Sharing key moments and insights from our fellowship year working with Kansas City, MO, Kansas City, KS and Wyandotte County.
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We've missed you in KC this month, but we've been showing up on screens all over town! Earlier this week we had a remote meeting with Global Prairie that joined us from coast to coast - NYC, KC, and SF, and today we gave a guest lecture for an outstanding group of students at the Kanas City Art Institute who are working on designing interactive online learning communities.
#kansas city#code for america#civic tech#google hangout#remote meeting#guest lecture#kcai#cfakc#cfa2013#screens
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Digital Innovation in Government Resources
As part of our work in Kansas City this year, we continue to advise on policy and culture change within city hall. Through the national Code for America network, we learn about the latest innovations coming from cities across the country and can help share these examples with our city partners and the community. We’ve collected a short list of some of the best resources for digital innovation and open government:
Example Open Government Plans & Policy
Some municipalities are writing pieces of broad policy around how they will more open, transparent, and accessible. These can be a great first start towards more digital innovation and open data. Additionally, some municipalities find that an open policy like this gives a broad overhead to their initiatives and allows for specifics to be directed in smaller pieces of legislation.
Template for Writing an Open Government Directive
Template for Writing a Declaration of Local Open Government Principles
U.S. National Open Government Action Plan
Currently have an open call for public input for 2.0
White House Open Government Dashboard
Philadelphia Open Government Plan 1.0
Example Digital Roadmaps
A digital roadmap is a great way to create digital accountability across the government. Some municipalities have started creating plans for where they would like to go digitally, including on the web, social media, and also in digital infrastructure in the built environment, including municipal Wi-Fi and smart devices. The plans provide goals, standards, requirements, staffing needs, and ways to measure success.
GovLoop Guide to Creating a Digital Government Strategy
Best in class example: Chicago Tech Plan
New York City’s 2011 Digital Roadmap
New York City’s 2012 Digital Roadmap
New York City’s Digital Progress Report
Gilbert, Arizona Digital Roadmap
Montgomery County, Maryland Digital Government Strategy
UK Government Digital Strategy
White House Digital Government: Building a 21st Century Platform to Better Serve the American People
Digital Government Design Principles & Standards
The United Kingdom has been leading the way in innovating the digital services for their entire government. They have established both design principles and a service standard. These are excellent starting points for any government to consider and also help bring staff at all levels along in the process.
UK Government Digital Service Design Principles
UK Government Digital by Default Service Standard
Open Data Guides & Frameworks
National organizations are creating excellent guides to help shape open data policies including recommendations on language, sections to include, and linking to examples.
Open Data Guidelines from the Sunlight Foundation
Open Data Handbook from the Open Knowledge Foundation
Open Data Field Guide and Open Data Workbook from Socrata
Example Open Data Policies
Open data policies take on different forms depending on their municipality. We’re seeing some fit different city and state regulations or directives. Additionally, some cities are writing their policies in a transparent way, asking for public input to shape the language and requirements.
Comparison of Municipal Open Data Policies from the San Diego Regional Data Library
Comparison of Open Data Policies from the Sunlight Foundation
Open New York - Provisional Open Data Handbook
South Bend, Indiana - written with Mayor’s Office, CfA fellows, Sunlight Foundation
Oakland, CA - currently writing it openly on Github & Google Docs
Chicago - using RapGenius/NewsGenius to annotate and define terms within their Open Data Executive Order
Example Open Data Schedules & Plans
Some municipalities are creating schedules that direct when data is opened by specific departments, creating accountability. Philadelphia uses a free tool, Trello, to manage, assign, and track open data releases in a publicly visible way.
City of Philadelphia Open Data Pipeline
Example Open Data Portals
Open data portals are where the data sets are shared. There are numerous services for data portals including Socrata and CKAN. Individual cities are launching portals, as are counties, states, and even entire countries.
data.gov List of All Open Government Data Sites in the World
Cities
Open Data Philly
Chicago as well as a fantastic catalog of the apps built on their open data
Regions/States/National
data.gov/cities is a national Socrata portal sharing data from 12 cities
Open Colorado gathers data from 12 cities and counties in Colorado
State of New York
State of Oregon Dataset Suggestion Tool
Missouri
Kansas
