Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
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Editor-in-Chief Bridget Quigg Managing Editor Alida Moore Contributing Editors Tim Cashman Patrick Hasseries Design/Art Direction Corey Smith Promotion Steven Gottlieb Published By Socrata 83 S. King Street Seattle, Wa. 98104 info@socrata.com (206) 340-8008 www.socrata.com
Dear Fellow Innovator, Thank you for picking up our Winter 2014 edition of Open Innovation magazine. In this issue we take a look back at the most exciting year in open data history, and share some thoughts on whats to come in 2014. As part of our look back, well review the civic hacking events and conferences Socrata had the honor of attending and awards our customers received. Were you part of the National Day of Civic Hacking? We highlight the group that played a central role in its success, Code for America. Looking more closely at stories from the open data movement, Socrata Director of GovStat Beth Blauer features three government organizations that are bringing more data to their decisions. And, Socrata VP of Worldwide Markets, Erika Smith, gives us a snapshot of how open data is expanding in Europe. Thanks to the exponential growth of the movement, there are important issues the open data community needs to address. Socrata Director of Open Data Ian Kalin calls for establishing data standards and soon, while longtime thought leader David Eaves reminds us to engage in the debate on how open data will be put to use in organizations around the world. And, youll hear my suggestions for cleaning up the broken federal government procurement process. For the tech enthusiasts in the group, Socratas Director of Product, Ben McInnis describes how the demands on and uses of open data are evolving quickly towards bigger datasets, faster data movement, and even greater accessibility. Data artist Thomas Levine asks us to consider the benefits of open data metadata analysis. And, Chris Whong, a Socrata Data Solutions Architect and geodata specialist, describes how OpenStreetMap is helping data flow from the citizens of New York back into the citys data stores. Plus, you get to meet our engineering team, and learn about their hobbies and habits that keep our office full of home-brewed beer and hand-built electronics. I am honored to be a part of the exciting time in the open data movement. I hope you enjoy the magazine and wish you the best in 2014. Sincerely, Kevin Merritt Socrata Founder and CEO
IN FOCUS
OPEN DATA
In todays world of data standards, we are operating in pre-mainstream chaos, similar to that which existed with electricity in Edison and Teslas time. The potential for data-as-a-fuel exists as a natural resource in much the same way as magnets and copper did in the industrial revolution. As this next wave of economic opportunity takes root, the same kind of arguments are being made.
As the open data movement gains momentum, more organizations, businesses, and citizens are looking to share data and collaborate on projects. What is essential to them doing so? Data standards. Data standards are a topic that deserves our communitys full attention right now. The government innovation movement must address their importance across industries, across borders, and even between departments.
very different formats. The solution is a uniform format for reporting things like asbestos, pest infestations, and even abusive landlords. As standards like HouseFacts are adopted by city governments, businesses can aggregate the data that most cities are already collecting
As open data moves into our mainstream world, making it as available as possible, in a consistent, efcient manner, is essential.
buy and sell homes (e.g. Trulia, Zillow, most commercial banks, etc.), but the information on the safety and health of those homes is messy and reported in and integrate that information into the websites people are using to make housing decisions. The map for standard adoption becomes a map for business growth.
The challenge lies in developing these standards. Development can be difficult because of the complexity of the data. Data reflects the world in which it is created. The maintenance alone of engineered standards is hard, as demonstrated by the huge network of organizations that deal with standards, like the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), the American National Standards Institute (ANSI), and UL. As open data moves into our mainstream world, making it as available as possible, in a consistent, efficient manner, is essential. I encourage you to engage in the discussion of defined data standards so that public, open data truly serves the world of citizens who own it.
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sites, and decision support systems for government. says Socrata VP of Product Saf Rabah. Businesses, governments, and citizens now use open data on a daily basis, and they want to look at as much of it at once as possible. For example, the City of Chicago offers a traffic dataset that is more than one million rows long. And, San Franciscos app showing parking availability is updated in near-real-time. Having hosted millions and millions of rows of public data since 2007, Socrata has seen data use change dramatically, particularly over the last two years. Here are three of the strongest trends weve noticed.
and manage their consumption, public officials accurately plan for capacity needs and seasonal variance, and utility personnel pinpoint leaks and service interruptions. A study by technology market research firm Hurwitz & Associates titled The Benefits of APIs in the App Economy found that organizations offering APIs, as opposed to those that didnt, increased customer reach by 70 percent, number of apps created by 50 percent, and number of mobile platforms supported by 58 percent.
Imagine a state that tracks K-8 student consumption of free and reduced lunch and puts that data alongside test scores and attendance information. Imagine this data is then summarized in an internal dashboard and sent to teachers via a mobile app. In this scenario, millions of data points updated regularly could help with resource allocation on a monthly, weekly, or even daily basis.
