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Edmonton takes five steps towards open govt

Edmonton takes five steps towards open govt

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 08 Mar 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Edmonton is the fourth municipality in Canada moving ahead with open government initiatives. The challenge is helping people understand 'we are like the new city,' says CIO Chris Moore, who made five major announcements at the Open City Workshop

Moore said he would have initiated similar efforts in Brampton, but “a lot of this activity wasn’t mainstream at the time … if I was still there and had political sponsorship and community engagement, I would have absolutely tried it.” Political sponsorship, administrative leadership and community engagement are three key elements, said Moore.

Open initiatives still aren’t mainstream, he added, but Edmonton “is a very engaged community, separate from all the social media stuff so … some of those things just caught fire here easier.”

The Open City Workshop is about broadening the circle and including people in the conversation. The big challenge is that government has not always felt open and engaging, he said. “We are trying to help people understand we are like ‘the new city,’” said Moore.
  
Roughly 110 people attended the Open City Workshop and 2,200 participated in the online Web cast, which was broadcast live by Fusedlogic Inc., a social media engagement firm based in Edmonton. Fusedlogic shared the feed and embedded code, allowing external sites to broadcast the stream.
 
Workshop organizers uploaded photos to a Flickr page during the event and promoted a discussion on Twitter using the hash tag #yegdata. (The panelists changed the hash tag to #openyeg at the onset of the event.) The discussion was trending in Canada by 11:00 a.m., an hour after the event started, said Moore.
 
“What it tells me is that there are a lot of people who are passionate about this … whether it is technology or government, the way we have been doing things has not been sustainable and they want to be part of changing it,” said Moore.
 
The Twitter feed circulated several quotes from the day-long event, including Moore’s comment that “no tax dollars were harmed in the making of those applications.” The quote was a reference to two iPhone apps – Route 411 and My Stops – developed by two Edmonton-based organizations that took advantage of the city’s decision to release its transit scheduling data to Google.

“One tells you when the next bus or LRT comes and the other one allows you to do route planning … the only thing we had to do was release our data,” said Moore.

Nanaimo, Toronto and Vancouver released their initial group of data sets in 2009.

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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.
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