Government Experience
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The city recently launched its Kensington Dashboard, which offers a comprehensive picture of the area through data, to inform residents and stakeholders about progress toward resolving its challenges.
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A statewide effort led by the Controller’s Office has connected grant management directly to its enterprise resource planning system, changing how agencies track, process and deliver funding.
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The Center of Excellence in Environmental Forecasting, recently stood up in a joint state-education endeavor, will aggregate information to inform residents on everything from hazards to recreation.
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Public health officials can use the website to look at how some diseases had spread during epidemics and how they were stopped.
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The study looked at whether particular technology-based tools are available, not at the performance of transportation services or transit agencies.
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The creators of EmergencyPetMatcher hope to make pet-and-owner reunifications during and after disasters easier.
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Tom Wheeler opts for strict regulation of Internet service providers to maintain an open Internet.
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Transit agencies are finally catching up to the private sector’s use of social media to improve their systems and increase the public’s trust in them.
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Facebook was found to be most visited site by state employees in Oklahoma, triggering an investigation.
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The software gathers real-time and old posts from around the area and organizes the data for officials to review and track using keyword searches.
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The FCC is expected to vacate state laws regarding the creation and expansion of municipal broadband networks.
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U.S. Sen. Cory Booker’s legislation that would give cities and counties the right to build municipal broadband networks makes a broad statement for the future of connectivity, according to experts.
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A new report by the commission, Parks Forward, lays out a two-year turnaround plan that includes better transportation to state lands for urban residents and online tools for planning visits.
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HealthCare.gov continues to face technical problems that cost the American public, this time, in privacy.
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The department hopes that renewing public interest in the cases will prompt someone to come forward with information to crack them.
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Agencies don't need to avoid social media, experts say, but they need to prepare for possible attacks.
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A competing company alleges that officials made the change to cover up crime trends in advance of this fall’s council and mayoral elections.
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This Wednesday brought some government website hiccups.
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San Diego, Calif., is examining how to make social media work more effectively in emergency response situations.
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Engaging with social media has become the number one way Americans spend time online.
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Once tightly controlled by commercial publishers, legal codes are becoming more accessible online, thanks to the open data movement.
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