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BIGGER DATA
Two years ago, the average dataset stored on Socrata was under 10,000 rows. Todays common datasets fall somewhere between 10 - 40 million rows. Socrata stores datasets as large as 100,000,000 rows and, by end of 2014, we expect to store datasets of 1 billion rows or more. As data scales in size, two interesting things happen. First, data becomes more useful for indirect and unforeseen purposes because, within larger datasets, common keys are more likely to exist. Second, with more and more correlated records across datasets, the need to precisely clean and format data decreases. Because of these characteristics, analysis of large datasets can often yield surprising and profound results. For example, the City of Chicagos analytics team discovered a relationship between
streetlight outages and petty theft-correlations that were always latent within their massive 311 and crime datasets. While the connection might have seemed obvious, having the data to clearly understand this relationship helped the city strategically address the problem.
synchronized to optimize traffic flows, and less obvious connections can drive business efficiencies. A coffee vendor might synchronize the preparation of fresh coffee and warm pastries to correspond with the anticipated arrival of a commuter train - not the scheduled arrival, but the arrival time according to data coming from the trains computer system. By transforming data from a historical record to a dynamic feed, it can be utilized on an on-going basis to make programs and decision-making more efficient.
Today, nearly every dataset is accessed via API and many thousands of times per day. Socrata is the largest provider of government data APIs in the world, with more than 77,000 datasets available via API. And, the total volume of data served by Socrata via API has grown more than 1,500 percent in the last two years. This explosion in API usage across the open data movement comes from innovative citizen apps like WasMyCarTowed. This app uses public data APIs to tell motorists, who return to their parking spot but find no car, if their car was towed and, if so, where.
FASTER DATA
High-frequency data (data thats updated very often) has seen similar growth. In the last two years, as data from sensor networks and operational systems has been published as open data, the number of real-time datasets Socrata hosts has grown more than 2,000 percent. (See chart above.) While static data is useful primarily for archival and analytical purposes, realtime or streaming data can be leveraged as an input into other systems. Snowplow locations can be fed in real-time to citizens and the media, bus locations and traffic signal state information can be
his way of tracking and reporting on school programs via web and mobile apps is just one example of the many that will emerge as government organizations offer more public data as open data. Since its founding in 2007, Socrata has seen open data move in larger quantities, faster, and to more places than ever before. Were evolving past the catalog phase of open data and into the data-as-a-platform era, where value is measured by the realtime flow and distribution of data through application ecosystems, consumer internet
MACHINE-TO-MACHINE DATA
Data is also increasingly accessed, not by humans, but by systems and applications via application programming interfaces (API). They make data assets useful by integrating them as an input for other systems. For example, a new generation of connected and sensor-enabled municipal water systems provide data on water usage. This information lets citizens understand
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initially. From the cell phone to the car to the printing press to open source software, all these inventions have helped billions of people, but they did not distribute themselves evenly, especially at first. So the question cannot be reduced to will open data empower the empowered, but to what degree, and where, and with whom? Ive seen plenty of evidence where data has enabled small groups of people to protect their communities or make more transparent the impact (or lack there of) of a government regulation. Open data expands the number of people who can use government information for their own ends this, I believe is a good thing but that does not mean we shouldnt be constantly looking for ways to ensure that it does not reinforce structural inequity.
Duringmy 2011 keynote at Open Government Data campI talked about how the open data movement was at an inection point. For years we have been on the outside, yelling that open data matters. Now we are being invited inside and we have a great responsibility to be of service. Once you have world leaders talking about things like aG8 Open Data Charteryou are no longer on the fringes - not even remotely.
citizens, nonprofits, and companies gain access to information that could help them with their missions. I also wanted to help change the way governments deal with their data, so that they can share it internallymore effectively. I often cite a public servant I know who had a summer intern spend three weeks surfing the national statistical agency website to find datathey knew existed but could not find because of terrible design and search.A poor open data site is not just a sign that the public cant access or effectively use government data; it usually suggests that the governments employees cant access or effectively usetheir own data. This is often deeply frustrating to many public servants. Thus, the most important outcome created by the open data movement may be that government organizations, save for those in the intelligence community, realize that they are not comfortable with using data to drive decisions. Getting governments to think about data as a platform (yes, Im a fan of government as a platform for external use, but above all forinternaluse) is, in my mind, one way we can enable public servants to gain better access to information. Adoption of this principle will also, in many cases, obviate the need for costly solutions from huge vendors (like SAP and Oracle), whose $100 million dollar implementations often silo off data, rarely produce the results promised and are so obnoxiously expensive it boggles the mind. The key to all this is that open data cannot be something you slap on top of a big IT stack. I try to explain this in my blog post Its the Icing Not the Cake about how Washington, DC was able to effectively launch an open data program so quickly
(which was, apparently, so effective at bringing transparency to procurement data the subsequent mayor rolled it back). The point is that governments need to start thinking in terms of platforms if over
One of the main reasons I have been an advocate of open data is a desire to help citizens, nonprots, and companies gain access to information that could help them with their missions.
the long term open data is going to work. And it needs to start thinking of itself as the primary consumer of the data that is being served on that platform. My main point is this: lets not play atthe edges and merely define this challenge as one of usability. It is a much bigger problem than that. If we get it wrong, then the big government vendors and the inertia of bureaucracy win. If we get it right, we could potentially save taxpayers millionswhile enabling a more nimble, effective, and responsive government. I try hard to be critical advocate of open data one who engages the risks and challenges posed by open data. Im not perfect and balancing these two goals advocacy and a critical view is not easy, but I hope it is how we in the open data movement see our role.
ob Kitchin, Professor of Geography at the National University of Ireland at Maynooth, recently wrote a list of open data critiques for his blog Programmable City. His post inspired me to remind the open data community particularly the advocates - of our responsibility to take part in the debates around open data, right now. We need to engage in the discussions on a number of topics if we want open data to reach its full potential for effecting positive change in the world. Specifically, I will address two critiques that Professor Kitchin raised: using data to empower the less powerful and how to improve utility and usability of that data.
