Posted on 12/20/2008 9:08:10 PM PST by smokingfrog
Ive obtained documents sent to a reader in response to his FOIA request regarding the creation of Barack Obamas Change.gov website. It gives you the rest of the story. Youll recall last month that I blogged several questions about the propriety of allowing the perpetual Obama campaign to use a .gov domain name for what appeared to be a fund-raising front. Readers and industry observers noted that the decision appeared to violate General Services Administration rules governing government domains.
Guess what? They were right. The FOIA documents sent to Lance O., which he forwarded to me, reveal that the GSA initially rejected Obamas application for Change.gov. On Oct. 21, Peter Alterman, Deputy Associate Administrator of Technology Strategy at the GSA, denied the Obama campaigns request for a government domain because:
1) It would be a a violation of the governments naming conventions (too generic); and
2) using change in the domain name would be political, since it was the trademark slogan of the Obama campaign.
The day after the election, on Nov. 5, GSA Chief Information Officer Casey Coleman overruled Alterman after apparently receiving a waiver from Chris Lu, Executive Director of Obamas Transition Project. As reader Lance discovered through his FOIA request, Ms. Coleman did not elaborate on the granting of this waiver except to say that she had determined that it is in the best interest of the Federal Government to register the subject domain name.
As another GSA official who facilitated the convenient change in policy regarding change.gov exulted to the Obama campaign after the domain was granted, Rock and roll!
Thanks to reader Lance for filing the FOIA request and giving us a peek into the GSA bureaucracy for change.
***
(Excerpt) Read more at michellemalkin.com ...
What about youaresoscrewed.gov?
It just never ends does it. Is this still the USA. I don’t think so.
Wow. Looks like you have found the smoking frog.
Sure, but it's anyone's guess how large the butcher's bill will be this time to keep it that way.
Ping
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.