Reports to Congress Under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
September 1997
Office of Management and Budget
Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs
Table of Contents
Overview
- Government Wide Summary of Information Technology Obligations
Introduction
Summary Analysis
Federal Information Technology Obligations
- The Fiscal Year 1996 Information Collection Budget (ICB)
The Information Collection Budget and Paperwork Burden
Information Collection Burden in FY 1995 and FY 1996 and Estimated Burden in FY 1997
Information Collection Burden Reduction Accomplishments for FY 1996
Information Collection Burden Reduction Planned Initiatives for FY 1997
Paperwork Reduction Act Violations
- Government Information and Services: Information Dissemination Activities and Trends
- Agency Compliance with the Information Policy Provisions of OMB Circular No. A130
Appendices
- OMB Circular No. A11 (1996), Section 43
- Glossary of Agency Abbreviations and Common Names
- Changes in Historical Reporting Basis
Overview
On May 22, 1995, the President signed the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), P.L. 10413, into law.
The PRA gives specific responsibilities to the Office
of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) in the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB). These
responsibilities include ensuring that:
- effective and efficient information resource
management practices are implemented across
the government;
- the paperwork burden imposed by the Federal
government on the public is minimized; and
- the greatest possible public benefit comes
from the collection, use, and dissemination of
information collected from the public.
These Reports to Congress under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 are intended to document for
Congress some of OIRA's continued efforts towards
the fulfillment of the purposes and planning
requirements of the PRA. These reports detail how
much the Federal government anticipates spending on
information resources, to what extent the information
collection burden on citizens by the government has
been reduced, and how the Federal government has
improved access to government information.
The first report is an analysis of the components of the
proposed $27 billion in information technology
spending from the President's FY 1998 budget for the
Federal government as well as an historical discussion
of Federal IT spending. (See also "Improving
Performance in a Balanced Budget World," contained
in the President's FY 1998 Budget.)
The second report contains a discussion of the total
paperwork burden imposed by the Federal
government. The burden is the number of hours
individuals, businesses, and State and local
governments must spend preparing or maintaining
Federally mandated forms, reports, and records. For
FY 1996, the estimated total burden is 6.7 billion
hours. This section provides both an accounting of
actual reductions accomplished by Executive Branch
agencies during FY 1996 and a description of some of
the actions the agencies are planning to achieve
additional paperwork reductions for FY 1997.
The third report describes some recent efforts in the
Federal government to provide for the widespread
dissemination and, more importantly, organization of
government information through the World Wide Web
(WWW).
The final report documents agency compliance with
the information policy provisions of OMB Circular
No. A130. The circular requires agencies to
document and report complaints about the agencies'
information dissemination policies. With one
exception, no complaints were documented during FY
1996.
Federal agencies are continuing their efforts to
promote programbased planning for the use of
information resources towards a more efficient use of
technology in serving program goals, towards reduced
paperwork burdens without compromising program
integrity, and towards the improved delivery of public
services. These reports are intended to provide
Congress and others information needed to promote a
more efficient government. OIRA hopes as well that
the public will use these reports to learn about the
Federal government's IRM policies and practices and
more actively participate in the shaping of these
activities.
Return to Table of Contents
Continue on to Chapter 1
The Budget | Legislative Information | Management Reform/GPRA | Grants Management Financial Management | Procurement Policy | Information & Regulatory Policy Contact the White House Web Master
Privacy Statement |