Friday, June 15, 2012

What open source can teach government officials


Image by opensource.com
What started with a unanimous vote to adopt an open source resolution eventually became a long-term commitment to the open source way. How many of you have had an elected official attend a citizen-lead event? Probably some of you. But how many of you have had your entire city or town council attend an unconference?
At a recent open government unconference, all city council members—including the mayor of Raleigh, North Carolina—attended some or all of the event. Their attendance wasn't a requirement—and it wasn’t a political drive-by. It was genuine, natural. And some of them got knee-deep in the “code,” competing in the civic hackathon.
CityCamp Raleigh
The open government event was CityCamp Raleigh, returning for its second year. CityCamp is an international unconference series and online community focused on innovation for municipal governments and community organizations. This marks the first time in CityCamp history when all elected officials from the local municipality attended a camp. It may also be the first time multiple elected officials actively participated and competed in a civic hackthon. Raleigh’s mayor was on a team exploring how community health scoring could be applied to urban planning.
"My favorite part of CityCamp Raleigh was seeing how many people devoted their thoughts and time—it goes a long way," said Mayor Nancy McFarlane. "I saw the collaboration of open source first-hand. The efforts this weekend are making our city better."
Having the mayor and the entire city council attend CityCamp Raleigh exemplifies their commitment to open source. Not only did they unanimously pass an open government directive in February 2012, they attended and participated in CityCamp. Attendees were excited to see their representatives so engaged during the unconference; for some, it restored a trust in government.
CityCamp Raleigh took place June 1-3. On Friday, June 1, CityCampers enjoyed a government perspectives panel, a business perspective panel, and several lightning talks. Runtime Expectations, a live technology/development talkshow on CodebassRadio, recorded all the talks. Saturday, June 2, was the CityCamp unconference, where attendees pitched ideas, groups refined those ideas during sessions, and teams formed around the best ideas. The civic hackathon occurred Sunday, June 3, and one team walked away with a $5000 (US) prize.
One of the most amazing moments at this year’s CityCamp occurred when our elected officials jumped right in. Something magical happened. Citizens were looking to solve problems and the elected officials were part of the solution--an equal citizen at the same table. That's unusual, said CityCamp co-founder Kevin Curry.
"Normally, council seeks citizen input by calling a public meeting or workshop," Curry said. "Usually it's in the middle of the day in some obscure government building you'd never otherwise go to. In Raleigh they flipped that whole dynamic around. The mayor and all councilors came because citizens sought government input to solving citizens' own problems."
Other open government advocates will inevitably ask me how to replicate this success—how to get their elected officials more involved in citizen movements—but I'm concerned about what to tell them. Here's the best answer I have: establish an open source culture—not an easy thing to do. It takes time. Obviously, the first step is to invite officials to events and teach them the open source way. It’s up to them to make the commitment and get involved.
Groups pitched more than 30 ideas, workshops, and projects at Saturday's unconference. Only 25 of them made it to "the grid"—the unconference agenda created on-the-fly based on votes from CityCampers.
image credits: CityCamp RaleighAfter organizers set the agenda, attendees were off and running. One city councilor pitched an idea for community health scoring that attracting more than 20 people to the session; they formed a team that eventually competed in the session.
During the unconference, attendees documented as many sessions as they could on the Triangle Wiki workshops page. Although the Trianlge Wiki project wasn’t pitched at last years camp, it is one of the major success stories coming out of CityCamp Raleigh. It allows any citizen to contribute local knowledge to an easy-to-use wiki platform based on the open source LocalWiki software.
"CityCamp validated how important and valuable open content is to the community,” said Reid Serozi, a CityCamp Raleigh organizer and Triangle Wiki enthusiast. “Almost every final CityCamp idea had incorporated a stream of content from Triangle Wiki."
By 4 p.m., ten teams had submitted formal teams competing for the prize money. The team project ideas looked like this:
Triangle search—an open source search engine to help find useful local information from local sources.You’ve been towed—a towing alert system.Priority 1—an early stage plan to standardize and encourage open use and access by city government.R Greenway—A mobile application that would show maps of the greenway (multi-purpose paths in Raleigh) and allow people to know where they are and how to connect to other trails.Community health score—a way to calculate the health impact for urban planning.CitySeek Raleigh—a mobile game that encourages users to explore interesting sites in Raleigh.Welcome to RDU—A citizen powered site that seeks to connect people in the Triangle with events, business, and brands.Augmented reality pictures—An app that would give you a window to the past; matching photographers position to see exactly would it used to look like.QR code all the things—Generate QR codes for TriangleWiki pages.Raleigh retold—An application to allow the user to tell the story of the neighborhood by collecting audio, video, and other multimedia.
All ten presentations were amazing; the ideas were solid. As a judge, I can attest that it was hard to pick a winner. But in the end, one team stood above the rest. Perhaps it was the simplicity of the idea. Or maybe it was the fact that they combined available city GIS data with other assets that made a better user experience for something everyone in Raleigh loves and uses frequently: our greenways.
image credits: CityCamp RaleighThe winning team presented the "R Greenway" application. The maps were already available, and the problem they were solving was simple: How does a user connect to other trails and provide feedback to the city while they are using the greenway? The team included other components like parking maps and integrated SeeClickFix, a non-emergency system for reporting issues like graffiti, downed tree limbs, and similar situations.
This year, one thing that impressed me was the addition of students from NC State’s Design Graphics Lab. Three of the four teams placed in the top five. One of our goals as organizers was to include more students and youth. We accomplished that goal by bringing in students who were prepared to participate in CityCamp.
Another satisfying part of the weekend were the number of mentions and references to Triangle Wiki. It’s a project that spawned after last year’s CityCamp and it’s thriving in the Triangle region. Attendees used Triangle Wiki to document their sessions, projects, and organizers are using it to track the future progress of all the teams.
Compared to last year, we had more participants and better ideas. We had more teams pitch ideas. We have more momentum to keep the projects moving forward, improving, and becoming a reality.
When your entire council shows up to your unconference, it indicates their commitment to open source and open government. Seeing this happening is very fulfilling for me as an organizer. And just as importantly, it makes more of a difference when attendees recognize the significance of this.
Raleigh is definitely accelerating on its path to becoming an open source city. Open source is changing the world. In Raleigh, it’s happening one elected official at a time. Citizens are shaping the open government movement because it means something to them. Open government and open source are part of our culture.

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