Posts tagged "Clerk of the House"

2009 House of Representatives financial disclosures now available on LegiStorm

Posted by LegiStorm on Wednesday, June 10, 2009

The House of Representatives Clerk's Office has accidentally released all of the personal financial disclosures of members of the House ahead of their scheduled release on Friday.

The 2009 financial disclosures went up on the Clerk's web site. They are now all on LegiStorm's site.

The disclosures were scheduled to be released June 12, but the Clerk of the House website briefly posted them yesterday and LegiStorm was able to download the available disclosures and post them (with all the pages rotated to the correct orientation for our users' convienence - the forms are released in a sideways fashion due to the scanning process).

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LegiStorm updates House salary data

Posted by LegiStorm on Tuesday, January 13, 2009
LegiStorm has updated its House staff salaries, releasing data for the third quarter of 2008, ending Sept. 30.

The release comes six weeks after the Clerk of the House released a three-volume set of books containing salaries and all expenditures of the House of Representatives. Since that time, LegiStorm has been keypunching the data, as well as  proofreading for errors and matching the data to our existing salary records.

We are nearing completion of editing the Senate salary data as well. The Senate releases its expenditure records every six months, so the existing Senate salary data on our site is naturally getting a bit old, with March 31, 2008 being the last closing date. But this Thursday, we hope to bring the data current to Sept. 30.

Latest House congressional staff salary data released

Posted by LegiStorm on Friday, October 10, 2008

LegiStorm has released the latest available congressional staff salary data from the second quarter of 2008 for the House of Representatives.

As usual, the salary data comes from the Statement of Disbursements books published quarterly by the Clerk of the House. The books are typically published three months after the quarter ends and we spend a few weeks converting the books from hard-copy to digital form.

The Senate publishes its salary data in semi-annual, not quarterly, increments. The next Senate data is not scheduled for release for another three months.

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