Policy
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State lawmakers are concerned about how information from the cameras can be used. A bill, however, has received pushback from law enforcement. To date, at least 16 states have created such rules or guidelines.
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All e-bikes must be registered and insured, whether they are low-speed e-bikes that require pedaling and can't exceed 20 miles per hour, or they are motorized bicycles that reach 28 miles per hour.
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Officials at the capital city this week approved a one-year moratorium on data center development. The suspension will provide time to review potential impacts and guide responsible development.
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The tricky part, of course, is knowing whether public records exist on employees’ private accounts in the first place.
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The Legislature had allocated about $178 million in additional funding in 2013-16 for the unemployment compensation system, and nearly $170 million was spent before then to modernize the department's technology.
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Companies are now preparing to start selling technology to identify people in myriad ways.
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The issue originates in 2015, when the state Legislature approved a bill exempting internet service providers from an unusual Oregon property tax - provided those companies offer online connections of roughly 1 gigabit per second.
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The online database contains court records from across the state, which is now possible through legislation passed last session requiring counties to digitally file court documents.
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The proposed contract itself will span 18 months and afford ample time "to complete infrastructure design, hardware and software installation, uniform modifications, system testing and other program requirements that need to be met before the pilot project commences."
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Allowing the nonprofit electric co-ops to have cable-like television offerings is a way of doing that in rural Tennessee where 34 percent of residents don't have broadband access.
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The court's decision came just two days after the American Civil Liberties Union of Delaware argued that the practice was unconstitutional and was not actually keeping the public safer.
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The lower chamber of Congress and the White House aren't friendly to the idea of net neutrality.
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Utility officials in Chelan County have decided to uphold the temporary ban on digital currency mining operations until August, citing a need to find the best way to handle the high-density electrical demand.
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Dozens of surveillance cameras throughout the city have been opened to the public in the hopes that fresh eyes will spot crimes in progress. But civil rights advocates see a problem: racial profiling.
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Skyrocketing rental prices and the “missing middle” are just a few of the problems brought on by the successes of Silicon Valley tech giants. Now, Mountain View is considering a tax based on a company’s number of full-time employees.
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Moving away from the stale and dated modes of procurement can drive efficiencies and make for better outcomes for all involved.
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The city is partnering with Code for America in an automation project that will clear eligible convictions under California's marijuana legalization law.
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Conversations are underway in Albany County to make legislative information more accessible to the public through the purchase of new equipment and software.
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Alaskan Sen. Lisa Murkowski said her affirmative vote on the effort to reinstate Obama-era Internet protections was about bringing attention to her state’s overall lack of access.
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With San Diego named as one of the FAA’s ten cities to study drone integration, product and food deliveries could be an area of interest.
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The county expects the new system to be faster and cheaper than regular card payments.
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