Nov 16, 2007, News Report
State governments are improving their transparency practices, but many still aren't taking full advantage of the Internet to inform the public, according to a report entitled The State of State Disclosure released today by the Corporate Research Project of Good Jobs First.
Online disclosure of economic development subsidies lags behind reporting on procurement contracts and lobbying, continued the report.
"The Internet makes possible unprecedented government transparency," said Good Jobs First Executive Director Greg LeRoy, "But many states have been slow to adopt vigorous online disclosure."
The study evaluates each state's disclosure Web sites in terms of criteria such as ease of searching and level of detail. "We see evidence that states are improving," said Philip Mattera, research director of Good Jobs First and principal author of the report. "Yet the average state gets only B- on contracts and C- on lobbying. On subsidies, the average grade is F. No state receives better than B across all categories."
Other findings:
The report concludes by offering a set of policy options:
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