In Washington, the reports have become commodities traded and sold by policy wonks.

Every day, the Congressional Research Service, a little-known government agency attached to the Library of Congress, churns out papers on issues as varied as the defense budget, the farm bill and nuclear weapons. They’re not classified. They’re nonpartisan. And unlike many government reports, they’re fairly easy to understand. Yet it’s hard for most people to get copies of reports produced by the Congressional Research Service, which operates as an in-house think-tank for lawmakers. That is absurd.

As the Library of Congress, which will soon get a new leader, takes long-overdue steps to modernize digital access, lawmakers and library officials must find a way to make the service’s valuable work readily available. These expert reports give taxpayers a richer understanding of the issues and choices their representatives deal with.

Currently, some of these reports are made available to people who know where to look, like diplomats, lobbyists and reporters. Constituents can get them from congressional offices if they know what to ask for. Some private groups, like The Federation of American Scientists, post a selection on their websites. But access is very haphazard.

Senate bills have been introduced in past years that would have made all Congressional Research Service reports available online, much like those produced by the Congressional Budget Office and the Government Accountability Office. Yet, since 1952, the yearly bill that provides financing for the Congressional Research Service, which employs more than 600 people and has an annual budget of roughly $107 million, has contained a vaguely worded provision that the agency believes prevents it from sharing reports broadly. Early this year, Representatives Leonard Lance, a Republican, and Mike Quigley, a Democrat, introduced a measure in the House to require the service to post its reports online.