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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City planners aim to take the platform’s data-management capabilities and eventually leverage them through the use of its own data analytics tools, presently in development.
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A new type of policing is focused on fostering communication and mutual respect.
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The new system brings together 92 databases, giving users free access to raw data, as well as presenting them with 17 maps highlighting different geospatial features across this county of 1.2 million people.
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The line has since been reconnected, but during the outage, Because the Internet was out, the building department couldn’t issue permits or schedule inspections.
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To help find the missing, the Mineral County, Colo., emergency management office recently received a drone to get to those places where an all-terrain vehicle, snowmobile or even a man on foot can’t access.
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Two east Boulder County communities joined 24 other Colorado municipalities when they approved ballot measures allowing them to explore offering their own broadband internet service.
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Local governments are combining geospatial data and crowdsourced information to ease congestion.
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While the solution’s ability to support planning across all departments was a major selling point for the city, the cloud-based software is also key.
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A local businessman is calling on the city to move away from its use of 4000-Kelvin LED fixtures in favor of lower-output LEDs rated 3000K or lower.
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Ohio will become the first large U.S. city to provide free Wi-Fi on all of its buses.
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How local municipalities can support inclusive and sustained collaborations with different users of open data.
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The U.S. Census Bureau-led project leverages open data for economic mobility.
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The website aims to help entrepreneurs easily access a broad array of services offered by public and private entities.
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The Los Angeles Department of Human Resources is pushing the envelope of how technology is aiding service delivery for county residents.
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Over the past year, a Google Street View car carrying a methane-sniffing sensor drove around half a dozen Pittsburgh neighborhoods and picked up 200 indications of gas leaking from old Peoples Natural Gas pipelines.
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