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We are creating a campaign finance data tool that clearly shows the flow of money into and out of campaigns. We hope to ensure government integrity and transparency in campaign activities by opening up campaign finance data to the public.

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danid123/opendisclosure

 
 

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opendisclosure

Overview

The goal of the project is to produce useful visualizations and statistics for Oakland's campaign finance data, starting with the November 2014 mayoral race.

Meeting notes can be found in this Google Doc.

Running Locally

To start, you'll need ruby installed.

rbenv install 2.1.0

Then install bundler and foreman:

gem install bundler
gem install foreman

Now you can install the other dependencies with:

bundle install --without=production

You should be all set. Run the app like this:

foreman start

Then, to get a local copy of all the data:

bundle exec ruby backend/load_data.rb

Data Source

The raw, original, separated-by-year data can be found on Oakland's "NetFile" site here: http://ssl.netfile.com/pub2/Default.aspx?aid=COAK

We process that data in a nightly ETL process. Every day (or so) this dataset is updated with the latest version of the data. There is a data dictionary of what all the columns mean here.

Current technology choices to-date:

  • Javascript/HTML/CSS
  • D3.js for visualization
  • Ruby (probably) for backend data acquisition and processing
  • Neo4j (graph database) for storying and querying contributions data

The raw data needs to be cleaned. A few common problems are:

  • Misspellings
  • Mischaracterized/vague occupation

Development Process

Trying out an "agile" approach, with a basic first version:

  • Clean a sample dataset (for one point in time) using a list of rules we come up with
  • Use cleaned dataset to answer the below 5 key questions
  • Then try to automate the cleaning to the extent possible for automatic updates/dynamic data

5 Key Questions from the Public Ethics Commission

(Click a question to be taken to the GitHub Issue for that question.)

1. Who are the top 5-10 contributors to each campaign? (people or company)

2. Which industries support each candidate? (top 5 industries, aggregate amount given from this industry to each candidate, percentage that this contribution makes in the committee’s entire fundraising efforts for this reporting period)

3. Bar graph showing how much campaign committee has raised so far versus how much that committee has spent in expenditures on the campaign.

4. What percentage of campaign contributions to each mayoral candidate are made from Oakland residents vs. others?

5. Evaluate any overlap between corporations and industries that employ and register a lobbyist with the City of Oakland and campaign contribution and expenditure data.

TABLETOP CODE

Initialize Tabletop

var gsheet = "https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/pub?key=0AnZDmytGK63SdDVyeE9ONFctMnRSU2VjanhZTUJsN1E&output=html";

$(document).ready(function(){
    Tabletop.init( { key: gsheet,
                       callback: setTheScene,
                       proxy: IF USING PROXY,
                       wanted: ["SHEETi"], ##can haz multiple sheets
                       debug: true } );
});

function setTheScene(data, tabletop){
  $.each( tabletop.sheets("SHEETi").all(), function(i, sheeti) {
    var insertRow = [];
    insertRow[0] = sheeti.columnname; #enter column name here
    ARRAY.push(insertRow); ## push to array of choice
  });
}

About

We are creating a campaign finance data tool that clearly shows the flow of money into and out of campaigns. We hope to ensure government integrity and transparency in campaign activities by opening up campaign finance data to the public.

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  • JavaScript 63.4%
  • Ruby 21.1%
  • CSS 11.9%
  • Python 3.6%