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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CyberTECH’s many projects include tackling cybersecurity, robots and the Internet of Things — the way electronic gadgets connect to computer networks to provide and receive data.
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PUD fiber engineers told commissioners that the county’s hilly, tree-covered terrain would make for spotty coverage from wireless broadband, and the cost to maintain it would be higher.
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After an evaluation of the assessment, appropriate action plans and projects to effectively and improve the broadband environment will be developed.
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That project is part of Gov. Andrew Cuomo's planned $30 million investment in the corridor.
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The city has set publicly available, time-bound, and measurable goals to improve performance.
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As part of a new pilot program, Los Angeles is deploying kiosks that offer services targeted to the local surroundings in locations throughout the city.
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The consolidated city-county is making significant changes to how it interacts with more than 650,000 residents.
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Because internet-capable cameras eventually can tie into the system, officials plan to ask business owners and residents for help as early as this summer.
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The document tackles some of the barriers communities face as they work to bring high-speed Internet to their citizens.
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Teams of residents from five neighborhoods around Bangor will get together over the next five to six months and come up with two ideas — one about improving the city as a whole and one about improving their own neighborhood.
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Plus, officials in Marshfield, Wis., launched an online GeoReporting System that links the city’s infrastructure and investment and ensures constituent issues go to the right place.
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After several public records requests, the city provided just one study that touched on safety. It doesn’t appear to support the city’s case, instead showing that school zones without traffic cameras were, on average, safer than those with them.
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The bankrupt provider's fiber optic network serves primarily government customers in 124 communities.
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A proposed contract is expected to go before the city's spending panel by May.
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Without a binding commitment, it was possible that Rochester would not have funded their side of the project, and the money would have gone unused instead of going to another project needed in the state.
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