Budget & Finance
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The blockchain-based token, believed to be the first from a U.S. public entity, is for individual and institutional use. The executive director of the Wyoming Stable Token Commission is planning what comes next.
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From the Rocky Mountains to the Gulf Coast, local governments are taking a strategic approach to sustain operational continuity in the face of IT department layoffs caused by budget constraints.
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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.
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Donor information is becoming increasingly difficult to find while more money than ever is flowing into state elections.
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The bill requires fantasy sports sites to pay $50,000 initially, ensure players' money is kept separate from operating funds, and turn over annual audits for the state's Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services to review.
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The steps Louisville is taking to financially empower its public employees and its citizens point the way.
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A modest home on State Line Road in Kansas City, Kan., is the Home for Hackers, where entrepreneurs can plop their laptops down and get started.
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The Bronx, a New York City borough once synonymous with arson and crime, was turned around by a succession of mayors.
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According to some, the labor rights in the gig economy are "fraught with ambiguity," and state governments may be catching up with the tech companies that take advantage of system.
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The initial cost of the cameras are only the tip of the iceberg for municipalities; often the steepest costs come from storage fees.
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Culturally, he’s a mismatch; Trump lost points in the valley for his protectionist views on trade, and when he called for a boycott of Apple for refusing the FBI’s request that it unlock the iPhone of the San Bernardino gunman.
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The Google.org grants align with a growing national movement focused on racial justice and fueled, in part, by the killings of young black men like Tamir Rice in Cleveland and Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo.
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State lawmakers want pharmaceutical companies to open their books to justify high-priced drugs.
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The government loses billions each year to tax refund fraud, but this summer, Georgia and North Carolina will pilot a new technology that aims to change that.
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Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin urged a Chicago-based company to cancel layoffs after hearing about a plan to replace American workers with foreign workers in a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting.
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As computerized voting machines reach the end of their life span, officials must figure out what to replace them with — and how to pay for it.
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Analysis of donation data in the 2016 election cycle showed that Republican candidates are making inroads in an industry traditionally perceived as closely aligned with Democrats.
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The federal digital service 18F is testing a new platform for small purchase coding projects by startups and technologists.
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Public and private officials looked to the future of technology in the public sector, honing in on three obstacles IT leaders face and potential opportunities.
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The term 'collaboration' gets thrown around a lot in the tech space, but as California officials on the heels of a massive public safety initiative contend, it's the best way of doing IT in government.
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The Texas Department of Information Resources board has voted to appoint Stacey Napier its executive director.
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