Difference between revisions of "US/Office of Special Counsel"

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|description=Officially, in charge of ensuring whistleblowers are taken seriously.
 
|description=Officially, in charge of ensuring whistleblowers are taken seriously.
 
|interests=whistleblowers
 
|interests=whistleblowers
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|headquarters=1730 M Street, NW Washington, D.C.
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|website=http://www.osc.gov/
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|num_staff=122
 
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}}
 
The [[United States Office of Special Counsel]] was set up to receive [[whistleblowing]] disclosures from federal employees. It has the power to demand investigation of charges made by whistleblowers, but very rarely does so - the OSC's annual report for fiscal year 1995 reveals that out of 333 whistleblowing disclosures, the office forwarded only 2 for agency investigation.<ref>[[Document:Whistleblowers - Risks and skills]]</ref><ref>[[Tom Devine]], (1997) ''The Whistleblower's Survival Guide'', Washington, DC, Fund for Constitutional Government, p. 68</ref>
 
The [[United States Office of Special Counsel]] was set up to receive [[whistleblowing]] disclosures from federal employees. It has the power to demand investigation of charges made by whistleblowers, but very rarely does so - the OSC's annual report for fiscal year 1995 reveals that out of 333 whistleblowing disclosures, the office forwarded only 2 for agency investigation.<ref>[[Document:Whistleblowers - Risks and skills]]</ref><ref>[[Tom Devine]], (1997) ''The Whistleblower's Survival Guide'', Washington, DC, Fund for Constitutional Government, p. 68</ref>

Revision as of 08:23, 20 September 2015

Group.png US/Office of Special Counsel   WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Parent organizationUS
Headquarters1730 M Street, NW Washington, D.C.
Staff122
Interestswhistleblowers
Officially, in charge of ensuring whistleblowers are taken seriously.

The United States Office of Special Counsel was set up to receive whistleblowing disclosures from federal employees. It has the power to demand investigation of charges made by whistleblowers, but very rarely does so - the OSC's annual report for fiscal year 1995 reveals that out of 333 whistleblowing disclosures, the office forwarded only 2 for agency investigation.[1][2]

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References

  1. Document:Whistleblowers - Risks and skills
  2. Tom Devine, (1997) The Whistleblower's Survival Guide, Washington, DC, Fund for Constitutional Government, p. 68


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