October 11, 2009

To Do More With Less, Governments Go Digital
By STEVE LOHR
NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/11/business/11unboxed.html?_r=1&ref=business&pagewanted=print


IN government, as in business, crisis can fuel creativity. These days, 
the pressure to rethink things is particularly intense for state and 
local governments, which have far less leeway than Washington to borrow 
in bad times.

“The economic pressures will force us to be more efficient and change 
how we deliver government services,” says Sonny Perdue, the governor of 
Georgia.

Mr. Perdue was one of more than 500 government officials, business 
executives and academics who attended a two-day conference in New York 
this month. Under the theme “Smarter Cities,” the meeting was sponsored 
by I.B.M. in partnership with the Brookings Institution, the City 
University of New York, the Urban Land Institute and other nonprofit groups.

That a giant technology company underwrote the gathering suggests that 
there is money to be made in helping governments tackle thorny problems 
in traffic management, energy use, public health, education and social 
services — and that technology has an important role to play.

Local governments, like many businesses, are struggling with a data 
glut. Agencies collect huge amounts of information about topics as 
diverse as building permits, potholes, Medicaid cases and foster-child 
placements. Technology, according to computer experts and government 
officials, can be a powerful tool to mine vast troves of government data 
for insights to streamline services and guide policy.

“The mistake people make is to think that collecting the data is the 
endgame,” said Michael R. Bloomberg, the mayor of New York. The real 
payoff, he said, takes another step. “We actually use the data,” he noted.

Indeed, New York has been a pioneer among cities in the use of computing 
firepower to sift through data to improve services. It began in the 
1990s with the city’s CompStat system for mapping, identifying and 
predicting crime. The system, combined with new policing practices, 
reduced crime rates in New York and was later adopted by Los Angeles, 
Philadelphia, Baltimore and other cities.

In 2002, the city began its “311” telephone number for answering 
questions about government services and to report problems down to 
missing manhole covers. The service receives 50,000 calls a day, and 
earlier this year began operating on the Web as well. Complaints, 
response times and resolved problems are tracked and measured to improve 
performance.

In 2006, the city began an online service, NYC Business Express, to make 
it easier and faster to start a business. The average time to obtain a 
building permit, for example, has been cut to 7 days from 40. Such 
seemingly mundane improvements can add up to big gains in the efficiency 
of government service systems, experts say, nurturing productivity and 
growth in local economies. The process, they say, is similar to “lean 
manufacturing,” a system first mastered by Toyota in which step-by-step 
changes on the factory floor, made repeatedly, translate into major 
advances in quality and productivity.

Linking government databases can be crucial. The New York Fire 
Department, in partnership with I.B.M., is developing a system that 
combines information on building floor plans, inspections and code 
violations from city agencies and then uses software to analyze and make 
predictions. Firefighters will be able to call up building information 
on hand-held wireless computers on their way to a fire. The real-time 
system, scheduled to be deployed next year, should help guide 
firefighting tactics and help firefighters avoid some dangers.

In Alameda County in California, the social services agency recently 
integrated information from several systems into a single data 
warehouse. Business intelligence software knits together the information 
on an individual — typically from multiple social service programs — and 
presents it as a single Web page to the caseworker assisting that person.

The agency began using the system in July. It helps social workers, who 
handle more than 400 cases each, on average, to be more informed, save 
time and deal more effectively with individuals, said Donald Edwards, 
assistant director of the county agency. The agency estimates that it 
will save $11 million a year from eliminating duplicated work and by 
detecting fraud, he said.

To do more with less, Mr. Edwards said, government services will be 
increasingly automated. “This is about the modernization and 
mechanization of services,” he said.

The future of using an expanded array of digital technologies to create 
smarter cities is just getting under way in a project in Dubuque, Iowa. 
Over the next several years, the city will use sensors, software and 
Internet computing to give its government and individual customers the 
digital tools to measure, monitor and alter the way they use water, 
electricity and transportation. Computerized electric meters, for 
example, can track energy use and reveal ways to reduce consumption and 
trim bills, often by 20 percent or more.

The city is paying for the initial stages of the initiative with a bond 
offering. I.B.M. is investing as well, seeing its work in Dubuque as a 
manageable research project that can move quickly in a small city of 
60,000 people.

“For us, it’s a living lab,” said Robert Morris, head of services 
research at I.B.M. “We want to learn things in Dubuque and then export 
the best practices.”

ROY D. BUOL, the mayor, has export ambitions for Dubuque, too. A local 
company, for example, is making the computerized water meters for the 
project. And Mr. Buol views the initiative as a training ground for 
local people to develop technology and skills they can sell in other 
regions and, perhaps, other countries.

“We’re not just a petri dish here,” he said.

“We want the smart-city work to be a replicable model for other cities.”

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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