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------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
From:                   "Beierle, Tom" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

------------------ October 19, 2000

ELECTRONIC DEMOCRACY AND ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE: A SURVEY OF THE STATES
Information technology is rapidly changing the way we work, shop, and
play. Some envision a future where it also has a profound effect on
democracy, with governments at all levels using Internet-based technology
to engage citizens in the democratic process.

A new paper by researchers at Resources for the Future (RFF) says that
state-level governments are in an early and experimental phase in applying
the principles of electronic democracy to environmental decisionmaking.
The paper describes an RFF survey examining how all 50 states use the
Internet to engage citizens in environmental issues.  (The survey can be
found at http://www.rff.org/disc_papers/PDF_files/0042.pdf .)

RFF researchers found that while all 50 states have environmental Web
sites that provide at least basic information, relatively few use the
Internet for active on-line interaction between citizens and government,
or among citizens themselves.

States generally have embraced the notion of posting environmental laws
and regulations on their Web sites.  Seventy percent of the states
received a high score for the basic legal information they provide. Sixty
percent of the states scored high for the information they provide on
state environmental conditions; half scored high for providing easy
on-line access to information on particular environmental problems and
pollutants. Only 40 percent scored high marks for the information they
provide about regulated facilities in the state, such as chemical
companies, landfills, underground storage tanks or Superfund sites.

Beyond simply providing information, states were evaluated for the degree
to which their Web sites invite public involvement in the environmental
decisionmaking process.  Only 36 percent of states received a high score
for allowing the public to submit electronic comments on proposed
regulations via e-mail or a Web-based form.  Interviews with state agency
staff, however, suggest that on-line notice and comment is emerging as a
key interactive feature in many states, and on-line input is increasingly
being treated the same as that received through more traditional means.

The survey is one part of a larger project at RFF to examine the impact of
the Internet on public participation in environmental decisionmaking.  For
more information on the RFF project on  Electronic Environmental
Democracy: The Future of Information Technology in Participatory
Environmental Management, go to
http://www.rff.org/proj_summaries/99files/davies_Electronic_Environment.ht
m.

Resources for the Future is a nonprofit and nonpartisan think tank located
in Washington, DC that conducts independent research -- rooted primarily
in economics and other social sciences -- on environmental and natural
resource issues.

CONTACT: Tom Beierle, Fellow
Resources for the Future
(202) 328-5015
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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