Legislative Tools for the Road
The basic tools for legislative
work are few and versatile. We have collected the most important and general-
purpose legislative tools here. Privately made tools are marked in blue, publicly-made tools in red.
Contents
Legislative Resources
- House legislative database
- Will T. Bill
- LegiSlate Gopher
- Thomas
- GPO Access
- LC Web
- University of Michigan Legislative page
Judicial Resources
- Internet Law Library
- Villanova WWW Law
- Emory Law School
- Cornell Law School
Current Law: US Code sites
- USC at the House
- USC experimental server
- USC at GPO
- USC at Cornell
Other Current Law
- University of Michigan Laws and Regulations page
- Searching Public Laws on GPO
Jump to
the bottom of this page.
Legislative Resources
- House Legislative Database
- See also the Federal Tool Kit's more
complete description of this ambitious
project: a fully searchable database of House bills and amendments in full
text; bill and amendment status, bill summaries, and histories; committee
hearing transcripts, votes, and reports; the Congressional Record; etc.
Many of the databases, however, especially those that would yield the
most current and timely information, remain permanently "under construction"
and unavailable.
The
House gopher describes the House WAIS databases as follows:
The U.S. House of Representatives is now providing the full
text of the printed versions of House bills and resolutions on a
WAIS server.The Legislative Resources area also contains listings of major
Floor and Committee actions taken in the House and Senate,
as well as Joint Committees, for the last three
legislative days. It is updated only when the House is in
session, so will not include Committee actions taken during
recess. The Joint Committee Actions includes information
for the last three legislative days on which Joint
Committees met and acted.
http://www.house.gov/Legproc.html
>
- Will T. Bill
- The "Will T. Bill" interface to
the House WAIS server (legislative database) is usually
available from 6AM to 1AM EST. It provides an easy one-stop
search of many aspects of House bills: one may search any
bill from the 104th or 103d Congress, limit the search to
particular versions (any, engrossed, enrolled, reported, introduced)
of bills or to particular kinds (HR, HRes, HConRes, Hjnt Res, S,
Sres SConRes, SJntRes, any), and search by bill number or title,
by date of introduction, sponsor or key word or phrase in the
full text of the bill. Beware, however: the interface
requires a WAIS-conversant browser, or a browser with a
local WAIS client configured.
http://www.unipress.com/will-t-bill.html
- The LegiSlate gopher
- Provides quick and timely access to
very frequently (daily) updated information about current legislation.
Legislate is a commercial product, a subset of the larger
Legislate database. As such, unfortunately, it makes only
a smaller subset still available to the general public.
A full description is available
in the Federal Toolkit. Those with institutional access to the full LegiSlate
gopher service may view a
description from LegiSlate itself; those without may prefer to look at their
description of the public portion.
gopher://gopher.legislate.com:70/11/Legislation
- THOMAS
- The premiere legislative resource, containing
the searchable full text of current legislation, bill summaries and histories (both searchable), indexes of "hot" legislation, and browsable lists of
bills by date, status (vetoed, passed, enrolled), etc., as well as a
searchable text of the Congressional Record. Various guides are available,
including hints for searching bill summary and status information; a
guide to keyword
searching; a guide to
interpreting results; and a
guide to searching for individual bills by bill number. There is
also a fairly comprehensive guide in
the Federal Tool Kit.
(http://thomas.loc.gov)
- GPO Access Legislative Databases
- The main legislative databases at
GPO Access include (linked here to the relevant pages of the
Federal Tool Kit):
The Congressional Record and CR Index
United States Code
Public Laws
Bills
Congressional Directory
House and Senate Calendars
History of bills.
The last contains the 1996 History of Bills and
Resolutions, a section of the 1996 Congressional Record Index (Vol.142) that
provides information about all bills and resolutions introduced during the 2nd session
of the 104th Congress. The database is updated daily, usually the day after
publication of the record. The 1995 and 1994 History of Bills and Resolutions
database provides information about the 104th Congress 1st session and the 103d
Congress 1st and 2nd session. Entries for each bill include actions that are reported
in the Congressional Record and reference issue and date and pages where the
action is reported.
- LCWEB
- A good survey of legislative
sites from the Library of Congress. Includes a
subsection devoted to Congressional sources in
particular, and links to CapWeb, Thomas, various partisan and
official legislative sources, voting record sources, etc. A
fairly small but well maintained site.
http://lcweb.loc.gov/global/legislative/
- University of Michigan Legislation Page
- From the Documents Center, a comprehensive
guide to Federal Legislation information on line (and some off).
To this site might be compared the set of
general laws and legislation links from the
University of Colorado
Boulder (mostly GPO Access mirrors, Thomas, Project
Vote Smart, Cornell Law School, etc.), as well as the
Colorado page of political campaign material,
voting
records, current bills, congressional directories, etc.
http://www.lib.umich.edu/libhome/Documents.center/fedlegis.html
Judicial Information
Only occasionally of use to the legislative craftsman, Federal judicial
information merits mention of only four of the most important sites.
