Civic Innovation
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The myAurora 311 Open Data Portal gives residents a detailed look at the city's non-emergency call traffic, service trends and response, and is part of a broader push to make city operations more transparent.
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Officials will refresh the site to eliminate customer issues including a delayed reflecting of precise balances. Changes to the village payment system are underway, and are in early stages.
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The AI Center for Civic and Social Good will let the public and the San Jose State University community learn about and work with AI technology through programming — at no cost to participants.
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A year-long contract will provide the city with a cloud-based subscription service to allow for the public to submit online service requests to city staff.
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Libraries throughout the city this week are hosting more than 30 free data privacy workshops as part of New York's ongoing privacy efforts.
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MetroLab, a network of 44 cities, five counties and 55 universities dedicated to growing partnerships to solve complex urban problems, has launched its next major initiative.
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The Louisville Digital Inclusion Design Jam will help city technologists learn from design practices while helping designers use their skills to benefit the community.
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Plus, Arnold Foundation RFP seeks to reimagine America’s crisis response system; Los Angeles expands its cybersecurity lab; Atlanta launches a new Fix-It ATL public request campaign; and Code for America’s Brigade Network responds to Hurricane Michael.
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The effort to enable deployed military personnel to vote via smartphone is drawing sharp criticism from election and cybersecurity groups.
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The funding round comes from a single investment partner.
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The international collaboration initiative has posted a list of 80-plus startup-friendly challenges that present contract opportunities for gov tech entrepreneurs.
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Stephanie Dedmon will step into the role of Tennessee CIO as Mark Bengel prepares to retire.
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More nonprofits are starting to sell their stories through analysis.
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The searchable map, ordered by the Legislature in 2011, allows the public to see who is renting state-owned property and how much they pay.
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Residents will soon have access to a snow service tracker that allows them to see which streets have been cleared before they leave their homes.
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Texas registrations are at an all-time high, is the state ready for a secure Election Day?
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A core piece of the company's work is verifying user's identities to help deliver feedback to the right people.
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Officials in Fremont, which recently joined the Startup in Residence program, hope to utilize it and a recent Waze partnership to address significant traffic congestion caused by out-of-town commuters.
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After holding tech and innovation positions in government in Boston and Rhode Island, Kevin Parker discusses priorities for his new position in Illinois.
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CIO Shawn Riley said the state has hired longtime private-sector tech executive Dorman Bazzell as its inaugural chief data officer.
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Plus, San Antonio hosts its first SmartSA Datathon; Washington D.C., Gigabit DC Challenge seeks mobility solutions; Chicago launches annual flu shot dataset; and political organizing tactics that are also useful in civic tech.
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