The Government Printing Office and Executive Branch Information Dissemination: Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Government Management, Information, and Technology of the Committee on Government Reform and Oversight, House of Representatives, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session, May 8, 1997U.S. Government Printing Office, 1997 - 197 lappuses |
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36th Congress access to government Administration American American Library Association authority bit stream CD-ROM central Chairman Committee on Printing Comptroller Congress contract cost Counsel Daily Reports databases Department Depository Library Program DIMARIO distribution electronic format electronic government information electronic information ensure executive branch printing FDLP Federal agencies Federal Depository Library funds Government information products Government Printing Office Government publications GPO Access GPO's HORN in-house information dissemination information industry Internet issue Joint Committee Jones KELLEY legislative branch Library Association MALONEY Mickey Kantor National Technical Information NewsBank NTIS OAKLEY OIRA OWENS Paperwork Reduction Act permanent public access printing and duplicating printing operations private sector products and services Public Printer publishing Senate separation of powers Special Libraries Association specifically staff Stat Subcommittee Superintendent of Documents taxpayer Technical Information Service Title 44 users Walter Dellinger World News Connection
Populāri fragmenti
1. 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. Knowledge will forever govern ignorance; and a people who mean to be their own governors must arm themselves with the power which knowledge gives.
74. lappuse - July 1, 1919, all printing, binding, and blank-book work for Congress, the Executive Office, the judiciary, and every executive department, independent office, and establishment of the Government, shall be done at the Government Printing Office, except such classes of work as shall be deemed by the Joint Committee on Printing to be urgent or necessary to have done elsewhere than in the District of Columbia for the exclusive use of any field service outside of said District.
127. lappuse - Our comments today reflect the views of the members of the American Association of Law Libraries, the American Library Association, the Association of Research Libraries and the Special Libraries Association. We...
74. lappuse - Printing shall have power to adopt and employ such measures as, in its discretion, may be deemed necessary to remedy any neglect, delay, duplication, or waste in the public printing and binding and the distribution of Government publications...
22. 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).
82. lappuse - Appellants suggest that the duties assigned to the Comptroller General in the Act are essentially ministerial and mechanical so that their performance does not constitute "execution of the law" in a meaningful sense, On the contrary, we view these functions as plainly entailing execution of the law...
87. lappuse - Government by getting a false or fraudulent claim allowed or paid; (4) has possession, custody, or control of property or money used, or to be used, by the Government and, intending to defraud the Government or willfully to conceal the property, delivers, or causes to be delivered, less property than the amount for which the person receives a certificate or receipt...
83. lappuse - Printing Office[.]" Whether this provision involving discretionary certification by the public printer is understood as the exercise of legislative power or executive power, it plainly runs afoul of separation of powers principles. "If the power is executive, the Constitution does not permit an agent of Congress to exercise it. If the power is legislative, Congress must exercise it in conformity with the bicameralism and presentment requirements of Art. I, § 7
84. lappuse - You have asked whether contracting officers who act in a manner consistent with our opinion and in derogation of the Comptroller General's view will be subject to liability or sanction. This opinion presents the official view of the executive branch; the Comptroller General's opinion may not carry legally binding effect, although it may be considered for whatever persuasive value it may offer. See Bowsher. 478 US, at 733 (holding that statute unconstitutionally entrusted execution of laws to Comptroller...
72. lappuse - Printing shall have power to adopt such measures as may be deemed necessary to remedy any neglect or delay in the execution of the public printing...