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
-
This month, the city of Baltimore has denied two Public Information Act requests from a local newspaper on grounds that the agency did not have the documents to provide.
-
There is a strong case for local government partnering with co-ops to deliver broadband to under-connected areas, especially if the cities or counties own their public utilities.
-
By planning strategically and measuring critical operations, the city has improved service delivery.
-
The summit will award $50,000 in cash and assistance to one of nine big ideas designed to parlay an environmentally challenged lake into a business proposition.
-
The bill imposes a number of limitations on how counties and municipalities can regulate what wireless service providers can do.
-
Cities are speaking out against the recent FCC proposed rollback of regulatory power over Internet service providers. Boston, New York City, Seattle and San Francisco have all weighed in.
-
The new cameras are intended to overlook areas that see heavy resident and visitor traffic, including the bars that line the town's small central business district.
-
The transit administration said releasing the footage would present unacceptable security risks by divulging where its cameras are located and how they pan and zoom.
-
All those snaps can take a lot of time out of an elected official's busy schedule.
-
Plus, the Knight Foundation announces $1.2 million in funding for six cities to explore Internet of Things technologies, a Maryland county's Bicycle Stress Map serves as a template for others, and Boston stumbles upon inconsistencies with Web analytics.
-
The department has started to use its online page as the primary means of communicating with the public and local media, but in a way that is different from most public safety agencies.
-
The county Public Utility District started working on the fiber system in 2000, and by 2016 it had cost about $256 million.
-
The city implemented a system to measure outcomes and enforce standards in its pavement procurement
-
The organization, called MC² for short, announced that it will seek to chip away at the shortage through an apprenticeship program.
-
The idea is to gather data to see if Wi-Fi would add to the amenities that city officials hope will draw crowds to the area.
Premier Sponsors
Sponsors