for the GODORT annual program: “What Difference Does It Make What Congress Published? American History in the Earliest Congressional Documents.”

Posted in ALA, Congress, Fed Docs | No Comments »

chair of House Admin succumbs to cancer

Posted by Valerie on April 23, 2007

According to the AP, Congresswoman Juanita Millender-McDonald, chair of the Committee on House Administration, passed away this morning.  She had been diagnosed with cancer earlier this year.

The Committee on House Administration is responsible for forming the Joint Committee on Printing (JCP; GPO’s oversight committee) this session.

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LIBRARIAN Act of 2007

Posted by Valerie on April 19, 2007

On Monday, the Librarian Incentive to Boost Recruitment and Retention in Areas of Need (LIBRARIAN) Act of 2007 was introduced in both the Senate and the House.  The bill amends the Higher Education Act of 1965 to provide for Perkins student loan forgiveness, which will encourage individuals to become and remain librarians in low-income schools and public libraries.

The bills are S. 1121 and H.R. 1877.

Posted in Congress, Librarians, legislation | No Comments »

“Naming Politicians not always easy for Alabamians”

Posted by Valerie on April 10, 2007

The Mobile Press-Register and the University of South Alabama Polling Group surveyed 407 adult residents of the state last week, asking them to name such political figures as the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Alabama’s two U.S. Senators, U.S. Speaker of the House, etc.  Amazingly enough, “more Alabamians could identify [Speaker Nancy Pelosi] than were able to name either of the state’s two senators.”  Yikes!

One more time, folks: Alabama’s U.S. Senators are Jeff Sessions and Richard Shelby.  If you don’t know who represents you in the U.S. House, go to the House web site & enter your zip code + 4.  (If you don’t know your +4, go to the Post Office’s Zip Code Lookup site.]

In order to find out who represents you in the Alabama Legislature, use their zip code lookup.

Posted in Alabama, Congress, Legislature, Politicians, Polls | No Comments »

Voting records

Posted by Valerie on April 8, 2007

There are a number of sources for tracking how your members of congress vote on particular legislation. The Washington Post’s Congress Votes Database is one - it includes data going back to 1991, and includes information on who missed votes, most voted on bills, late night votes, etc. RSS feeds for individual members of Congress are available, as is an RSS feed for the 10 most recent votes.

OpenCongress does not have votes going back to past sessions of Congress - it begins with the 110th (Current) congress. This site includes RSS feeds for Members’ votes, for each piece of legislation introduced (the full-text and status of legislation is also included), and also allows you to subscribe to blog posts and news articles mentioning your Member of Congress.

The official federal government sources for Members’ voting records are the Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of the House, respectively.

The only site I’ve been able to find for the Alabama legislature is their official site, ALISON. Keep in mind that ALISON only works with Internet Explorer. In order to view votes, follow these steps (from the legislature’s web site):

When you have a bill or list of bills that display the bill buttons. You click a bill button first, and then go to the History button at the top. In the history list you should see one or more Roll NNN buttons(N=a number). This button is visible for any votes except a voice vote. Also, vote buttons are available in the BIR History window, which is accessible from the History window. Yea, Nay, Abstain, and Present are the vote options.

I haven’t yet found a source that compiles the roll call votes & makes them available…but I’ll keep looking.

Update, 2008-02-24: ALISON now works in the Firefox browser!  HT: Daily Dixie.

Posted in Alabama, Congress, Legislature, legislation | No Comments »

2008 Elections

Posted by Valerie on April 2, 2007

All everyone seems to talk about these days is the 2008 presidential election (well maybe not everyone…but it’s definitely dominating the news).  Today Tom Tancredo, Republican of Colorado, announced that he’s running.  Wednesday it will be former Wisconsin Governor and Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy Thompson.  For more information on that race, check out the 2008 Presidential Campaign blog.
There will be plenty of other races in 2008 as well.  Here in Alabama, in addition to all of the Representatives running for re-election, Senator Jeff Sessions is running for re-election.  He does not yet have an opponent.

Posted in Alabama, Congress, Elections 2008 | No Comments »

tours

Posted by Valerie on April 1, 2007

If you’re a big dork like I am, and you like to watch cspan, you might be interested in getting a tour of the capitols in DC and Montgomery - or just watching from the gallery.  Here’s how you do that:

For tours of the Capitol building in Washington, DC, you can contact your Senator’s office, or your Representative’s office.  They can also give you passes to the Senate and/or House galleries (in case you want to sit & watch the comings and goings on the floor).

For visits to the Capitol in Montgomery, the Legislature’s web site has some useful information.

Always remember - make sure that Congress or the Legislature is in session before you go!

Posted in Alabama, Congress, Legislature | No Comments »

H.R. 1591 passes

Posted by Valerie on March 29, 2007

H.R. 1591, “Making emergency supplemental appropriations for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2007, and for other purposes,” passed today with a vote of 51 ayes, 47 nays, and 2 abstentions (This is the bill that doesn’t just give more money for the war in Iraq - note that ‘other purposes’ line because that can range from peanuts to the minimum wage.)

Both Alabama Senators voted against the legislation.

Posted in Congress, legislation | No Comments »

Hearing on MLB/DIRECTV Deal

Posted by Valerie on March 27, 2007

Today the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Technology is holding a hearing on Exclusive Sports Programming: Examining Competition and Consumer Choice. Representatives from Major League Baseball, DIRECTV will testify. In case you missed it, they do archive their hearings - you just need to make sure you’ve got RealPlayer on your computer.

Posted in Congress | No Comments »