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In fact, today, the United Kingdom hosts one of the most mature open data programs in the world. From this vantage point, UKs thought leaders are talking more and more about the tremendous economic and social potential of open data, especially in machine-readable, standardized formats. In late October 2013, Open Data Institute (ODI) founders Sir Tim Berners-Lee and Sir Nigel Shadbolt announced the
want to collaborate with them to promote the creation of new products and services based on open data. Socrata CEO Kevin Merritt presented on a panel at the Open Data Summit with the title, Open for Business The Commercial Impact of Open Data. Merritt commented on the growing interest in economic growth through open data, saying, In the UK, and all of Europe, people are asking, Open data, so
delivery within Europe, Socrata recently partnered with Microsoft to make the Socrata Open Data Portal available on the Microsoft Azure platform. Azure has a number of data centers on the continent. Socrata Senior Site Reliability Engineer Paul Paradise noted, As a growing company, we scale internationally much better by partnering with an established, trusted, international data-hosting platform like Microsoft Azure.
With the growing list of businesses relying on government open data, the speed and frequency with which governments deliver that data has become more crucial.
creation of a global network of nodes where programs aligned with ODIs principles of openness and economic innovation would be established. As part of the announcement, they were quoted as saying, The best way that open becomes the new default is demand: from businesses and organizations, both public and private, from individuals and corporations. Berners-Lee and Shadbolt assume that open data will be put to use supporting new businesses. The ODI, a not-for-profit organization that is just over one year old, has so far helped set up more than a dozen open data-based startup companies in the UK. Socrata became an official partner of ODI in the fall of 2013. ODI lead Gavin Starks says, We love Socratas view of open data as fuel for new businesses. We what? And, the ODI and other incubators of new businesses help demonstrate that innovation, new jobs, and better services are possible when non-private data is easy to access.
The open data movement is thriving in many parts of Europe, including well-established programs in the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and Scandinavian countries like Sweden and Norway. But, in response to recent questions like, What have we achieved and what can we do with all of this data? the conversation has turned from open data for transparencys sake to open data to strengthen the economy.
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Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications (provider of the footprints data) and are launching a community project to systematically import the citys treasure trove of building data into OSM. The project was announced in late September.
to redefine open data publishing: This is about an open data commons, a single space in which government and citizens interact. The first gathering of volunteer mappers to work through the monumental task of importing the citys data met in October. Liz Barry, another leader in the NYC-OSM collaboration, hosted the meeting at the offices of the Public Lab in Brooklyn, and 22 community members showed up to help. The data was broken down into election districts, and the team set out validating footprints against aerial imagery, checking geometries, and correcting overlapping polygons. Existing attribute data in OSM could also be merged with better polygons from the city data. Barry said the workflow is still being vetted, and is not quite ready for fullscale deployment. The idea is that once the workflow is perfected, updates wont require a physical meetup. Volunteer OSM users will be able to import a chunk of the citys building footprints whenever and wherever they can. The real fun will begin when large amounts of the data have been successfully imported and the city can report back about the volume and utility of OSM-contributed changes. In many cases, there may be more information about a building in OSM than the city maintains on its own, meaning the twoway street of open data may not flow evenly in both directions. The OSM community has found a partner in DoITT, and this experiment will serve as an early model of the power of citizens and activists to improve government data.
pen data has by and large been a one-way conversation. Governments produce public data and make it freely available, while citizens, journalists, researchers, and hackers consume it in whatever ways suit them. But, having more eyes on the data once it is released may be able to provide value back to the government, turning users of the data into a source of new data and quality control. This is the experiment in two-way open data that New York City is pioneering with OpenStreetMap. OpenStreetMap (OSM) is the Wikipedia of Maps, where anyone can contribute changes. (Yes, if theres a footpath or bike trail near your house that doesnt show up on mainstream web maps, you can literally draw it into OSM, name it, and connect it to existing roads.) Like Wikipedia, changes to the map are subject to quality control by the rest of the community,
and can be just as easily undone. Users may choose to update the map for many reasons, from just knowing more about conditions on the ground than anyone else, to improving the map for a specific project such as an app. What if a user needed some building outlines that OSM didnt have yet? That user could manually trace over the satellite imagery, pointing and clicking lots of custom polygons into existence. But what if they needed a whole town? What if they needed New York City? They do, and NYC has an open dataset for that. The citys detailed GIS database of building outlines and point data is freely available for download at data.cityofnewyork.us. While it will still take human effort to import and verify data for over a million buildings, creating them manually would be an unfathomable and time-consuming process. Leaders in the mapping tech community have partnered with NYCs
OpenStreepMap allows users to view multiple regions, from a birds-eye view of Europe to a zoomed in view of the streets of Manhattan.