Data.gov is experimenting with a new front page that makes it easy to search the datasets, shows off visualizations from data, and shares news on how the federal government is thinking about data.
Next Steps
There are many options and ways to create a open, digital future for a government. It’s important to take key learnings from these numerous resources and then customize to fit each particular municipality.
A few possibilities for Kansas City:
Regional Open Data Agreement & Portal
In Kansas City, we think it’s very important to collaborate regionally on data and release information in standard formats to create better comparisons and tools for the whole region. Kansas City has one of the best metropolitan planning organizations in the country, the Mid-America Regional Council, which has nine member counties, already hosts data, and brings together government leaders across the metro region. MARC is an excellent source to gather data through, and work with the member counties to display individual city/county data, collective data for the region, and facilitate data standard adoption. Through MARC, the municipalities can come together, create a regional open data agreement to collaborate and adopt data standards, as well as create a modern open data portal that serves the region.
KCMO
Kansas City, Missouri has a growing open data portal, but is in need of an open data policy and digital roadmap to support it. After discussions with our city partners, we recommend an open data ordinance to give broad definition and to establish technical details through administrative resolutions. Additionally, a digital roadmap is in process to help establish the goals and metrics of a digital future for KCMO. We also recommend that an open data schedule be established and shared with all city staff and the public, especially for the benefit of civic technology volunteers in the Code for America Brigade who may be looking to utilize the data in tools they are building. We will be working closely with our city partners, the Mayor’s Challenge Cabinet, and the Brigade to advise and develop the specifics of these documents and resources.
KCK
Kansas City, Kansas has passed an initial open government resolution to explore opening data and begin creating a policy, but does not yet have a portal or a full policy. Additionally, they openly offer their GIS data. We recommend creating an open government directive with an open data policy soon to follow, a digital government roadmap, and contributing to a regional data portal as well as establishing a data portal for the Unified Government, if resources allow.
We only have a few months left as fellows, but are committed to continuing to push along these initiatives in the time we have left.
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Want to try out what we've been building for Kansas City?
We have several great demo and test drives lined up!
Are you a Kansas City small business owner? Join us to try out our app, BizFriendly, which helps small business owners learn how to better use the web for their business. We're eager to hear what you think! Your feedback is invaluable in our next iteration. Please sign up with a free ticket to a half hour time slot that works well for you.
Monday 8/13
KC Biz Care
1118 Oak Street, Kansas City, MO
3:30, 4:00, 4:30 pm
Sign Up
Tuesday 8/13 Connecting for Good
3101 Troost Avenue, Kansas City, MO
9, 9:30, 10, 10:30, 11, 11:30 am
Sign Up
Wednesday 8/14
Demo Hour after 1 Million Cups
Kauffman Foundation Conference Center - Plaza Room
4801 Rockhill Rd, Kansas City, 64110
10-11 am
Sign Up
Wednesday 8/14
KC Chamber
30 West Pershing Road, Kansas City, MO
3:30, 4, 4:30 pm
Sign Up
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Today we demoed our app, BizFriendly, to Aneesh Chopra, the former CTO of the United States of America. Thanks for your enthusiastic advice and encouragement!
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Hack Kansas City at National Day of Civic Hacking
Over 80 Kansas Citians came together June 1-2, 2013 for National Day of Civic Hacking at Hack KC in the Board Room at Union Station. Participants included software developers, city staff, designers, project managers, writers, neighborhood leaders and more!
Many participants were engaging in this type of event for the first time and had responses like “this is the first hack event I’ve been to and you’re awesome” and “these types of events are really awesome at finding people who are talented and dedicated.”
The local press was also excited by these new ideas emerging in Kansas City. Check out stories from 41ActionNews, Kansas City Star, and KMBZ.
Listed in order of presentation, here are the main nine projects worked on over the weekend:
Daily 311 Brief - Andrew Hyder
The Kansas City 311 Daily Brief shows cases opened and closed yesterday using KCMO’s open 311 data.
Achieved in a weekend: Repurposed Boston’s Daily Brief app for KC and connected open data
KC Airport Community Engagement - Bill Mullins Proposal to see how to best invest money for the airport versus other infrastructure through user-centered evaluation of what’s civically important using stakeholder profiles such as urban seniors and airline staff.
Achieved in a weekend: Community discussions and presentation document
Re.Use.Full - Leslie Scott, Ai Namima, Kol Kheang, Alexis Petri, Melissa Melina, Jon Kohrs

