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Civic Hacking Using Data, Software, and People to make our Cities Better Madison Neighborhood Conference, Sept 2014 Erik Paulson Greg Tracy James Lloyd
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Page 1: Madison neighborhood conference, 2014

Civic HackingUsing Data, Software, and People

to make our Cities Better

Madison Neighborhood Conference, Sept 2014

Erik Paulson

Greg Tracy

James Lloyd

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Using a device or a system

in an unanticipated manner

to obtain an interesting

result

(software, biology, laws, etc)

Hacking: A Definition

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“Civic hacking is the application of new tools

and approaches to improve the processes

and systems of government for all.”

(Alex Howard)

“Civic hacking is using technology and

design to make where we live better.”

(Kevin Curry)

Civic Hacking

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Using data from the government, or

collecting data ourselves, to build new apps

or websites that have a focus on solving a

need

Things that are great but wouldn’t normally

be counted as civic hacking

- neighborhood listservs

- static websites

Civic Hacking, Part 2

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Many (though certainly not everyone) has

computers

Computing, storage, and bandwidth for

serving are nearly free

Software is getting easier to write and data is

available

Facebook, Google, Apple are changing

expectations

What’s different now

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An informal group of (mostly) Madison area

people who are working on civic apps that

touch life in Madison

Occasional meetups, Google Group, Google

Plus community. Sort of like a book club for

civic hackers

Not a legal entity, not explicitly a service

organization

Hacking Madison

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We’re going to talk a lot

about software, but

technology is not strictly

required

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Banksy is a Civic Hacker

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Pop-Up Parks

are Civic

Hacking

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Occupy Madison used the fact that towable “tiny

houses” aren’t regulated by zoning codes - that’s

Civic Hacking

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Little Free Libraries

are Civic Hacking

(That could really

use some better

technology)

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Guerilla Gardening is Civic

Hacking

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● What’s happening in Madison

● Apps that are in use outside of Madison

● Discussion: What could we/should we be doing?

Outline of the Session

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SMSMyBusReal-time arrival estimates delivered via SMS

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I wasn’t alone

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16,560 requests

by

356 individuals

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Mother Fool’s Coffeehouse

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an app ecosystem emerged

an API was born

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1,567,442

API requests in 2012

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58,426,824( 2 million per week )

API requests in 2014

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second highest in Metro’s history

14.7 million riders in 2013

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Milwaukee budgeted $250k

to build a transit API

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http://api.smsmybus.com/map

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A Civic Epiphany

time + passion = goodness

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adopt-a-hydrant

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Clean Lakes Monitoring

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ccw.cleanlakesalliance.com

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A volunteer partnership

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Phase 1: Record and Aggregate Data

Phase 2: Market to Madison

Phase 3: Roll out to communities outside of

Madison

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Make Music Madison

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MuniQA.org

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Up next for MuniQA.org

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Examples from other cities

New opportunities

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Ordinance Search

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City Website Search

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Development FastPass

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Culture Blocks

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Parking Understanding

www.willtheytow.me

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Textizen

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UrbanForestMap

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http://istheresewageinthechicagoriver.com/

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How can we make connections?

Madison’s Open Data Ordinance

Adopt-a-Hydrant in more neighborhoods

Other thoughts?

Discussion

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Thank you!