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Every dataset has basic, easy-to-extract properties like the number of records it contains, and the size it takes up on a hard drive. We can come up with more complicated information too, like the number of missing values and the date of the oldest record. In addition, when a dataset is published online, it creates metadata about the dataset and its use. Metadata provides details like when it was first published, who uploaded it, and how many times people have downloaded it since then. By collecting some of these simple properties and metadata from each dataset, its possible to create a dataset about the publication and use of other datasets what I call a super-dataset.
A visualization of the datasets available on data.cityofnewyork.us by category, showing both raw datasets, as well as derivative charts, maps, and ltered views.
Weve been opening government data for some time now. Without realizing it, weve amassed some rather rich data about how people publish and consume open data. With this data about the use of open data, its possible to use databacked benchmarks, projections, and decisions in our open data strategies, and this can make our approaches to open data more systematic, logical, and obtainable. Curious about what the data behind open data can teach us? Read on.
DATA, DATA, EVERYWHERE
We have data about open data, but it always starts out in formats that are not convenient for this sort of study of open data. So, we first need to turn this raw data into a dataset. In my mind, a dataset is a collection of things, with some consistent properties describing each of the things. (We often represent datasets as tables.) Were going to treat each dataset as a thing inside our collection of many datasets.
Licensing: I also used my super-dataset of properties and metadata to look into this question: What licenses do people apply to their open data? I discovered that many portals favor public domain or some form of open license, but most list no license at all. Groupings of Datasets: By looking at similarities in the titles, schemas, and other metadata of datasets, I determined what sorts of data government organizations were putting on their open data portals and how different datasets were related to each other.
data platform displays metadata about each dataset, such as community rating, number of visits, number of downloads, etc. When you use metadata to populate records in a super-dataset, that metadata becomes data that we can see, analyze, and learn from.
about how people publish and use open data. It paints the bigger picture of whats going on, whats working, and what isnt. Imagine what we can do with this databacked understanding of our open data! We can find out what has been done before and what has worked, allowing open data publishers to plan their releases more strategically. We can measure release strategies against solid, quantitative statistics to make sure that they are helping us achieve our goals. We can even use these findings to build products that help people interact with open data. These are just some of the possibilities that emerge when we think of data catalogs as a datasets of datasets.
METADATA AS DATA
Even though the word metadata contains the word data, people dont typically think of metadata as something to analyze. Metadata is often invisible. If we could see it, it might just look like background information about web pages and their contents. For example, Socratas open
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ometimes it takes a disaster for people to recognize the need for change. The botched rollout of HealthCare.gov something I would actually describe as a systemic catastropheprovides a historic opportunity to overhaul the federal government technology procurement system, which is so clearly broken.
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We admire startups because their core competency is innovation. They establish traction and momentum because they invent novel solutions to old problems, develop new technologies, or come up with creative new ways of doing business.
they have innovated. Rather, it is just the opposite. Their sole core competency has nothing to do with technology or innovation at all; their only real skill is that they have perfected the art of selling to the government!
First and foremost, there needs to be full transparency into federal contracts. All of the details for each contractincluding the amounts paid and the names of the people who authorized each payment need to be online in machine readable, fully sortable, and searchable formats. The federal government also needs to make it simple for the public to follow the flow of money and influence between federal government agencies requesting vendor support and the contractors bidding on projects. As a country, we have made great strides in recent years in increasing visibility into campaign contributions. To weed out corruption and improve efficiency, senior government leaders need to bring that same level of effort and scrutiny to the procurement process.
Further, policy makers should engage providers of cloud and SaaS-based technology solutions to discuss ways to modernize the federal governments information security requirements. In the wake of the failure of HealthCare.gov, there is an exciting opportunity to educate the government officials who certify these security mandates about modern software best practices.
Government leaders need to introduce a serious-minded reform agenda if any real progress is to be made in revamping the federal IT procurement process.
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Awards
Bloomberg Philanthropies Mayors Challenge (Chicago) Data Liberation Award (NYC Dept of Health) 2013 Digital Counties Survey Award (Montgomery County, Snohomish County, King County) State Program Innovation Award (Oregon) 2013 Web 2.0 Award (Raleigh, NC) 2013 Best of the Web Winner (Alameda County) 2013 Digital Government Achievement Award Winner (Alameda County) 2013 CSAC Merit Award (Alameda County) 2013 Achievement of Excellence in Procurement Award (Alameda County) 2013 Digital Cities Winners (Boston, Seattle, Austin, Chicago, Baltimore, Raleigh)
Events
ATX Civic Hackathon III (Austin, TX) Code Michigan Code Across America (Philadelphia) Code Across America (San Diego) Vegas Hack San Francisco Housing Data Jam Open Science (Mountain View) EcoHackSF (San Francisco) Urban Data Challenge Hackathon (San Francisco) Data P2PU Course Sprint (Mountain View) Code for Seattle NC Data Jam (Raleigh) Hack 4 Change (Seattle) Alameda County Apps Challenge NYC Data Week SpoCode (Spokane) Apps4Halifax API Craft Conference (Detroit) API Strategies and Practices Conference (San Francisco)
Ian Kalin Director of Open Data for Socrata at Code Michigan Socrata on site is really benecial because having somebody like Clint (a Socrata engineer) is going to bring a technical element to it to help promote all the different tools that are on the portal, available through Socrata.
