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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$143.5 million in financing for California-based Accela will help firm expand its cloud platform.
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If Oracle can wrest a settlement from the state, it would end the production of documents and sworn testimony that could prove revealing about Oracle's conduct.
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The new Business Oregon program will help companies in their early stages develop their products to the point where they would be candidates for a much larger federal program.
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While startups can't equity crowdfund from "unaccredited investors," House Bill 1360 would allow those in Virginia to take advantage of an intrastate exemption.
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The Connector paid Mansha Consulting at least $14.7 million before cutting off payments and launching an investigation into the performance of the information technology vendor, said the Connector's executive director.
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A new generation of payment technologies could help transform the federal government's image while simultaneously protecting sensitive consumer data.
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Two lawmakers have introduced a resolution that enables Congress members to vote and participate in committee hearings via the Internet.
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The contract, issued in 2009 to two politically-connected firms, was mired in controversy from the start, culminating in a judge’s final declaration last week that it was illegal and void.
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Facing high costs but smaller budgets, states like Hawaii and Rhode Island are struggling to find financially and politically sustainable ways to keep their health exchanges running.
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Ohio Treasurer John Mandel said he wants “to create an army of citizen watchdogs” to demand transparency of every level of government and challenge questionable purchases.
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A California licensing and enforcement portal is failing in most ways, according to a recent auditor's report.
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The service, which took six months to develop, was on the municipality’s wish list for three years.
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When the Texas HHS Commission asked the federal government to foot most of the bill for new Medicaid fraud tracking software, it assured Washington counterparts the deal had been competitively bid.
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A shortage of operable hand-held radios could force the patrol into changing its routine operations, including traffic enforcement, ISP officials told lawmakers Tuesday.
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The utility described the $653.8 million effort as an important step toward reaching Gov. Jerry Brown’s goal of having 1.5 million zero-emission vehicles on the state’s roads by 2025.
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The database, the Alaska Public Safety Information Network, has not been replaced nor fully upgraded since it launched in 1984 on what is now regarded as an outdated large-scale business computer system.
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The Texas Department of Information Resources has negotiated a contract with Amazon Web Services to provide further cloud technologies to state agencies.
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The DOJ has been interviewing employees of the state and of contractors Education Networks of America and CenturyLink about how the $60 million broadband contract was awarded in 2008.
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