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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The plan announced last month by Chairman Tom Wheeler would raise the overall funding cap for the program from $2.4 billion to $3.9 billion a year.
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Gas prices are dropping all over the country. Will state lawmakers take the opportunity to raise gasoline taxes?
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The theft of 40 million credit and debit card numbers came as a shock to Target shoppers, but analysts say that in the end, almost no consumer suffered a financial loss.
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A website that maps bitcoin-friendly locations plots more merchants ready to accept the currency around Kansas City than in all but three other U.S. markets — and it’s thanks largely to one Overland Park company.
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This fall, the state is moving business tax functions into a new system and replacing the nearly 40-year-old mainframe system.
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Former Ford executive Jeff Wellman has been guiding a retrofit of Michigan’s purchasing process. But just what ideas Wellman is adopting from his former employer remain a mystery.
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The shift marks a reversal for many firms, which had until recently been focused on better-established companies with more revenue and loyal customers.
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As their customers' lives become increasingly digital, local banks are looking to offer simple ways to pay for everyday things.
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Thanks to a law enacted in October, Massachusetts health insurers have to make all their prices public – in advance.
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A high-tech approach in identifying property tax fraudsters is generating millions for Illinois’ Cook County, the most populous in the state.
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For Los Angeles, innovation won't live in just one office – it is being democratized across the city in an effort to improve operations.
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Some tech entrepreneurs are making headway, delivering a range of tools to improve government and ultimately better the lives of citizens.
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Massachusetts' first GIO discusses open data and the evolution of his office.
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A host of private-sector companies are offering unlimited vacation time to employees, but public-sector CIOs aren't sure the practice is feasible for technologists in government.
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More states are considering “social impact bonds” for multiyear projects in health, education and prisoner rehabilitation. Are they a good investment?
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A recent report indicates that the city brought in $7.6 million more in business tax revenue last year from the tax-break zone than the area had generated before the incentive.
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Illinois is in the midst of modernizing its purchasing rules to help better communicate with vendors and encourage cloud adoption in state agencies.
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The regulations will provide companies a new avenue for raising capital and give most of the state’s adult residents a new opportunity to take an ownership stake in those firms.
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