Health & Human Services
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The government technology supplier says its new AI-backed tool can help states reduce costly mistakes on SNAP applications. Such mistakes could lead to even larger cuts in federal assistance.
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Public agencies use software from Libera for vocational rehabilitation. CiviCore, once part of Neon One, has government clients that include courts, schools and health and human services departments.
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Plus, a new digital inclusion report ranks worst-connected cities in the U.S.; Boston deploys an interactive map for finding public restrooms; and San Antonio moves forward with innovation zones.
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Case studies from Washington D.C., Boston, New York City, and San Jose highlight the potential advancements and potential pitfalls of using predictive modeling to improve city services, and offer a few common considerations.
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North Carolina’s Duke Energy is giving customers a unique way to opt out of smart utility meters, but it requires getting a doctor to diagnose them with electrosensitivity.
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The department tried an agile, user-centered approach to building its new housing portal. It liked the outcome.
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This is part one of a series about the 35 cities that have advanced in the Bloomberg Mayors Challenge, a nationwide competition to create innovative solutions for shared problems faced by municipal governments.
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A new mobile technology pilot could transform how a handful of agencies work from the field.
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Graduate students from the University of Pennsylvania's Master of Urban Spatial Analytics Practicum are working with city officials in Philadelphia, Providence, R.I., and Minneapolis to develop data science tools to improve safety, health and quality of life for residents.
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As more jurisdictions begin to share data related to combating the opioid crisis, other agencies are encouraged to do the same.
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Unemployment consortiums among like-minded and like-sized states join forces to modernize old-fashioned gov tech.
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Through a Clean Streets LA initiative called CleanStat, Los Angeles is the first city to map the cleanliness of every one of its blocks.
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Data storage in the cloud by a 211 social services vendor may have resulted in the release of information on calls from Los Angeles County residents.
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The state has 100 full-time employees dedicated to determining subsidy eligibility. One CIO thinks they could be freed up to do other things.
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As technology improves to map floodplains, the number of residents and businesses at risk is climbing fast.
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Hundreds of police agencies in small towns, suburbs and rural areas across the country are checking in on seniors who live alone by offering them a free automated phone call every day.
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911 emergency responsive systems have been glitching all over the country recently which has brought serious attention to updating these systems.
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