Report says Congress needs lots of help with Web sites

Congress needs to work harder to develop best practices for lawmakers' Web sites, a report from the Brookings Institution says.

Although a few congressional Web sites are exemplary, many are “suboptimal,” and Congress needs to do more work to improve Web sites and share best practices for Web 2.0 technologies, according to a new report from the Brookings Institution think tank.

Brookings has been reviewing congressional Web sites for quality since 2006. In its most recent review with the Congressional Management Foundation in April, it gave the Platinum Mouse Award top honors for Web site excellence to the House Science & Technology Committee, the House Republican Conference, and the individual sites of Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Rep. Steve Israel (D-N.Y.)

Despite those superior examples, and despite the fact that many lawmakers say their sites are important communication tools, the quality of many of those sites is “suboptimal,” according to the Brookings authors Kevin Esterline, David Laser and Michael Nablo in the "Improving Congressional Web Sites" report, dated this August.


Related stories:

Study sees widened gap between best, worst congressional Web sites

10 government sites that effectively use new media for public engagement


Among members of Congress, “Web site design often appears to be at most a secondary priority, best practice standards do not appear to drive existing design practices, and there appears to be few attempts to learn about best practices within the institution, either top-down from the leadership or in a decentralized way through social networks,” the report states.

As a result, Congress “seems to be stuck in a suboptimal equilibrium with respect to communication technology,” according to the report.

The authors blamed the inconsistent quality on the lack of any institutional mechanism to educate incoming lawmakers and to evaluate congressional efforts and drive improvements.

“Overall, it appears that there is no established mechanism within the institution driving new technology adoption,” the study said. “Congress as an institution fails to harness any collective process for adopting Web technology innovations or for learning about and using best practices.”