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Caroline Cournoyer

Caroline Cournoyer is a staff writer for Governing.

West Sacramento, Calif., and Santa Monica are testing a Tinder-like app that "meets citizens where they are."
The number of laptops, tablet computers and other devices in Vermont schools has exploded in the last several years, according to a new Agency of Education technology survey.
Human error and outdated technology have miscalculated thousands of prison sentences and cost some states millions of dollars.
Local police continue to search today for a suspect who wounded a Ferguson police officer Saturday night, but now authorities say the incident involved only one person and that it appears no burglary took place.
While the precise rules vary from state to state, one explanation is the same: opposition from utilities grown nervous by the rapid encroachment of solar firms on their business.
Not only are landlines more reliable during disasters, rural residents and the elderly are concerned about the new generation of phone services that will likely be less regulated.
The federal government wants to create a single network for emergency communications, and it’s up to states to decide whether they want to join.
While HealthCare.gov has been called a disaster, state-level stories are quite different.
For cities searching for ways to use mobile technology effectively, Boston's latest app offers a case study on how to do it right.
On the eve of the implementation of one of Obamacare’s most significant provisions, Governing spoke to Harvard economist David Cutler.