Sep 30

Clouds Banner

Wednesday was International Right to Know Day

For Local News, TV Is Dominant But the Internet is Our Digital Future

  • “The days of relying on a print newspaper and a television anchor telling us “the way it is” are long gone. In 2011, Americans and citizens the world over consume news on multiple screens and platforms. Increasingly, we all contribute reports ourselves, using Internet-connected smartphones.”

Community Foundations Support Public Access TV

The Difficulty of Accessing Clear State Budget Data

  • “One of the largest obstacles to covering state budget issues is often state government itself. Accessing simple budget data such as revenue and expenditure totals can create a headache harsh enough to discourage even the most determined…”

Local Governments and Disaster Communication with Social Media

  • I have a guest post on The American Society for Public Administration’s blog.
  • “From the recent earthquake to hurricanes and wildfires there certainly has been the need for residents to find out timely and useful information from their local government.”

Open Gov Links of the Week

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Sep 23

Clouds Banner

Transparency Advocates React to U.S. Open Government Action Plan (by techPresident)

  • “President Barack Obama on Tuesday led the public unveiling of national open government action plans from the eight countries participating in the Open Government Partnership, a multilateral coalition on openness and transparency.”
  • Find out what some advocates have said about it.

September 2011 Municipal Cost Index Released (by American City & County)

  • Find out if the costs of goods and services purchased by local governments went up or down since last month.

August 2011 U.S. Online Video Rankings (by comScore)

  • “comScore, Inc. … released data from the comScore Video Metrix service showing that 180 million U.S. Internet users watched online video content in August for an average of 18 hours per viewer. The total U.S. Internet audience engaged in a record 6.9 billion viewing sessions.”
  • More data here

NY Governor launches transparency website (by CivSource)

  • Find out how the Governor is trying to interact more with citizens.

Open Gov Links of the Week

, , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Sep 9

Clouds Banner

Local Government Guidelines for Working with the Media During an Energy Emergency

  • “This document provides strategies that local governments can use for communicating effectively with the media, and for cultivating relationships with both the media and the public during energy-related emergencies.”

Code for America Announces Winners

Citizen-Sourced Redistricting Efforts Are Reaching the Finish Line

Look at Cook sets a high bar for open government data visualizations

  • Open source tools and a focus on user experience elevate Cook County’s “Look at Cook” data website.

The O’Reilly Radar Visualization of the Week: Mapping U.S. Job Losses

Open Gov Links of the Week

, , , , , , , , , , , ,


Aug 26

Clouds Banner

As Citizens Look for Hurricane Information Online, Governments Scramble to Deliver

Earthquake Location Map - USGS

3 Earthquake Takeaways for Government & Social Media

  • So what can government communications learn from the east-coast earthquake that happened on Tuesday?
  • Here’s three things:
    • be where they are, be official, be fast.

New reports on citizen participation and rulemaking offer open government guidance

  • “AmericaSpeaks released a new report, ‘Assessing Public Participation in an Open Government Era: A Review of Federal Agency Plans.’ This represents the most comprehensive review of the public participation aspects of the federal open government initiative to date.” (link in original)

Court rules White House visitor logs subject to FOIA

  • A bunch of info in the story by The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

comScore Releases July 2011 U.S. Online Video Rankings

  • “comScore released data from the comScore Video Metrix service showing that 180 million U.S. Internet users watched online video content in July for an average of 18.5 hours per viewer. The total U.S. Internet audience engaged in a record 6.9 billion viewing sessions.” (emphasis added)

Which way did the August 2011 Municipal Cost Index go? Find out here!

Working Together Towards Transparency in Local Government

  • The author “shares with us his organization’s venture at creating metrics for government websites that officials and citizens can agree on.”
http://www.rcfp.org/newsitems/index.php?i=11993

Open Gov Links of the Week

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Aug 23

This afternoon there was a 5.8 magnitude earthquake that had it’s epicenter in VA.

Earthquake Location Map - USGSWe felt it here in the office and within moments of it happening, I checked Twitter. What did I find? Multiple people that I follow had already said they felt it in DC and elsewhere. This was before the mainstream news websites would have had any information on it – well before the newspaper for tomorrow has come out.

I also quickly checked the USGS’ website to see if they had any information on it and they sure did!

So what can governments learn from this? (I get some of this from Steve Ressler’s point in this post on GovLoop, “What Tools Government Needs in an Earthquake“)

Here’s some ideas:

Be where THEY are!

  • You need to be in places that you will be heard quickly. These need to be outlets where your citizens are and regularly frequent for news and official (or unofficial information). If they don’t hear your message, the rest pointless. Whether that is Twitter, Facebook, through an email list, or someplace else where people go for breaking news.

Be Official!

  • People are talking about it – whether you are or not. And they may have inaccurate information. You need to be out there with correct and trustworthy information.

Be Fast!

  • Like I said, I found out info about the earthquake within moments of it happening – from sources who didn’t know what the earthquakes’ magnitude was, if there might be an aftershock, etc. You have to be quick to get information out there. The USGS was pretty fast. They had data about the earthquake available almost instantly on their website and they Tweeted about it on Twitter within minutes of it.

More Observations

USGS crowd sources earthquake reports

Gov't & Technology, News & Events

, , , , , , , , , , , ,