9/11 Commission Hearing Today and Tomorrow

Eleventh public hearing of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States – “The two-day hearing will examine the response of local and federal emergency response departments on September 11, 2001, and will consider how to improve these critical functions in the event of future terrorist attacks.” Staff Statement No. 13 – Emergency …

Subjects: Freedom of Information, Government Documents

Biometric ID Will Be Added to US Passports

U.S. passports to get ID chips: The State Department will be testing machine readable passports, incorporating facial scanning for U.S. citizens, this fall, with plans for wider implementation in 2005. DHS Secretary Ridge and Sec. of State Powell recently requested a two-year extension for 27 countries who had been required to meet a “October 26, …

Subjects: E-Government

DOJ Advisory Cmte. Warns About Data Mining and Privacy

According to the New York Times, the Technology and Privacy Advisory Committee advises the DOJ, in an report delivered in March, but just made available (although not yet on the TAPAC website), that due to data mining undertaken by the government in the fight against terrorism, there is the need to establish additional legislative protections …

Subjects: Civil Liberties, Government Documents, Privacy

Senate Resolution Calls for Substantial Improvements to THOMAS Website

S. Res. 360 – Expressing the sense of the Senate that legislative information shall be publicly available through the Internet. May 13, 2004: From the statement by co-sponsor Sen. Leahy: “In particular, we are calling on the Library of Congress to improve its public website, called “THOMAS (U.S. Congress on the Internet),” in order to …

Subjects: Congress, Freedom of Information, Internet, Legislation, Libraries

Congress Requests That GAO Investigate E-Voting Technology

David M. Walker, Comptroller General of the United States, received a letter last week signed by a bipartisan group of 13 House members, requesting a formal investigation of e-voting security and reliability. The group stated the issue involved “a critical aspect of American democracy — the ability of Americans to have confidence that the votes …

Subjects: E-Government, Government Documents

FTC Settles Fair Credit Reporting Act Case

From an FTC press release yesterday: “One of the nation’s largest debt-collection firms will pay $1.5 million to settle Federal Trade Commission charges that it violated the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) by reporting inaccurate information about consumer accounts to credit bureaus. The civil penalty against Pennsylvania-based NCO Group, Inc. is the largest civil penalty …

Subjects: Legal Research