Re.Use.Full helps match people looking to re-home their gently used household items with worthy nonprofit organizations who can put them to good use.
Achieved in a weekend: name, logo, launch site
Needs: front end development, design, talk with non-profit orgs and people who frequently donate household items to charity
Made in KC - Richard Shipley, Katie Greer

Made in KC is a digital listing for locally made products available online and as an Android app. A big need is a branding mark that can be put on products and utilized by businesses to show that they are locally made. With the individuality of the local brands in mind, the logo was developed in a way that the colors can be customized by each company.
Needs: help getting word out, meetings with local manufacturers and restaurants, fundraising
Garden Free - Caitlin McMurty, Louisa Whitfield-Smith, Camilo Snapp, Jarrett Homann, Zach Flanders, Jon Stephens
Garden Free is dedicated to improving urban food access by connecting those looking to grow healthy food with the land they need to do so. Need a place to garden? Enter your address and Garden Free will show you properties near you in Wyandotte County, color-coded for how easy it is to start a garden on the site.
Achieved in a weekend: integrating open data, launch site, criteria for land
Needs: designers, GIS coding for the different criteria
Votify - Andrew Douglass, Wesley McKain, Deborah Soetandio
In seeing that mayors in many American cities are elected by voter turnouts in single digit percentages, Votify seeks to connect voters with election information and notifications. After entering your address, Votify finds your voting precinct and sends you an email when you have an election coming up. Data is captured by a combinations of scraping data from election boards and election boards providing information directly. In the future it will add mobile integration and calendar invites with an appointment to vote.
Needs: Connections to voting advocacy groups
WikiKC Neighborhood Stories - Synthia Payne, Larry Arnold

WikiKC was furthered over the weekend by creating a place within in it for telling personal stories about neighborhoods. Stories were collected from many HackKC participants to get the collection started. The team found it was helpful to write down what others are saying, rather than just trying to write down your story.
Achieved in a weekend: new wiki pages, story collection
Needs: getting in all neighborhoods, more stories, easy way for anyone to add their story
Awesome Transit Apps- Kyle Rogler, Ryan Mott, Ron McLinden, Bradley Dice, Jestin Stoffel, Mack Yi
This team saw two big problems in Kansas City in that all of the bus systems are not combined in one map and they also do not give updates on bus arrivals. By working with KCATA via Twitter over the weekend, the team was able to use GTFS and OneBusAway to integrate it into a near real time map.
Achieved in a weekend: translated KCATA's GPS feed into GTFS-Realtime, applied it to the OneBusAway Visualizer
Needs: real time data, make it more fun through game mechanics, add all bus systems for the metro area, connections to transit agencies
Teardown Tattler - Jase Wilson, Briston Davidge, Paul Barham, David Snodgrass, Shawn Davison, Gatlin Hebert, Marlene Jeffers

Many of Kansas City's buildings have already been lost. Most could have been saved if people had gotten involved sooner. Teardown Tattler monitors the city’s 311 database for dangerous building notices, allows users to sign up to get an email notification of new notices as well as browse the site for map of current notices. The target user is any concerned citizen, but especially those who want to affect urban planning and already community organize around planning decisions.
Achieved in a weekend: built front end page, scrape 311 data, Google street view of the buildings, email notification
Needs: Add monitoring of demolition permits, but that’s often too late in the process to save a building so we'll architect a process to identify at risk buildings using water shutoff data and other key indicators of demolition. Add user-specified geographic areas for monitoring/notifications and saving multiple locations. Add Advocacy arm utilizing Neighborland API.
Civic Tech Expo

Some great organizations also came out to share how they’re making a better Kansas City. We had booths from Boys Grow, Urban Harvest KC, Kansas City Maker Faire, Connecting for Good, and a DIY touchtable running OpenPlans.
Want to do more?
If you love these projects and want to build more civic tech for Kansas City, join the Brigade!
Organizers
HackKC was organized by Jase Wilson of Neighbor.ly, Will Barkis from the Mozilla Foundation, Ariel Kennan and Andrew Hyder from Code for America, and Aaaron Deacon from KC Digital Drive.
Thank You to our Sponsors
Intel, Mozilla Foundation, Google Fiber, KCNext
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Kicking off a National Day of Civic Hacking by talking about the futures of civic technology with the Unified Government of Wyandotte County & Kansas City, Kansas. Where are we at with tech today? Where are we headed in the future?
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Getting to Know a Place

