GovTech Biz
-
The company has bought GrantExec, a young company that uses artificial intelligence to help match grant providers with recipients. The deal is not Euna’s first foray into grant administration technology.
-
The newest Transit Tech Lab competition focuses on such areas as data modernization, infrastructure management and workflows. Finalists have a chance to work with city officials and enter procurement.
-
The largest city in Kentucky recently hired a public-sector AI leader, and marked the first AI pilot for the local government. Louisville, in need of affordable housing, wants to build AI leadership.
More Stories
-
The California city is preparing to move onto the next phase of innovation.
-
How does a city make its data more accessible if the people who have the data are afraid to release it?
-
What used to be multi-million-dollar work is now getting broken down at the local level.
-
Maury Blackman is leaving Accela. What does it mean for the company's future?
-
Pulse is a civic engagement platform that simplifies info about legislation, allows constituents to make their opinions known and gives elected leaders a simplified dashboard to process input.
-
The free app will help give St. Louis dispatchers more accurate locations and information when someone calls 911.
-
Faced with a potential budget-busting bill of $120,000 to provide Wi-Fi at its aquatic facility, Naperville Park District’s IT director scored a deal to receive free broadband equipment, Wi-Fi installation and service at eight facilities. Now the company is looking to take the idea nationwide.
-
The state is the first to try the technology at such a large scale — though the number of people using the system will likely be a tiny fraction of the overall electorate.
-
The next-generation 911 company, Carbyne, is based in Israel but signing its first customers in the U.S.
-
RideAlong is all about giving information to emergency responders who are interacting with people who have mental health problems. The company is working with its first few customers, and it's already seeing results.
-
The company has worked a lot on facilities and asset management in the past, but with Paladin's SmartGov system it's getting into a new space.
-
Mike Wons was already serving as an adviser to the company.
-
The Board of Equalization hired contractor Fast Enterprises to build a new tax filing system in August 2016, and the California Department of Tax and Fee Administration took over the project last year when the Legislature stripped the Board of Equalization of almost all of its powers.
-
Law enforcement agencies across the nation are increasingly adopting body-worn camera programs that citizens hope hold the promise of accountability and transparency of police actions, but that trend is colliding with another citizen movement that puts a high value on privacy.
-
The program is called ResponderXLabs, and it's beginning with 13 companies that will focus on back-office work and software that saves time and money.
-
The company provides transportation data and analytics on demand.
-
Kansas-based NIC Inc., a provider of more than 13,000 digital government services nationally, launched RxGov, a prescription drug monitoring program platform powered by a recent tech acquisition.
-
The city has applied for federal permission to launch self-guided drones to collect video at the scene of gunshot reports coming from its ShotSpotter system.