Matthew Burton

ReadableLaws.org

Congressional legislation in plain English

http://readablelaws.org

Congress proposes over 5,000 bills and resolutions every year. When was the last time you read one? You're not alone. Even senators and representatives don't read them. Some bills are several thousand pages long, and they're filled with legalese that no one human can possibly sort through. This means that most bills do not undergo the public scrutiny they should before becoming law.

Using the same software that runs Wikipedia, ReadableLaws.org lets citizens decipher legislation line by line and turn it into plain English. After that, site members can analyze bills and explain their deeper implications. The result is a clear explanation of legislation and a concise, understandable copy of its full text.

NYU Journalism Professor Jay Rosen sparked the initial idea for this site.

Also, a few books have been the motivation behind this project\'s participation and clarity undertones:


I expect this community\'s early members to be people like me: civic-minded geeks. These people will probably make up the bulk of the contributors. Eventually, the number of non-contributing readers will outnumber the contributors, and I hope those readers are average citizens who just want to find out about legislation.

The site is based on MediaWiki, the same software that drives Wikipedia. I\'ve modified it substantially to accommodate the site\'s content.

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