Federal News Radio
abernard102@gmail.com 2013-01-08
Summary:
'We plan to release the open data policy in early 2013, which will allow us to learn from and build on the ongoing work of Presidential Innovation Fellows working on open data initiatives,' said Steven VanRoekel, federal chief information officer, in an email to Federal News Radio. The Innovation Fellows are impacting the open data efforts in several ways, including creating an open national design program for a true human readable standard for health records under the Veterans Affairs Department's Blue Button initiative. 'It's gotten more than 240 entrants from professional designers who are participating and the winner will be announced soon,' Park said. 'And that design for a human readable open format for the Blue Button will be made open source for anyone to download.' The new policy and the addition of innovation fellows are helping agencies move out of that basic stage of open data, which calls for putting any and all information out there. Park said some agencies already are moving out ahead of the initial phase, including the Department of Health and Human Services, which is integrating semantic Web capabilities with open data. He said one example of HHS' work in this area is the hospital compare portal, which uses hospital care data quality to contrast health care providers. Park said the model used the government to promote open healthcare data is expanding to five other sectors. [1] Energy [2] Education [3] Public Safety [4] Finance [5] International Development 'We are running the same play [as we did with healthcare],' Park said. 'We have posted thousands of major government data resources across these sectors for free, easily findable, public access on the Data.gov website and subsidiary sites. We have dedicated community sites for each of these sectors. They are easily findable and very importantly they are computer readable, as much as humanly possible, and available for free' ... "