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 Mapping innovation: Five takeaways from 89 cities around the world

A recent report and interactive map from Bloomberg Philanthropies and the OECD provide the most thorough accounting yet of how local governments are building internal capacity to solve problems in new ways. Here are key takeaways from the report and details on how other cities can contribute to the research and get on the map—both to compare their innovation efforts to others and to help build the global understanding of how the urban innovation movement is spreading and maturing.

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MEET KEITH HANSON

Title:Chief Technology Officer
City: Shreveport, La.

When Keith Hanson in January left the small software company he started in Shreveport to become that city’s first chief technology officer, he brought one thing with him: his inventiveness. “I bootstrapped my company—I didn’t have tons of money to get it off the ground,” he said, noting one similarity to working in a mid-sized city with modest budgets. “We don’t get tons of funds. That means I’ve got to get scrappy. There’s always a solution, even if there’s duct tape and glue involved.” Hanson thinks Raspberry Pi—small, flexible computing devices that a child can program—are a perfect low-cost hack for cities to experiment with. He’s looking to use them for everything from cracking down on fast drivers (a camera on the devices can detect speed) to flagging roads in need of repair (by having city employees push a button in their cars anytime they see a pothole while driving around). Now, as part of Mayor Adrian Perkins’ participation in the Bloomberg Harvard City Leadership Initiative, Hanson is leading the charge to improve the city’s use of data to make decisions. One focus is downsizing the number of fleet vehicles the city owns—Hanson has found open-source software he wants to use to prototype an Uber-like ridesharing model for city employees to get around. Another focus is boosting the share of city contracts going to minority-, women-, and veteran-owned businesses. He’s begun exploring ways of using text messaging to prod those businesses to bid on city work. “Every day, I’m challenging the idea that government works slowly,” Hansen said. “Don’t tell me something is going to take 18 months. I’ve never worked on an 18-month project in my life.”


Pro tip: “You don’t need super-fancy tools to get things done. Try a pilot, try something free first. If it works, it can show the need for more dollars for your initiative.”

WHAT WE’RE READING

INNOVATION: Measuring innovation performance is not a common practice in the public sector, but it should be. (Apolitical)

CLIMATE: Flooding like what Venice saw last week is a preview of what’s to come in coastal cities. (Washington Post) Cities such as Virginia Beach, Va., are fighting back by tightening rules about building in flood-prone areas. (The New York Times)

EQUITY: A growing number of cities in the U.S., such as Austin, Texas, Boston, and Philadelphia, are creating “chief diversity officer” as a top management position aimed at making local government more responsive to all residents. (Route Fifty)

HOUSING: The Charlotte Housing Authority is rebranding itself after finding that many residents find the words “housing” and “authority” have negative connotations. The agency’s new name: Inlivian. (Charlotte Observer)

TRANSPORTATION: With its new Urban Movement Labs, Los Angeles hopes to partner with the private sector, nonprofits, academics, and others to test, evaluate, and scale up transportation solutions. (Smart Cities Dive)

NETWORK NEWS

INNOVATION TRAINING: Bloomberg Philanthropies is offering cities with chief innovation officers a nine-month training program to boost innovation capacity among city employees. The application deadline is December 3. Click here for information on how to apply.

GRANT OPPORTUNITY: The Asphalt Art Initiative grant program from Bloomberg Philanthropies is designed to fund visual art interventions on roadways, pedestrian spaces, and public infrastructure in U.S. cities with populations of 30,000-500,000. The application deadline is December 12. Learn more here.

Contact us to share events and job postings with the Bloomberg Cities network.

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