Bill Sponsor
Senate Bill 760
115th Congress(2017-2018)
Open, Public, Electronic, and Necessary Government Data Act
Introduced
Introduced
Introduced in Senate on Mar 29, 2017
Overview
Text
Introduced
Mar 29, 2017
Latest Action
Jul 24, 2017
Origin Chamber
Senate
Type
Bill
Bill
The primary form of legislative measure used to propose law. Depending on the chamber of origin, bills begin with a designation of either H.R. or S. Joint resolution is another form of legislative measure used to propose law.
Bill Number
760
Congress
115
Policy Area
Government Operations and Politics
Government Operations and Politics
Primary focus of measure is government administration, including agency organization, contracting, facilities and property, information management and services; rulemaking and administrative law; elections and political activities; government employees and officials; Presidents; ethics and public participation; postal service. Measures concerning agency appropriations and the budget process may fall under Economics and Public Finance policy area.
Sponsorship by Party
Democrat
Hawaii
Republican
Colorado
Democrat
Delaware
Democrat
Michigan
Republican
Nebraska
Senate Votes (0)
House Votes (0)
No Senate votes have been held for this bill.
Summary

Open, Public, Electronic, and Necessary Government Data Act or the OPEN Government Data Act

This bill requires open government data assets made available by federal agencies (excluding the Government Accountability Office and certain other government entities) to be published as machine-readable data. When not otherwise prohibited by law, and to the extent practicable, public data assets and nonpublic data assets maintained by the federal government must be available: (1) in an open format that does not impede use or reuse and that has standards maintained by a standards organization; and (2) under open licenses with a legal guarantee that the data be available at no cost to the public with no restrictions on copying, publishing, distributing, transmitting, citing, or adapting.

If published government data assets are not available under an open license, the data must be considered part of the worldwide public domain. Agencies may engage with outside organizations and citizens to leverage public data assets for innovation in public and private sectors.

Agencies must: (1) make their enterprise data inventories available to the public on Data.gov, and (2) designate a point of contact to assist the public and respond to complaints about adherence to open data requirements. For privacy, security, confidentiality, or regulatory reasons, agencies may maintain a nonpublic portion of their inventories.

The General Services Administration must maintain a single public interface online as a point of entry dedicated to sharing open government data with the public.

The Office of Management and Budget must develop and maintain an online repository of tools, best practices, and schema standards to facilitate the adoption of open data practices.

Text (2)
July 24, 2017
March 29, 2017
Actions (5)
07/24/2017
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 180.
07/24/2017
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs. Reported by Senator Johnson with amendments. With written report No. 115-134.
05/17/2017
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs. Ordered to be reported without amendment favorably.
03/29/2017
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.
03/29/2017
Introduced in Senate
Public Record
Record Updated
Jan 11, 2023 1:36:11 PM