Justice & Public Safety
-
The app is aimed at providing residents and visitors of the county with quick information, jail info, mental health resources and more. It also offers users the ability to submit tips directly to authorities.
-
Windsor, Conn., is turning off cameras that take photos of license plates, citing a list of concerns that includes federal agencies previously accessing the data in an effort to enforce immigration laws.
-
A bipartisan, two-bill package would define the systems and set limits on how they collect, store and share data. The information could only be kept 14 days in most cases and its use would be prescribed.
More Stories
-
"Now we see that the basic oversight and certification process must be examined as well."
-
"To date, more than 1,500 e-mail addresses and phone numbers are registered to be notified about inmate status."
-
A key committee of the United States Senate has recently endorsed a measure to close the loophole on the national level. That bill has already passed the U.S. House of Representatives.
-
"The additional funding will provide our nation's health care community with a means to continue planning, training and acquiring needed equipment for an effective pandemic response."
-
Funding aided Baltimore's purchase of Closed-Circuit Television cameras (CCTV), as well as established regional radio interoperability and regional decontamination capabilities.
-
Students are using site to avoid misidentification by uploading photos of their passports and other personal records.
-
Hardy has led CBP's operations at ports of entry on the northern border from the Pacific Ocean to the Great Lakes since its inception on March 1, 2003.
-
Pittsburg pilots Web-based alert notification system.
-
Having accurate records produced in the field and shared quickly with others who need the information is a significant enhancement to the system.
-
New emergency radio network provides law enforcement officers with the ability to move from town to town and from region to region and communicate with other agencies, State Police and dispatch centers.
-
State Department denies passports to any non-custodial parent owing $2,500 or more in court-ordered child support.
-
New procedures maintain balance between Colo. open government and public safety.
-
Current Web site and database were written in a programming language that the Dept. of IT and the vendor can no longer support.
-
New Web site provides easy access to comprehensive information about what to do before, during and after disasters.
-
"Shorter, less bureaucratic and more user-friendly" than National Response Plan.
-
GAO is recommending that DHS make completion and implementation of a comprehensive IT human capital plan an imperative.
-
Will provide greater access to emergency preparedness information for city residents, businesses, schools and our special-needs populations.
-
Web-based system to report status of communications equipment, restoration efforts, power and access to fuel during a crisis.
Most Read
- Defending Your Castle: Best Practices for Smart Home Security
- Signal Priority Improves the Bus Ride in San Jose, Calif.
- High School Tech Director Advises Ed-Tech Skepticism, Intentionality
- Mississippi AI Innovation Hub’s New Chatbot Targets Procurement
- Cleveland Looks to Accela Permit Tech to Boost Development