The intent is to change the worldlet democracy see whats in government and get involved easily, said Mark Forman, OMB associate director for IT and e-government. This is clearly a positive step in that direction.
Project managers designed the rule-making portal with components from four agencies. The Government Printing Office and the National Archives and Records Administration supplied the front end, which lets users find proposed and final rules. EPA and the Food and Drug Administration put together the back end, which lets users send comments about proposed rules to the correct agency.
This really is a great example of agencies working together, said Oscar Morales, online rule-making project director. Users can search by agency or by key word, and the comment forms are tailored to agency requirements, Morales said.
EPA plans two more modules for the portal. One would merge other rule-making sites and bring in agencies that do not have an online presence for rules. The other module would push the services to employees desks for easier regulatory analysis, said Linda Fisher, EPA deputy administrator.
Regulations.gov will make it quicker and easier for the public to search and comment on several hundred regulations without having to be an expert in how government is organized, Fisher said. Every controversial decision the government makes is enhanced by timely public input.
Quelle: Government Computer News