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e-Forum Newsletter  
7th May 2009  

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Public sector information

EU AUTHORITIES NOT DOING ENOUGH TO ENCOURAGE PUBLIC SECTOR INFORMATION RE-USE

Public authorities in the European Union have taken some steps to promote the re-use of public sector information, but need to go considerably further, the European Commission said May 7.

 
The European Public Sector Information platform keeps track of products and services based on publicly held data.
In a review of the impact of a 2003 Directive (2003/98/EC) setting out common rules for the re-use of public sector information (PSI), the Commission found that public authorities had started to unlock some of their information resources, but that progress had been uneven and "big barriers still exist."

The intention of the 2003 PSI Directive was to allow generally free access to data held by public authorities, such as mapping information, weather data, and historical and cultural archives. This would stimulate the development of new products and services, it was argued.

However, according to the Commission review, most EU countries implemented the legislation late, and there had been "attempts by public sector bodies to maximise cost recovery...[and] practical issues hindering re-use, such as the lack of information on available PSI, and the mindset of public sector bodies failing to realise the economic potential."

However, the review added that there was no need to revise the rules, because it was too early to make a full assessment of the benefits of the legislation, and because a transitional arrangement allowing exclusive arrangements on data access to continue until the end of 2008 had only just ended. The Commission said it would conduct a further review in 2012. In the meantime, public bodies must "remove remaining barriers to re-use: discrimination between potential users, high charges for public sector information and complex licensing policies," the Commission said.

According to the Commission, the economic value of data held by public bodies in the EU is in the region of €27 billion, and some sectors had seen significant change as a result of the PSI Directive. For more information, visit the e-Forum website.


eGOV AWARDS OPEN FOR NOMINATIONS

The European Commission is for the fourth time running a European eGovernment Award scheme. eGovernment awards will be given out at a Ministerial eGovernment Conference in Malmö (Sweden) in November, attended by ministers and officials from EU member states and the European Commission.

The Commission promotes the awards as a great opportunity to show and demonstrate different solutions for eGovernment practices in the use of public administration. Participating in the awards ensures greater visibility across Europe for the nominated and winning good practice cases.

Who can apply?

All public administrations (national, regional, local, etc.) from EU Member States, EFTA countries and candidate countries (Croatia, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Turkey) that deliver eGovernment services and solutions can apply. The online submission is open until 10 June 2009 at www.epractice.eu/awards.

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Privacy Working Group
Identity, privacy and ensuring an appropriate level of data protection in the Internet age
>> Click here  
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Access e-Forum’s Learning Journey archive, for a practitioner’s view of eGovernment programme implementation.
>> Click here  
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