For those of us who work in government, this feels like our own national holiday.
Shannon Spanhake City of San Francisco Deputy Innovation Ofcer on the National Day of Civic Hacking
Tim Dupuis Interim Director of the IT Department and the Registrar of Voters in Alameda County at Alameda County Hackathon
It is so amazing to see in a city that has such a diverse set of problems that we can unite to create a diverse set of solutions.
Code for America Summit (San Francisco) Code for L.A. NC Datapaolooza (Raleigh) Hawaii Digital Government Summit SXSW Eco Hackathon 2013 (Austin) Atlanta Govathon Code for Oakland International Open Data Day (Washington, D.C., New York City, Seattle, Atlanta)
Beth Blauer Director of GovStat for Socrata at Hack for Change Baltimore This is an amazing display of the power of civic hacking and what we can all do together.
Hannah Young Program Coordinator of the National CfA Brigade on the National Day of Civic Hacking
A datapalooza connects experts, innovators, and entrepreneurs to relevant data drawn from every level of government. Jason Hare Open Data Program Manager at NC Datapalooza
AWARDS EVENTS
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Before 2011, parents in Boston, MA struggled to gure out which schools their children were eligible to attend. The confusing process, involving a 28-page manual and a lottery system, was a source of contention and, at times, violent conict among parents across the city. A turning point came when Code for America (CfA), a non-prot organization dedicated to using data and technology to improve lives, turned their team on the problem.
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Ben Berkowitz, CEO and Co-Founder of SeeClickFix, presents at the Code for America Summit 2011.
Top: Andrew McLaughlin, self-proclaimed nerd, Sunlight Foundation board member, and CEO of Digg and Instapaper, presents at the Code for America Summit 2011. Bottom: Laura Meixell, 2013 Code for America Fellow in San Francisco.
auren Reid, Senior Public Affairs Manager at CfA, explains how they built a solution. The CfA fellows in Boston developed an app where parents could enter a few simple data points, such as address and age of child, and find out quickly which schools were available as options for their child, Reid says. The app was hugely successful. The City of Boston told us that this app, developed in just three short months, would have taken the city more thantwo years and two million dollars to create -- had it gone through the standard procurement process. Together with the City, were resolving a decadesold problem using modern technology and open data, and changing the conversation between parents and the schools system from one of contention to one that is positive and productive.
Code for America was founded in 2009 by Jennifer Pahlka, the current Deputy Chief Technology Officer for the United States. The organization seeks to find out what can happen when smart, savvy researchers, developers, and designers are deployed to cities across the nation to help local governments unlock their data to create solutions and deliver services to their citizens.
CFA PROGRAMS
Code for America has developed four programs to help further their mission. The Fellowship: Code for Americas flagship program, in which developers and designers are matched with local governments to transform data into usable forms for public improvement. The Brigade: Civic-minded volunteers come together to form brigades, bringing grassroots efforts to data use and transparency. The Accelerator: Provides financial and logistical support to civic tech startups, from a $25K grant to mentorship and networking opportunities. The Peer Network: A learning network for government innovators who want to work with other local governments to harness the power of open data in their cities.
FELLOWS IN ACTION
Matthew Hampel, 2012 CfA Fellow (Detroit), spoke to Socrata about his experience as a fellow. One of his projects for the city of Detroit was to create a web and mobile app that would update commuters about bus schedules. Hampel told us about the app, called TextMyBus. Originally, bus data was tracked manually through an ancient interface and it wasnt available to public, Hampel explained. So the city provided us with access to their servers and we exposed the data. With that, we built a text messaging app that helps people figure out when their buses are arriving.TextMyBus has proven quite popular. As of December 2013, the app has served over 1.1 million users. CfA fellows have contributed 62 apps across America so far, from helping citizens navigate the public school system to receiving text alerts when services, like food stamps, are about to expire.
THE FORMULA
The Code for America formula is simple. Developers and designers commit a year of their careers to helping a city government in need of problem solving. In exchange for a modest stipend, these participants, called fellows, live in their assigned cities, and use their skills to help move government forward to meet the needs of 21st century citizens.
We are on the cutting edge of Gov 2.0 and civic hacking and geeking.
