Accelerating Innovation and Digital Transformation in Local Government
Digital Communities News
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
More Stories
-
The app will be used to distribute information about floods, fires, missing persons, contaminated water and ongoing criminal activity, among other situations.
-
By releasing data in themed packages, cities create human-centered tools that energize users
-
DollarVan, OnBoard, nesterly and PASSNYC capture various prizes during the eighth year of the innovation competition.
-
Customers who regularly visited Internet cafes years earlier now get to relive those times — and so far there have been a lot of them.
-
Cost and effectiveness, however, may mean little to residents worried about the implications greater drone usage might have for their personal privacy.
-
An absent council member sent text messages to the county chair Ed Kelley and Councilwoman Billie Wheeler as she listened from home.
-
The City Council also approved spending about $3.3 million to implement the Smart Columbus electrification plan.
-
The King County Council requires that a Benefit Achievement Plan be developed for all technology projects prior to being funded.
-
The city is hoping that new computer systems it is slowly converting will provide the answer to water meter and billing problems.
-
The agency used social media and drone technology as floodwaters threatened Beulah Valley after a quick-hitting rain and hailstorm.
-
Since the city began outfitting patrol officers with cameras last summer, the police Records Information Unit received only 25 requests for information that included body camera video.
-
The sheriff's office is the only law enforcement agency in Hamilton County that has an unmanned aerial surveillance system program.
-
Beaver may enact a social media policy that would govern when and what borough employees can share on social media.
-
After less than one year in the post, Sree Sreenivasan has departed Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administration in the midst of a tech team reorganization.
-
The city’s 12.45 percent hotel room tax rate would apply to users of Airbnb services whenever they book a room, home or apartment.
Premier Sponsors
Sponsors