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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In 2012, hype and money surrounded the digital wallet concept. But now, the promise of mobile payments feels just as far off, if not further.
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While advocates hail the technology as an innovative payment system, critics caution consumers that digital currencies can cost them more than using credit cards or regular cash.
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The county's current software is expiring in the midst of coping with projected revenue losses, and as commissioners decide whether to cut services or raise taxes.
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Visitors to the website now can find data on judges and employees from the state’s 58 superior courts via a dedicated category on the publicpay.ca.gov website.
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Budget negotiations will dominate what little time Congress spends in session the rest of this year, pushing procurement reform to 2015 or later.
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FutureStructure interviews Michael Wilson, Managing Director of Public Transportation for North America at Accenture, about why transit agencies should be investing in transportation asset management.
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The outcome couldn't be more consequential for those who have long cherished the idea of universal health care built on the foundation of a single-payer system.
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While the Transparent Airfares Act aimed to help travelers get a fix on prices, it is a classic feat of legislative misdirection that does exactly the opposite of what it purports to do.
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Ohio is integrating all components of public safety intelligence into all disciplines for a safer state.
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The idea of shifting the risk of failed initiatives from taxpayers to investors is catching on.
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The technology upgrade will revamp the state's financial infrastructure, and is expected to improve significantly how workers and customers interact with the state when it comes to accounting, budgeting and procurement.
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In July, New York released a draft proposal to govern virtual currencies -- and California isn’t far behind.
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The new contract with Deloitte Consulting will add experts to work with both MN.IT and the Department of Human Services to do more in-depth testing and design work.
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Tech industry advocates say those are no simple hires, requiring thousands of dollars in legal fees and at least six months of lead time, with no certain payoff as companies nationwide share 85,000 visas allotted in a lottery each April.
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While automatic renewals sound like good news after troubled enrollments, many may end up paying far more than they need to and with policies that don’t best fit their individual circumstances.
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According to an independent analysis, the system is still in the "lengthy, expensive design phase," while disabled Americans continue to wait hundreds of days — and sometimes years — for benefits.
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Forced out the door, Microsoft employees are poised to see plenty of demand from quickly growing startups, according to Chandra Shekaran, a former general manager in Microsoft’s Bing search unit.
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Javelin Investments LLC, a Tucson company, owns and operates the machine— one of only about 145 bitcoin ATMs worldwide and about 25 in the U.S., according to various tracking sites.
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