Accelerating Innovation and Digital Transformation in Local Government
Digital Communities News
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The 54 winning cities in this year’s survey are incorporating community feedback into their plans, ensuring responsible AI use, maturing their data programs and navigating challenges without sacrificing service.
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The 52 counties honored in this year's awards from the Center for Digital Government are transforming local government with cutting-edge tech while focusing on resident services.
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Winning cities in the 2024 Digital Cities Survey are not only modernizing their IT infrastructure — they're investing in digital equity programs, upgrading resident-facing services and prioritizing data security.
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Efforts to shake up the amount of commercial content on the popular social media platform are affecting government agencies that use it as a way to reach their constituents.
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Despite public calls to disallow the 200-foot Verizon cell tower in the rural area, county officials determined the project would have no negative impacts on the surrounding environment or its residents.
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What steps does Boston need to take to avoid becoming another gentrified city?
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The initiative, known as Operation SafeCam, will help law enforcement in Niagara County access citizens-owned surveillance cameras during investigations.
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The city is leveraging a mobile app and centralized system to improve services to residents.
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Over the course of the next decade, autonomous vehicles will mean narrower lanes, flyover ramps at intersections, fewer public parking lots and more shortcuts through neighborhoods, officials say.
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Orlando's first innovation director, Matt Broffman, has identified 225 city services that could be Web-enabled and he's hiring an innovation team to get them online.
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The likes of Boston, Los Angeles, New York and Miami are under consideration for the company's second North American headquarters.
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Facebook's investments are helping to turn the area into a hub for research and development in the new technologies.
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The state will give funds to 52 cities and counties as part of the Tennessee Broadband Accessibility Act.
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Resident complaints have helped prompt the installation of adaptive traffic signals throughout town.
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Leveraging the county’s fiber-optic infrastructure is one key piece of the broadband puzzle, but officials in Whitman County said there is still a need for investment.
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Outreach workers, armed with a new smartphone app, are getting a clearer picture of the city’s homeless population through data.
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New research is lending insights on how millennials’ preferences are changing urban environments.
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A county official says providing Internet access to rural areas is not a matter of ability so much as finding the cash to make it happen.
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