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Foley agrees. Your civic technical ecosystem should overlap with entrepreneurship. As part of that ecosystem, our brigade influences the civic IT department by promoting open data. We are on the cutting edge of Gov 2.0 and civic hacking and geeking, Foley says. You can expect to see more brigades pop up in 2014, allowing for crossover and
BRIGADES IN ACTION
Some of Code for Americas most passionate, committed volunteers live in Raleigh, NC. Jason Hibbets and Chad Foley are two of the Raleigh brigades four co-captains. Each man volunteers hours of time each month, outside of their day jobs, to the brigade.
Top: Volunteers gather at a brigade meeting in San Francisco. Bottom left: Former City of Seattle Chief Technology Ofcer Bill Schrier presents at the Code for America Summit 2011. Bottom Right: CfA will send more fellow to more cities than ever before in 2014.
Data gives you the power to make informed decisions, and informed decisions are better decisions.
partnership. As Foley explains, Your city boundaries shouldnt limit innovation. If, for example, you have an app that catalogues the greenways in your city, it should continue beyond city limits, says Foley.
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fellows sent to eight cities: Austin, Chicago, Detroit, Honolulu, Macon, New Orleans, Philadelphia, and Santa Cruz
fellows embedded within nine communities: Kansas City, Kan. + Kansas City, Mo.; Las Vegas; Louisville, Ken.; New York; Oakland, Calif.; San Francisco; San Mateo County, Calif.; South Bend, Ind.; Summit County, Ohio
Being part of the Raleigh brigade allows us to have an impact on local government and our community, says Hibbets. He believes that government transparency in data is paramount to innovation. Open data is the foundation of civic entrepreneurship, Hibbets explains. Open data belongs to the people. Put data in the right hands and apps that can improve the daily life of citizens can be created.
A LOOK FORWARD
In 2014, Code for America plans to add 31 new fellows to the fellowship program. For people like Matt Hampel, who is passionate about harnessing open data for civic improvement, Code for America has been a vehicle for positive change. Data helps you design the future you want to see, Hampel explains. Data gives you the power to make informed decisions, and informed decisions are better decisions.
fellows will join the Code for America program. Cities to be announced.
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Beth Blauer is a leading expert in implementing stat programs in government and is Director of GovStat at Socrata.
In the previous issue of Open Innovation, I talked about the importance of fact-based decision-making and how gut decisions can be expensive and dangerous. For governments to play a leading role in the data revolution, performance measurement and successful delivery are mandatory. This truth is something I am passionate about. My passion resonates from my experience managing StateStat and the Delivery Unit in Maryland and is afrmed in conversations I have had with government leaders since.
ortunately, the open data movement has resulted in tools for data-driven decisionmaking, performance, and delivery. Socratas product, GovStat, helps local governments become more transparent, engage citizens, and measure progress against initiatives and goals. It also allows stakeholders to collaborate throughout the entire process on one common platform.
transparency, why they chose GovStat as their solution, and how each organization plans to use GovStat to increase efficiency and accountability to their constituents.
In Beyond Transparency: Open Data and the Future of Civic Innovation1, I stressed the idea that its not a matter of if datadriven government can create the best solutions to societys problems; its a matter of how soon governments will embrace the idea and reap the benefits. Using a tool like GovStat enables governments to collect and update data across departments, build beautiful data visualizations, and create both internal and citizen-facing dashboards to track progress. I would like to highlight three government organizations that have chosen to use GovStat as their primary performance measurement solution. I will share their specific challenges in moving toward data
Using a tool like GovStat enables governments to collect and update data across departments, build beautiful data visualizations, and create both internal and citizen-facing dashboards to track progress.
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enhance KCStat, they knew GovStat would meet those needs. Of all GovStats features, the KCStat team is particularly excited about the tools drag-and-drop reporting capabilities. We already were on board with the concept of telling our story through data and improving government performance, Bender says. The only thing missing was the ability to create dynamic reports and data visualizations, she continues. Kansas City hopes to improve how they communicate their results to the larger community. The Kansas City council has always been dedicated to civic engagement. Each monthly council meeting is filmed, televised, and shared online, which attracts serious stakeholders. Still, the
city wanted a way to communicate with every citizen, quickly and easily. They found the GovStat public-facing, or citizen, dashboard most useful. The GovStat dashboard is a way to engage every stakeholder, says Steenson. Its a storytelling device that makes the data more accessible. Kansas City launched its citizen dashboard in early October and looks forward to using the tool to make progress toward the citys initiatives. One big step forward was having the city council adopt a set of strategic priorities, which form the backbone of our dashboard, says Steenson. The next step was assigning measurements to those priorities, she continues. The council made a public statement about their priorities and then adopted specific measures to track
Citizens of Cook County can view progress on goals, like reducing the amount of sick leave taken by government employees, using GovStats citizen dashboard.