View from roof of Kansas City, Missouri City Hall looking towards Kansas City, Kansas City Hall.
By Ariel Kennan
For the A Team, as our fellowship team is affectionately known as our names start with A, our residency month was about getting to know Kansas City. How do you learn about a place? Walk its streets? Meet its people? Attend its events?
In early February, the directors of a new play about Kansas City e-mailed Code for America HQ looking for introductions to the fellows. They were still in the process of writing the play and wanted to find out more about our work and partnership with the local government. The play is called Waiting for You On the Corner Of (13th and Walnut) and was created by the Sojourn Theatre* and the TEAM in partnership with the Kansas City Repertory Theater Company. It’s a highly participatory work and includes moments that ask audience members to respond to questions and draw on a map where they’re from in Kansas City—places they know, where they’re welcome-not welcome. This type of interaction begins to flip the theater as the audience becomes performers.
We were only in our first week in Kansas City when we saw the play—very much still outsiders and just beginning to know the lay of the land. The theater companies, however, had spent months in Kansas City doing research, talking to locals, meeting reporters, going to church, and digging deep into what makes Kansas City what it is today. They brought the historic segregation, corporations, urban planning projects, and just the general feeling of the city to life on stage. The piece was eye-opening and reflective on the current state of the city. We strongly identified with two characters—one who is an outside consultant working on a marketing campaign for the city called “I am KC” and another younger character who is building a utopian virtual model of the city. Both creating visions for the city: one as an outsider, one as a local.
After the play, there was a “talk back” session where audience members shared their views and recommendations on how to continue to improve the script. Locals corrected names of places and moments in history. Even with the research and immersion by the playwrights, there was still a local knowledge that was needed to polish the details.
As Andrew and I drove to the airport on our last day in Kansas City in early March, we reflected on the experience we’d just had in the past month. We had a shared feeling that we knew Kansas City, but the process felt unlike the way we’d gotten to know other places. I’m an intrepid traveler and I get to know places by walking their streets. As fellows in Kansas City, we instantly got to know some of the most powerful people, from the Mayors, to successful business people, to educators, and neighborhood advocates. We had instant access to them, their knowledge, and their events. This is something that takes much more time in many places. Although I have a strong network in New York City, where I have lived for the past 9 years, I would not say I have nearly the same access to this level of people, but I know the city intimately. Waiting for You opened our eyes to a lot of Kansas City issues that we couldn't immediately see by going to meetings, and allowed us to dive deeper to reveal more in our research.
Kansas City is familiar now—people, icons, successes, challenges, history. I hope to spend more time walking her streets, the way I like to get to know cities, but I hope the locals will still fill in a few details too.
*I’ve been fortunate enough to collaborate with a member of Sojourn Theatre, Shannon Scrofano, on Sandy Storyline at the Tribeca Film Festival. Hopefully the first of many collaborations.
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Open Data in Kansas
By Andrew Hyder
Kansas City is serious about becoming the most entrepreneurial city in the country. They've been quickly organizing resources, technology, and laws to make sure that there is no better place to start and grow a new business. Like all grand plans, the region's ambitious economic development strategy is made up of many important smaller efforts. The latest happened April 4th as Kansas City, Kansas passed a resolution to start putting its data online. Mayor Reardon, in his final month of office, brought this important piece of legislation to vote. The resolution, like others in San Francisco and Washington D.C., allows for city departments to begin to publish their internal datasets online. By putting its spreadsheets and maps on the web for everyone to see, Kansas City is commiting itself to transparency and open communication about its work. Kansas City opening up their data is an essential step to becoming an entreprenuerial city. The data created and collected by cities is paid for and property of the public, so making it easily accessible is important. Being available online, it reduces the time and costs for entrepreneurs to do business with the city, while also allowing the tech community to build new applications and web services on top of the data. Within City Hall itself, city departments can now communicate and share information more effeciently. As Kansas City, Missouri has also recently put online an open data portal, regional collaboration and sharing of data will soon be easy.

The CfA Fellows presenting to the Board of Commissioners.
This resolution is just one step in creating an online open data portal for Kansas City, Kansas. The process began when we presented to the Board of Commissioners about the importance of open data, civic technology, and Code for America's role in Kansas City over the next year. We then provided advice and research to the Mayor's office to help draft the resolution.We will continue to work closely with staff in both City Halls and the community to plan out the release of their important data. Through transparency, open communication, and new technology, Kansas City is defining what it means to be an entreprenuerial city.
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Tour of Kansas City
During our last week of residency, we were fortunate to take a guided tour of Kansas City. Jase Wilson from Neighbor.ly graciously set up a driving/walking tour for us on a sunny Sunday in snow-covered KC. He rented a vehicle and drove us through parts of KCMO we had not yet seen. Jase’s background in urban planning and his enthusiasm for the city were apparent as he described buildings, neighborhoods, and historical transitions.

At lunch time we met Steve Curtis to continue our tour in KCK. Steve’s passion for the city was made evident the first time we met him on Super Bowl Sunday, and his work in the community is truly inspiring. During the afternoon tour, we saw several Community Housing for Wyandotte County homes and their park project, as well as some local art initiatives Steve has championed. The tour highlighted the historical economic shifts in the city, as well as the strong neighborhood ties.

Our amazing tour guides gave us an incredibly rich local perspective on Kansas City’s history, present, and future, that we might not have heard otherwise. Thank you Jase and Steve!
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On Monday evening, Kauffman Labs hosted a reception to welcome us to town and introduce us to the community. Mayor James kicked off the evening and we were introduced to a network of civic leaders and entrepreneurs.
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A Super KC Welcome!
The CfA fellows were welcomed to Kansas City with a bi-state Superbowl party with our city partners. We spent the first half of the game at the 403 Club in KCK, then traveled to Tower Tavern in KCMO to catch the halftime show and second half of the game. Although the night didn’t turn out successfully for the 49ers, our San Francisco-based CfA team had a wonderful night with good food and great company. Thank you, KC!
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