Common Sense Taxpayer
Scorecard - from Taxpayers for Common
Sense & TCS Action, "an independent taxpayer
organization that works to cut government waste by reaching out to
taxpayers from all political perspectives."
USA.gov
- easy-to-search, free-access
website designed to give you a centralized place to find information
from local, state, and U.S. Government Agency websites.
State
Fact Sheets
- information on population, per-capita
income, earnings per job, poverty rate, total number of jobs,
unemployment rate, percent employment change, farm and farm related
jobs, top export commodities, farm characteristics, and farm
financial indicators. From the US Dept. of Agriculture
Stateline.org -
state-by-state information and news articles on state and local
politics and policy. Recommended
StateSearch
- A "service of the National Association of State Information
Resource Executives [that] is designed to serve as a topical
clearinghouse to state government information on the Internet."
Information-packed 2-sided, color poster with select
sections from the Congressional Deskbook. Back includes
federal budget process flowchart and budget process
glossary.
"United States Government Internet Manual,"
by Peggy Gravin (Bernan Press, 2007).
"A solid, thorough, accessibly organized reference book of
World Wide Web sites corresponding to countless institutions
of the American Government, as well as state and local
government information, and a special section of government
information for numerous nations around the world from
Albania to Zimbabwe. Solid, detailed descriptions of what
each governmental web site has to offer as well as an index
for quick and easy reference make Government Information On
The Internet a first-class reference for anyone who has to
look up specific facts relatively quickly." - Midwest Book
Review
"You Won - Now What? How Americans Can Make Democracy Work
from City Hall to the White House,"
by Taegan D. Goddard and Christopher Riback.
"'Americans entrust their government to novices,' Riback and
Goddard remind us. 'Every November they elect a bunch of
people who have never done this before.' You Won, Now What?
offers practical tips on the task of governance, drawing
upon real-life examples to illustrate how elected officials
can do an effective job in their first--and in some ways
most critical--days on the job. Their scope is broad--the
authors consider state and local governments to be just as
important as the federal government in maintaining quality
of life for citizens--but the case studies keep the book
from sliding into generalizations." Available for purchase in
hardcover (Scribner, 1998) or
paperback (Simon & Schuster, 1999)
"Washington,"
by Meg Greenfield
[A] timeless classic on the ways and mores of our nation's
capitol. With Washington, the illustrious longtime
editorial page editor of The Washington Post wrote an
instant classic, a sociology of Washington, D.C., that is as
wise as it is wry. Greenfield, a recipient of the Pulitzer
Prize for commentary, wrote the book secretly in the final
two years of her life. This title is available for
purchase in
paperback (PublicAffairs,2002)
(Title descriptions are from Amazon.com unless otherwise indicated.)