We wanted to transform our external performance reporting from a static PDF to a dynamic open data web portal. GovStat jumped out as the product that made the most sense for us. An early adopter of the GovStat platform, Cook County decided on a two-phase implementation process. First, the County replicated the PDF data and created reports for each department. GovStat allowed us to take the data already gathered and put it on a more flexible, user-friendly, open, and transparent platform, Schwarm says. Once the data was updated and made available to the entire organization, Cook County entered phase two of implementation: using data to drive decisions. [Data-driven decision-making] is now part of our culture and the way we do business, explains Schwarm. Further,
accurate data allows Cook County to tell accurate stories. One goal the county tracks is lowering sick leave for county staff; Cook County hopes to reduce employee sick leave to 5.2 hours per month before December 2013. On October 25, 2013, Cook County published a GovStat report on the progress toward this goal, declaring it on track. Schwarm is excited to track other county initiatives, including public safety and healthcare goals. We plan to roll out one goal per month and continue to report on its progress, Schwarm says. He continues, The use of good, timely, accurate data, especially for a government facing tough fiscal situations, allows us to make decisions and prioritize at a high level.
The use of good, timely, accurate data, especially for a government facing tough fiscal situations, allows us to make decisions and prioritize at a high level.
This chart, updated daily, shows citizens in Kansas City the percentage of customers who have been satised with the citys response to water main break service requests.
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Executives in the County Managers Office viewed the approval of the tax known locally as Measure A as an opportunity to take the countys transparent, datadriven approach to budgeting to the next level. The Measure A sales tax will generate about $65 million in revenue each year over the next 10 years, says Reyna Farrales, Deputy County Manager for San Mateo County. We have a duty to show how the services funded by the tax contribute to specific, measurable goals and how those results ultimately fit together with the priorities in our Shared Vision 2025.
GovStats mapping capabilities help establish patterns. The map above shows all water leak, water meter, and hydrant repair requests open in Kansas City.
progress. These metrics for tracking progress will be the advantage of the GovStat dashboard as we build it out. Kansas City plans to roll out a new goal every month over the next six months, into 2014. Residents can follow each goals progress on the citizen dashboard. In the meantime, Bender is excited to see how the tool helps improve efficiency. Dynamic reporting saves so much time, she says. Its great to work in a system designed around government use.
In September 2013, San Mateo County became the first county government in the U.S. to deploy a public-facing GovStat site.
When voters approved the sales tax increase, county leaders began their search for a technology solution to keep the community informed about progress in the coming years. We were aware of the success of the StateStat program in Maryland and were really impressed with the performance dashboard they were using, says Farrales. We discovered that Maryland, along with a number of other cities and states, were all using the Socrata platform. Our newly appointed Chief Innovation Officer (CIO) Jon Walton came from San Francisco and had experience with Socrata, so he and his staff were able to help us ramp up our Socrata-powered open data portal and move into GovStat right away. After implementing GovStat, the County Managers Office used the system to help departments define goals and metrics for their respective Measure A funding proposals. In September 2013, San Mateo County became the first county government in the U.S. to deploy a publicfacing GovStat site. The launch of SMC Performance coincided with the Board of Supervisors approval of 22 projects totaling more than $50 million.
SMC Performance features a dashboard with a series of interactive tiles, each tile acting as a hub for the goals associated with a specific Measure A initiative. By clicking on the tile, users can explore performance measures, review raw data, read the actual proposal and, in some cases, look at charts, graphs, and maps created with the data. One of my favorite things about GovStat is how easy it is to create maps and other visualizations of the data we collect, says Shanna Collins, a Budget Analyst in San Mateo Countys Office of Budget and Performance. These visualizations help us identify where the greatest needs are throughout the county, so we can make budget choices that are based on objective data. In the coming months, San Mateo County will use GovStat to track the performance of the original programs funded by Measure A to monitor progress in key areas. In addition, the County is planning to roll out a new dashboard to follow the nine community impact goals that make up its Shared Vision 2025 in early 2014.
GovStat has been at the heart of our move toward true data-driven management, says Farrales. And it gives us a platform for involving the community and our employees in decision-making, which is central to our mission.
GOALS IN ACTION
Each of these organizations offers a compelling story of what is possible by putting the principles of datadriven decision-making, performance measurement, and delivery into action. Greater adoption of these practices is not a trend; its a fundamental shift in the way governments around the world are embracing their mission.
This pie chart shows the number of emergency response vehicles by category for San Mateo.
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hen Socrata was originally founded, it began with a small team of scrappy software engineers. Team structure was simple, and early team members quickly developed an office culture that paralleled the products they were building: open, engaging, and collaborative. They encouraged free discussion, shared a love for challenges, and held events planned or spontaneous that built camaraderie. Since the earliest days of the company, dozens of engineers have joined Socrata, from part-time high school interns to veteran programmers with decades of education and experience. The engineering team has grown into an engineering department, and the original infrastructure must evolve to accommodate more members and bigger projects.
Challenging Queries
Socratas engineering team members have attended dozens of hackathons around the world, serving as instructors, presenters, and judges.
Socrata is maturing, and it is most evident through the evolution of its engineeringpast, present, and future. Whats really exciting about Socrata right now is that were transitioning from a startup in the true sense of the word to a company, says Steve Greenberg, one of Socratas newest Engineering Program Managers.
