Should Charities Pay For The Police Services They Receive?

Municipalities around the country are struggling with declining revenues and a public that is resistant to any tax increases. In addition to cutting spending and eliminating jobs, local governments are seeking new revenue streams. Amherst (suburb of Buffalo) Town Supervisor Barry Weinstein is seeking to have organizations that sponsor public charity events reimburse the townRead… Read more »

The Boundaryless Organization – Fact or Fiction?

Way back in the early 1990s during my undergraduate business studies, we began learning about various predicted changes that were going to occur in the structure of leadership throughout corporate America, and all organizations. Sixteen years later in graduate school, I was surprised at the universal nature of most of our experiences: the majority ifRead… Read more »

Avoiding reinventing the wheel – an emerging case study

One of my pet hates is when government agencies re-invent the wheel. It often starts when politicians announces they’re going to do or launch something and agencies are then tasked with making it actually happen. If that agency isn’t already connected into what other agencies are doing, doesn’t conduct some research, or simply doesn’t playRead… Read more »

Measured Voice: Why We’re Coding for America

We started working on federal government social media communications more than four ears ago — before Barack Obama was president. And prior to that, we created “web 2.0″ (doesn’t it sound quaint now?) tools for presidential campaigns. Needless to say, the past few years have been a thrilling time to be at the intersection ofRead… Read more »

Are You Ready To Rumble for Open Data? Nov. 2, Join Us.

Do you care about kicking political corruption out of California with the power of open data? Do you have a bomb.com education app idea just waiting for the help of content experts and an awesome education API to make it a reality?? Here’s your opportunity: Data DeathMatch! hackathon November 2. November 2 from 6:30 a.m.Read… Read more »

Rewards for all the great hard work

I posted some pictures of our Workers Appreciation. It wasn’t all of them but it felt good to know that we are appreciated and not treated like a robot..And it was a workday! The food was awesome and so was the cake..There were door prizes and rewards! Honestly, it’s things like this that makes meRead… Read more »

Tapping Open Source: Linux Philosophy and the Government

This blog post was written by DLT Solutions’ Matt Micene, Engineering Team Lead for the company’s blog. You can visit the full blog by clicking HERE. —– With Mil-OSS WG4 over and 2012’s Red Hat Government Symposium kicking off on Tuesday, my mind naturally wanders to topics such as “The Open Source Way” and howRead… Read more »

Transition is An Opportunity – Be Ready

No matter who wins the election in two weeks, change will come. If the President is re-elected, we’ll see some new political appointees coming onboard and certainly new initiatives. If Governor Romney is elected, we’ll see wholesale changes in political personnel and plans; and transition teams will move into agencies quickly. In either case, newRead… Read more »

NextGen+ The Next Generation of Leaders Making Changes at HUD

Many agencies have been prepping for the “retirement wave” hitting the Federal Government, including the Office of Personnel Management with new reforms to the Pathways Program. In addition to recruiting a talented workforce, however, agencies face the additional challenge of retaining young employees. At the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Michael Lawyer had noticedRead… Read more »