Why Hide the Congressional Research Service’s Reports from the Public?

A Useful Adjunct of Congress*
*as opposed to Congress itself these days

Q: Is there anything connected with Congress that actually works these days?

A: Yes, the Congressional Research Service and the General Accounting Office.

A key difference between these adjuncts to Congress, however, relates to public accessibility. The Congressional Research Service can be a really valuable resource, but their reports can be difficult to locate.  Unlike the GAO, CRS reports aren’t made available directly to the public.  Access is hit-or-miss — there’s even one recent occasion when the report I wanted was only available through wikileaks (though it had no national security implications of any kind.)

It’s really a shame that the reports can be so hard to locate. Consider three recent CRS reports:   One report provides a comprehensive roadmap to the legal framework governing offshore oil and gas. A second report provides the details of President Obama’s recent climate pledge, including cross-references to other relevant documents.  The third report is about recent changes in the Arctic and the issues that they present for congressional consideration. (You can find a full list of FY2012 CRS reports on energy and environment in the annual report. as well as other information about CRS operations.) Such reports can be very useful sources of background information, not to mention being a great way of keeping track of recent legislative proposals.

It is baffling that GAO’s reports are generally posted on its website, but CRS’s reports can only be obtained from third-parties.  (For instance, the three reports mentioned above were all posted on the website of the State Department’s press office.)  The reports that I’ve seen don’t contain anything that could be remotely considered confidential information.  At the least, it would  make more sense for public posting to be the default  unless members of Congress specifically request a confidential report.

Reader Comments

2 Replies to “Why Hide the Congressional Research Service’s Reports from the Public?”

  1. As a former congressional intern (who temporarily had access to the whole database of CRS reports as I was working with congressional staff), I was told that reports can be requested by constituents but have never tried to do this (Also, in retrospect, requesting a report of which you are not aware seems quite difficult).
    But CRS is undoubtedly the gold standard for timely and comprehensive research on issues before Congress (which makes Republican attacks on certain CRS reports last year so deeply troubling).
    Here are the best third-party sites that I have found for CRS reports:

    The State Dept. site you mentioned: http://fpc.state.gov/c18185.htm

    http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/

    http://digital.library.unt.edu/explore/collections/CRSR/

    https://opencrs.com/

    https://lib.law.washington.edu/content/guides/crs

    Other recent CRS reports of potential interest to LP readers might include a May 2013 CRS report on Energy Issues in the 113th Congress and one written in April 2013 on nuclear energy issues, both of which I accessed by searching the above State Dept. webpage.

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About Dan

Dan Farber has written and taught on environmental and constitutional law as well as about contracts, jurisprudence and legislation. Currently at Berkeley Law, he has al…

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About Dan

Dan Farber has written and taught on environmental and constitutional law as well as about contracts, jurisprudence and legislation. Currently at Berkeley Law, he has al…

READ more

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