Government Transparency at Politics Online Conference in Washington, DC

Loading...

Flash Player 9 (or above) is needed to view presentations.
We have detected that you do not have it on your computer. To install it, go here.

1 comments

Comments 1 - 1 of 1 previous next Post a comment

  • + gregpalmer gregpalmer 2 years ago
    Hmm not all the fonts came through, eh?
Post a comment
Embed Video
Edit your comment Cancel

Favorites, Groups & Events

Government Transparency at Politics Online Conference in Washington, DC - Presentation Transcript

  1. Government’s Obligation to You
    • Radical Transparency inside government.
    GREG PALMER March 5, 2008 Director of Web Communications, NYC Public Schools
  2. Who Am I?
    • Founded Keystone Politics in 2004. One of the first state blogs.
    • Technology Advisor to the Oversight Committee under Chairman Henry Waxman.
    • Sometime “ideas” nerd for online civic projects.
    • Head Web Geek for the NYC Public Schools.
  3. What’s Transparency?
    • “Disclosure” is a poor synonym.
    • You pay for the government to do a lot of work on your behalf. You own that work .
    • Part of doing that work has to means it must be public.
    • Execution is a large part of transparency.
  4. What’s Gov’s Obligation?
    • Let you know what we’re doing.
    • Let you know why.
    • Give you the opportunity to participate.
    • Give you the opportunity to base your creations on the work we’ve done on your behalf as taxpayers.
  5. How-To for Government
    • Build websites to solve simple problems.
    • Execute them extraordinarily well.
    • These are the things people actually use.*
    • Leverage your scale, your public mandate and brand.
    * CREDIT TO TOM STEINBERG THERE.
  6. Make Things Easy to Understand: Calendars Calendars
    • Everybody wants them, everybody understands them, but I’ve never seen a good one.
    • At the Oversight Committee, we built a calendar for hearings and committee business.
    • Linked it with detailed information about each meeting.
    • More importantly, we collaborated with outside groups to develop an RSS feed for the schedule.
  7. People Want to Know: How’s My Gov. Doing?? How’s My Gov. Doing??
    • NYC unveils “Citywide Performance Reporting”
    • More than 40 city agencies report on over 500 performance measures.
    • Simple views = citizens understand.
    • What’s getting better, what’s stable, what’s getting worse?
  8. Easy to Understand
    • Fulfill needs that are easy to understand. Leave out bells and whistles.
    • Everyone understands a calendar.
    • Everyone wants if the government is doing a good job.
  9. Proactive
    • Proactive, creative information release is the way of the future.
    • It’s continuous. Batched information release isn’t appropriate much of the time.
  10. Opportunities of Scale
    • Government has a huge opportunity to leverage its scale and brand
    • Wyoming = 520,000 people
    • Delaware = 860,000 people
    • Rhode Island = 1 million people
    • NYC Schools = 1.1 million students (bigger than 8 states)
  11. Some Big Numbers
    • Google has 16,000 employees.
    • U.S. State Department has 30,000.
    • Microsoft has 79,000.
    • NYC Schools have 140,000 employees, including 90,000 teachers in 1,500 schools.
    • Our websites have over 200,000 pages. Parts of the site are translated into up to 12 languages.
  12. So What?
    • With scale comes challenges, but more importantly, opportunities.
    • Government, despite its flaws, has an enduring and powerful brand presence.*
    • How can we leverage our enormous size to do a fantastic job serving citizens?
    * Credit, again, to Tom Steinberg
  13. Here’s Where We’re At
    • Government is often lightyears behind in working with modern technology.
    • Often, we’re not even on the right path.
    • No RSS feeds is a great example.
    • Government has a 1998 attitude.
    • We think we’re an island in a world where that’s no longer realistic.
  14. Slow and Steady
    • Government will never beat private enterprise in technology development.
    • It can and should more closely track the technology of the commercial internet.
    • Real e-government won’t come from trying to create e-government.
    • Rather, it will be a mash-up of simple replacements for offline tools citizens already use.
  15. Where to Begin
    • Stable, standards-based platform. (Don’t try to reinvent the wheel)
    • Bridge the gap between business owners and web geeks.
    • Start small, put some simple, non-controversial goals out there. (Ex. - We want a great calendar)
    • Commit the resources to execute them well. That probably means less features, not more.
  16. Questions for You
    • Who does this stuff well? (I always want to learn!)
    • What progress will government make in the next few years?
    • How does transparency play a role in that?
  17. More Info
    • E-mail me: [email_address]
    • I’ll put this presentation and more on the web: www.gregpalmer.net

+ gregpalmergregpalmer, 2 years ago

custom

714 views, 0 favs, 0 embeds more stats

Online government transparency guru Greg Palmer's p more

More info about this document

© All Rights Reserved

Go to text version

  • Total Views 714
    • 714 on SlideShare
    • 0 from embeds
  • Comments 1
  • Favorites 0
  • Downloads 9
Most viewed embeds

more

All embeds

less

Flagged as inappropriate Flag as inappropriate
Flag as inappropriate

Select your reason for flagging this presentation as inappropriate. If needed, use the feedback form to let us know more details.

Cancel
File a copyright complaint
Having problems? Go to our helpdesk?

Categories