Oversight of the Government Printing Office: Hearing Before the Joint Committee on Printing, Congress of the United States, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session, March 13, 1997U.S. Government Printing Office, 1997 - 43 lappuses |
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access to Government Administration agreement appropriate BRARY CBDNet CD-ROM Chairman WARNER Commerce Business Daily Committee on Printing CONG CONGRES CONGRESS THE LIBRARY Congressional Record copies cost CRADA CRDA databases decentralized Depository Library Program Depository Program DIMARIO distribution electronic information products ensure executive branch FDLP Federal agencies Federal Depository Library Federal information Federal printing Federal Register free access fugitive documents fund Government information products Government publications GPO Access GPO's information dissemination Internet Internet information service Joint Committee Journal Legislative LIBR LIBRA LIBRARY OF CONGRESS ment National Cancer Institute NGRES NTIS oversight percent print products printing and information printing procurement private sector procurement program public access public domain PUBLIC PRINTER requirements sales program Senator FORD SGML Superintendent of Documents taxpayers Technical Information Service THOMAS tion Title 44 users World Wide World Wide Web
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36. lappuse - A popular government without popular information or the means of acquiring it, is but a prologue to a farce or a tragedy, or perhaps both.
19. lappuse - Government publication" as used in this Act and the amendments made by it means informational matter which is published as an individual document at Government expense, or as required by law.
5. lappuse - An abiding commitment to public access to Government information is deeply rooted in our system of Government. GPO is one of the most visible demonstrations of that commitment. For more than a century, our mission under the public printing and documents statutes of Title 44...
5. lappuse - Formerly, our mission was accomplished through the production and procurement of traditional printing technologies. However, a generation ago we began migrating our processes to electronic technologies, and in 1993 Congress amended Title 44 with the GPO Electronic Information Access Enhancement Act (PL 103-40) to require us to disseminate Government information products online.
13. lappuse - GPO AND INFORMATION DISSEMINATION The information dissemination programs of GPO's Superintendent of Documents include the distribution of publications to approximately 1,400 Federal depository libraries nationwide, cataloging and indexing, distribution to recipients designated by law, and distribution to foreign libraries designated by the Library of Congress which in turn agree to send copies of their official publications to the Library. These programs are funded by an annual appropriation.
20. lappuse - Study to Identify Measures Necessary for a Successful Transition to a More Electronic Federal Depository Library Program (June 1996) (as required by Congress in the Legislative Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 1996).
13. lappuse - ... Code of Federal Regulations Other work includes US passports, postal cards, the US Budget, and other jobs that are performed by GPO due to concerns for cost, timeliness, and control over sensitive Government information. The continued need for GPO's regional printing plants has declined. In response, we have closed plants in Chicago, Seattle, San Francisco, and New York, and previously a separate printing and reproduction facility at the Washington, DC, Navy Yard was consolidated with GPO's central...
20. lappuse - FDLP is continuing, as projected in the Study to Identify Measures Necessary for a Successful Transition to a More Electronic Federal Depository Library Program (June 1 996) (as required by Congress in the Legislative Appropriations Act for FY 1996).
5. lappuse - ... Government has a unique asset that combines a comprehensive range of conventional production and electronic processing, procurement facilitation, and multi-format dissemination capabilities to support the information life cycle needs of Congress. Federal agencies, and the public: We provide print and electronic information products and services to Congress and Federal agencies through inplant processes and the purchase of information products from the private sector. For Congress, we maintain...
37. lappuse - OTA concluded that legislative action Is urgently needed to resolve Federal Information dissemination Issues and to set the direction of future Federal activities.