Data is Socratas business, and it handles datasets of all sizes from those with only a dozen records to others with records ranging in the millions. A search request on a small dataset takes only a few seconds, but advanced searches on large datasets naturally take much more time to process. Socratas engineers have recently enjoyed the challenge of developing methods to make even advanced searches in large datasets complete in less than four seconds.
discipline (front-end development, backend development, user interface design, etc.) collaborate through inter-tribal groups called Guilds. Within each tribe are also Squads, small teams dedicated to specific disciplines within the tribe. Squads act like miniature startups in their own right, maintaining their own cultures and core values.
One thing I frequently talk about with friends outside of work is that Socratas engineering team is filled with a bunch of unique, funny people. We have a lot of characters here, but at the end of the day, everyone is deeply committed to our customers and to the companys mission, says Greenberg. Socratas engineers are inventive and rarely bored. When they arent building or running code, they run marathons, make hot sauce, craft micro-brews, and use 3D printers to produce models of Iron Mans helmet. In between tasks, they also pursue friendly feuds, from office Nerf-gun battles to internet pranks. Tradition is another important part of Socratas culture, with the engineers being among its most avid followers. Since the companys founding, engineers have eaten lunch every Friday at the same teriyaki place in Seattles Pioneer Square. They enjoy an office happy hour on Friday afternoons, bringing in beer or whiskey
Anyone who has visited Socrata can attest to the dedication and personality that each employee brings to the company, particularly the engineers.
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to share. On their anniversary of employment, team members also share one pound of chocolate for every year theyve worked at Socrata. While these perks and traditions are part of what makes Socrata great, ask the engineers what they love most about their job and they will likely reply learning, coding, and problem-solving. We face a lot of hard engineering challenges, and those challenges are very exciting to work on, says Anthony Nowell, a Socrata Software Developer. I have no doubt that Im surrounded by ridiculously bright people who can overcome those challenges, and Im really encouraged knowing that were helping each other to grow technically.
EXPONENTIAL GROWTH
Pioneering tech companies like Google, Spotify, and Facebook have demonstrated that well-defined culture and open organizational models are valuable growth tools. They help attract new team members, develop employee competency, and foster loyalty, which in turn inspires employees to produce innovative projects that put the company on the leading edge of entrepreneurship. Socrata adds members to its team on a near-weekly basis, many of them engineers. Part of this growth success comes from the attractiveness of Socratas culture, which the company has nurtured since its founding. Moving forward, Socrata will continue to emphasize organizational models that maintain that culture. Its amazing seeing Socrata grow as big as it has, says Chris Metcalf, Director of Developer Platform and sixyear Socrata employee. I dont have kids but, to me, this is like seeing my child go off to college.
GIACOMO FERRARI Achievements unlocked: 3D printed Iron Mans helmet and arc reactor; cocreated Socratas charting library Geeks out on: 3D printing, electronics, web development Most likely to: Invent a working ux capacitor, blow himself up in a lab
STEVE GREENBERG Achievements unlocked: Recently had his rst child, helped design Microsofts error reporting system Geeks out on: Cycling, family, remodeling his house
KARIN HELLMAN Achievements unlocked: Ive made it through a year in the U.S. without getting fat. Geeks out on: Climbing, colors, painting, Photoshop
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JOHN KEW Achievements unlocked: Worked on a number of evolutionary computation projects; developed code used on millions of servers around the world Geeks out on: Family, illustrating microorganisms, microbiology
AYN LESLIE-COOK Achievements unlocked: My kids dont seem like theyll turn out to be criminals. Geeks out on: Family, statistical modelling, swimming, theatre
ANTHONY NOWELL Achievements unlocked: Recently had his rst child, built a small application to assist his mother-in-law with her daycare business Geeks out on: Coding, family, web frameworks
PAUL PARADISE Achievements unlocked: Helped shape Socrata from the very beginning Geeks out on: Computer hardware, computer networking, triathlon
JEFF SCHERPELZ Achievements unlocked: Led Socrata through several versions of its front end (including conversion from FLEX to Javascript); designed and built his own house Geeks out on: Cars, food, knitting
JASON KROLL Achievements unlocked:Built a system to identify the best type of education for over 15,000 careers and nd schools offering such education Geeks out on:Computer science, economics, music, running, statistics, tennis
CHRIS METCALF Achievements unlocked: Helped Socrata grow from a startup into a company Geeks out on: APIs, developer tools, home improvement, micro-brewing, photography
BRIAN OLDFIELD Achievements unlocked: Accepted to grad school Geeks out on: Bitcoin mining, website design
DAN RATHBONE Achievements unlocked: Travelled and worked all over the world Geeks out on: Database technologies, hiking, running, triathlon Most likely to: Wander off to explore and then be found living in a hut in the middle of nowhere
CLINT TSENG Achievements unlocked: Taught math and English in India; worked on a project deployed to 80+ countries and the international space station Geeks out on: Design, guitar, music, movies, sailing Most likely to: Freak that this was written in Comic Sans
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info@socrata.com (206) 340-8008 83 S. King St., Ste. 107 Seattle, WA 98104 www.socrata.com twitter.com/socrata facebook.com/socrata