Here is a clear and timely press release from the office of California State Senator
Bob Hertzberg, who represents the San Fernando Valley in Sacramento, and who
authored SB 272, the Local Government Open Data Act, which he is now trying to
see followed throughout the state:
Hertzberg Holds
Hearing in Los Angeles to Examine Data Collected by Local Governments
SB 272, the Local
Government Open Data Act, went into effect on July 1, but not all local
agencies are following it
WHAT: The Senate Subcommittee on
Modernizing Government, chaired by Sen. Bob Hertzberg, D-Van Nuys, will hold a
hearing on Friday to examine compliance with SB 272, the Local Government Open
Data Act, which requires local agencies to create a catalog of the enterprise
software systems they use to collect and maintain public information and to
make that catalog public. This hearing will also explore how the information in
these catalogs can improve government cooperation and efficiency, and create
opportunity for innovative new products and services benefitting all
Californians.
WHO: Sen. Bob
Hertzberg
Quentin Wilson, Project Manager, Public
Performance Improvement
Robb Korinke, Principal, Grassroots Lab
Patrick
Atwater, Project Manager, California Data Collaborative
Matthew
Barrett, Manager for Policy Research and Library Services, Los Angeles County
Metropolitan Transportation Authority
Lilian
Coral, Chief Data Officer, Office of LA Mayor Eric Garcetti
Dane
Hutchings, Legislative Representative, League of Cities
Mike
Pettit, Chief Information Officer, County of Ventura
Dave
Maass, Investigative Researcher, Electronic Frontier Foundation
Frank
Ury, Mayor of Mission Viejo
Dillon
Gibbons, Legislative Representative, California Special Districts Association
WHEN: 11 a.m., Friday,
October 7, 2016
WHERE:
California
Endowment Building, 1000 N. Alameda Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012
NOTE:
If
you cannot attend the hearing, you can watch it stream live on Sen. Hertzberg’s
website: http://sd18.senate.ca.gov/
Note
also the diverse and high-powered roster of officials being brought together
under Senator Hertzberg’s leadership to participate in this forum, which should
therefore mean that real progress on the issues involved can be facilitated by their
sharing of their experiences with open data at the local government level. Live streaming will make the group’s public
deliberations open to the public, who stand to be the main beneficiaries of the
“innovative new products and services benefitting all Californians” promised by
this legislation.
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