Sunlight Foundation

States of Transparency: Ohio

The Open Government Directive encouraged states to put valuable government data online. In this series we're reviewing each state's efforts in this direction.

This week: Ohio

Website: www.transparency.ohio.gov

Ohio's open government site, transparency.ohio.gov, contains links to a few searchable databases; the results of one of them can even be downloaded as an Excel file. Unfortunately, the majority of the data cannot currently be downloaded.

Here's a rundown of what is and isn't available online:

Expenditures: The broad strokes -- how much each agency spent per month -- are downloadable as Excel files. (Click on "Spending Volumes 2010".) To be useful, the data would have to be much more detailed.

Grants: Grant information is listed on each agency's site (there's a central page with links to each here). Unfortunately, it's difficult to use the grant information in any comparative way, since it isn't in one place and the bulk of it is in PDF format.

Salaries: Again, these are on static pages that aren't searchable. Salaries of state employees are listed as gross income per pay period, in alphabetical order by agency.

Contracts: There's a searchable database of current contracts here, but the results are in PDF. You can't look up even simple information such as the amount of the contract without opening up each PDF though. While the searchable database is useful for finding a particular recipient, it's almost useless to researchers who want to look at trends. 

The individual contracts are available online, however, and the information is available at a very granular level. For example, interested parties can learn that starting July 1, J.T.M. Provisions Co., Inc. will be contracting to provide approximately 47,000 pounds of Beef Crumbles/Crumble Mix (with 7% vegetable protein product) to the state of Ohio. To get the approximate amount awarded, however, we had to search through the contract and multiply the price per pound by the minimum yield of finished product.

Tax incentives. Ohio gets extra points here. Using a searchable database (instructions can be found here), users can look up tax breaks by recipient name, county, zip code, incentive type or approval date, and the results are downloadable as an Excel file. The report also lists the number of jobs created, retained or maintained as a result of the credit, if applicable.

Property. Under the rationale that unused property can lead to community blight, the folks at the Treasurer's office created a searchable database for un- or under-used land that citizens can purchase. If the property has an address, you can click on a map, and owner information and price are available. There's even a link to email the state with information about the property.

Search the Blog

Related Content

Popular tags

2012 election 2012 elections 2013 Inauguration Ad Ad Hawk Ad Hoc AIG american crossroads Arab Spring Barack Obama BP budget Campaign contributions Campaign Finance Center for Responsive Politics Citizens United consumer banking Contracting Conventions2012 Correspondence crossroads GPS dark money Data Mine datamine debt ceiling Disclose act Distributed Research Dodd-Frank Earmarks Election 2012 Elizabeth Warren FARA FCC FDA FEC Federal Election Commission Fellows Finance Data Catalog Financial Bailout Financial Reform FLIT FOIA follow the unlimited money Foreign lobbying Foreign Lobbying Influence Tracker freshmen Fundraising Guns Handy Tools health care Hoc House House Freshmen 112th House Majority PAC Immigration Independent Expenditure Independent expenditures influence Influence Explorer investment James Bopp Jr. Lobbying lobbying tracker Logs_6553 Majority PAC Mark Sanford Market Meltdown Media Medicare meeting logs Mitt Romney National Rifle Association Newt Gingrich NRA obama OGD Open Government Directive Orrin Hatch outside spending Party Time PMA Group political ad sleuth Political Party Time Politwoops President Obama Priorities USA Action Recovery Recovery.gov Rep. John Murtha Research Restore Our Future revolving door Rick Perry Rick Santorum Romney Ron Paul Sen. Christopher Dodd Senate Sheldon Adelson states of transparency Stealthy Wealthy stimulus Sunlight Live super committee super congress Super PAC super PAC profile Super PACs supercommittee Supercongress supreme court TARP Taxpayers for Common Sense transparency