- US House of Reps Internet Law Library
- Contains U.S. Federal laws (arranged by original published source),
U.S. Federal laws (arranged by agency),
U.S. state and territorial laws,
Laws of other nations,
Treaties and international law,
Laws of all jurisdictions (arranged by subject),
Law school law library catalogues and services,
Attorney and legal profession directories,
Reviews of law books. This directory was developed by House Information Resources (H.I.R.) as
part of a demonstration project for the Office of the Legislative
Counsel of the U.S. House of Representatives and the Office of the Law
Revision Counsel of the U.S. House of Representatives. The purpose of
these directories is to provide easy access to the law-related resources
of the Internet. These directories include over 1,600 links to the law
resources of the Internet (Congressional Record included).
(http://www.pls.com:8001/his/1.htm)
- Federal Court WWW Archives
- Only remotely relevant to making laws, the courts are very relevant to interpreting
them. This site includes slip decisions from the circuit court of appeals, plus a very few
district courts and the supreme court. Most of circuit court links are to
the Emory site (http://www.law.emory.edu/6circuit/ etc.), which (in the
case of the sixth circuit, e.g.) enables one to find (e.g.) the full
decision in the recent Princeton Univ. Press et al v. MDS, Inc. Ann Arbor.
Also links to relevant agencies (Sentencing commission, Judicial Center,
etc.) and to WANT Inc., a company that publishes guides to the US Court
system. Catalogues of their materials are available, plus a few on-line
resources (list of recent judicial appointments and vacatings of judgeships
a directory
of courts by state + special courts including lists of justices plus
addresses and phone numbers. More useful for those trying to understand
the interpretation of current legislation than seeking to influence
the creation of new legislation.
(http://www.law.vill.edu/Fed-Ct/fedcourt.html)
- Emory's Federal Court Finder
- The emory site is arranged by circuit
with a nice map of the circuits,
Boolean search by keyword, or alphabetical listing by first or second
parties, or list by month of decision.
http://www.law.emory.edu/FEDCTS/
- Legal Information Institute (Cornell)
- Contains a searchable
list of Supreme Court decisions since 1990.
A very nice site, searchable by topic, keyword, or name of
either party (the last only
within individual years 1990-1995 only), plus selected pre-90 cases.
The larger Cornell site
of which this is a part is one of the chief repositories of U.S.
law on line.
http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/
Existing Law: Some US Law Code (USC) sites
- U.S. Code Gopher
- The U.S. House of Representatives
gopher server hosts this text version of the USC, broken
down by USC title (or access via
the web.) There is no search mechanism: just begin with
the
- Experimental House USC Server
- The experimental nature of
the server appears to lie not in the text (which is
that of the January 1993 edition of the USC,
as is explained on a
brief page, but in its search software from
Personal Librarian,
which allows a choice of
search between "search" and "concept search," and a choice
of "advisors" between "relate,"
"dictionary," and "fuzzy," these terms
roughly explained by
PLS,
and more thoroughly with a
Help page,
but most simply by trying it out. The "advisors"
suggest lists of terms to add to the query on
the basis of spelling, association in the database,
etc. Final search results are relevancy ranked
and ordered, and link to the relevant portions
of the full text of the USC.
http://www.pls.com:8001/his/usc.html
- US Code at GPO Access
- The United States Code is
prepared and published by the Office of the Law Revision Counsel, U.S. House of
Representatives' and contains the general and permanent laws of the United States in
effect as of January 1994 or January 1995 depending on the title. The database is
updated periodically, annotating changes to individual sections. Whole titles are
superseded annually as the editing process for each title is completed. Notification of
a change to a section of the United States Code usually occurs within five business
days of the enactment of the law; the text of a revision is incorporated as the annual
bound volumes are published.
Follow this link to the longer
discussion of the Government Printing Office GPO Access
site contained on the Federal Took Kit "General Purpose Tools"
page. Or
connect directly to the main
GPO site, or view
hints to searching the USC on GPO.
- US Code at Cornell Law School
- USC text of January 1994, representing
the codified law in force at that time, searchable by popular
title, USC title/section, or full text keyword.
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/index.html
Other Current Law
- University of Michigan Law and Regulations page
- : An excellent annotated list of the
chief sources of ready access to Federal laws and regulations.
http://www.lib.umich.edu/libhome/Documents.center/fedlaws.html
- Public Laws
- Updates to the US Code can be made
by attention to the bills that are enacted as Public Laws.
The GPO Public Laws database (limit search to P.L. database) can
be searched by subject or PL number in quotes "Public Law 104-17"
The Public Laws database is
a collection of laws enacted during the 104th Congress (1995-1996). The header of
each section indicates when a recent Public Law affects that particular section but the
text remains unchanged until the annual revision cycle. Prepared and published by
the Office of the Federal Register (OFR), National Archives and Records
Administration, each law is first published as a slip law and then later compiled into a
volume of the Statutes at Large. The Public Laws database contains the text of each
law enacted, and is updated irregularly as the publication of a slip law is authorized by
the OFR.
For Public Laws from the 103rd Congress, use Thomas. Follow this link to the longer
discussion of the Government Printing Office GPO Access
site contained on the Federal Took Kit "General Purpose Tools"
page.
Or
connect directly to the main
GPO site, or view
hints to searching for Public Laws on GPO.