300 Videos and Counting: A Treasure Trove of Civic Innovation

One of the most important things we do here at Smart Chicago is to document.

With our latest upload, we’ve hit 300 videos on our Smart Chicago YouTube Channel. We’ve got hours of video about the #CivicSummer program, the CUTGroup, and our how-to videos. We also have recordings of civic technology events in Chicago including OpenGov Hack Night, OpenGov Chicago, and the Connect Chicago Meetups.

newsmartyoutubechannel

We now live stream all of our events straight from our YouTube Channel. Don’t miss a thing—  can subscribe to our channel here.

Join Your Colleagues as an Admin of Connect Chicago

One of our favorite programs here is Connect Chicago, the meetups we hold that help create a community of shared learning in the hundreds of public computer centers and community technology centers here in Chicago. Consider joining!

The Connect Chicago website is a listing of more than 250 places in Chicago where you can use a computer for free. If you work at one of these locations, you can sign up to be an admin for your page.

Here’s a list of all admins to date— 58 out of 260 locations and counting!

A Knock At Midnight
Altgeld Library
Archer Heights Library
ARK of St. Sabina
Arturo Velasquez Institute (AVI)
Association House of Chicago
Auburn Gresham Senior Satellite Center
Back of the Yards Neighborhood Council CTC
Bezazian Library
Breakthrough Urban Ministries
Bucktown-Wicker Park Library
Catholic Bishop of Chicago/St. Sabina ERC
Center for Changing Lives
Center of Higher Development – Lake Grove
Center of Higher Development – Magnolia
Center on Halsted
Charles Hayes Center
Chatham Business Association, Small Business Development, Inc.
Chicago Commons ETC
Community Job Training and Education Center
Community Job Training and Education Center
Douglass Library
Edgewater Library
Garfield Ridge Satellite Senior Center
Goodwill Industries Job Training Center
Greater Southwest Development Corporation
Harold Washington Library-HWLC
Howard Area Community Center
Indo-American Center
Industrial Council of Nearwest Chicago (ICNC) Community Technology Center
Instituto Del Progreso
Jane Addams Resource Corporation
Kelly Hall YMCA
Kennedy-King College
Kennedy-King College
Lake Parc Place
Little Village Library
Lumity
Malcolm X College
Mather’s-More Than a Café (Higgins)
Mercy Housing- South Loop
Onward Neighborhood House
NEBC ( neighborhood empowerment for a better community )
Poder Learning Center
Renaissance Court at the Chicago Cultural Center
Roosevelt Library
Second Sense Beyond Vision Loss Technology Center (Access limited to people with vision loss)
SER Central States Little Village Center
GSDC Southwest REACH Center
Spanish Coalition for Housing
Spanish Coalition for Housing
Street-Level Youth Media Center
The Cara Program (West Loop Campus)
Metropolitan Family Services 63rd Street Corridor Center for Working Families
Metropolitan Family Services 63rd Street Corridor Center for Working Families
The Renaissance Collaborative
Whitney M. Young, Jr. Library
YWCA Parks Francis Community Technology Center

Chicago School of Data Interview: Illinois Sentencing Advisory Council

Next up in our Chicago School of Data interview series is the Illinois Sentencing Advisory Council (ISAC). The ISAC is a government agency created to collect, analyze and present data from all relevant sources to more accurately determine the consequences of sentencing policy decisions and to review the effectiveness and efficiency of current sentencing policies and practices.

Illinois State Capitol

Adam Garcia spoke with Nate Steinfeld who serves as Research Director for the ISAC about what the organization does and how they use data. Andrew Seeder did the transcription and pulled together threads, then Christopher Whitaker put together this post.

If you like what you’re learning here, consider joining us at the Chicago School of Data Days on September 19 and 20, 2014.

Eventbrite - Chicago School of Data Days

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Crime and Punishment Release Party at FreeGeekChicago

A couple weeks ago we had a party to celebrate our shared work with FreeGeek Chicago on the Crime and Punishment in Chicago project.  During the event, we heard from the people on the project team and got feedback on how the project can become even more helpful for community members, journalists, and policymakers.

I’m particularly proud of this project, because it takes a hard look at the gaping data holes we have in seeing the full cycle of crime in our city. I am very proud of the large cache of crime reports available on the City data portal, but I am mindful that we seem to be no closer in having a true understanding of the system.

In my work at EveryBlock, I was responsible for finding crime data in cities all over the country. It gave me a great window into the day-to-day reality of the data and the differences in what’s published. When we had the opportunity to partner with Tracy Siska of the  Chicago Justice Project as the main subject matter expert, and the community-based developers like Brian Peterson of the FreeGeek Chicago’s Supreme Chi-Town Coding Crew, I knew we had something special.

New 2013 CPD Ford Explorer Police Interceptor

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Recap of Cook County Land Bank Training

Last month, Smart Chicago took part in the Cook County Land Bank Training. We recorded all the sessions and have a re-cap of the proceedings below. Christopher Whitaker and Joshua Kalov of our team also created and taught the curriculum around Researching vacant properties.

The Land Bank is a great resource for residents and a great partner to Smart Chicago!

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Cook County President Toni Preckwinkle announcing a $10 million investment to the Cook County Land Bank

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Honorary Chicago at OpenGov Hack Night

On Tuesday, August 5, 2014, Linda Zabors of Honorary Chicago talked about her experience mapping out Chicago’s brown honorary street signs with Honorary Chicago.  Smart Chicago’s Christopher Whitaker captured the  entire presentation– see it after the jump or on our YouTube channel.

Kool.

Honorary Street Sign for The Cool Gent, Photo by Flickr user Jessi

The ubiquitous brown street signs are placed to honor Chicago residents and require passage by the Chicago City Council.

Below the fold, Zabors talks about the work she’s done mapping out the streets signs and researching their biographies of who these honorees are.

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Deadline for Knight-Mozilla Fellows closing fast!

We’re big fans of the Knight-Mozilla News Fellows. For ten months, the fellows are embedded in newsrooms like the New York Times, Texas Tribune, ProPublica, and the Washington Post bringing their technology skills to the front lines of journalism.

So, with that in mind – we’re encouraging developers, designers, data scientists and all around do-gooders to apply for the Knight-Mozilla Fellowship.

We have more details about the program below the fold. You can get the full story on the OpenNews website here.

Knight-Mozilla OpenNews 2013 Fellows

Dan Sinker and the Knight-Mozilla OpenNews 2013 Fellows, Photo by Laurian Gridinoc

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Tomorrow: Civic Tech 4-Pack with OpenTwin Cities (With live stream!)

This Tuesday: Bill Bushey, Laura Andersen, and Steven Clift with E-Democracy/Open Twin Cities will be in Chicago to visit with interesting civic tech, open gov, digital inclusion, and related projects. They’ll also be hosting a four-pack of events at 1871 Chicago.

OpenTwin Cities pitching during National Day of Civic Hacking, Photo by OpenTwin Cities

OpenTwin Cities pitching during National Day of Civic Hacking, Photo by OpenTwin Cities

Christopher Whitaker will be running his usual live stream of the events on our livestream page. We’ve listed the schedule and more detailed information about the events below the fold.

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Chicago School of Data Interview with Jane Addams Resource Corporation

In preparing for the Chicago School of Data Days conference (September 19 and 20), we’ve heard from more than 100 organizations and have detailed discussions with dozens. We need to hear from you to make sure we have as good a take on the field as possible!

Adam Garcia talked with the Jane Addams Resource Corporation. We worked with them to put together these thoughts on what they’re up to.

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Systems Used in Chicago School of Data Communications, Organizing, and Event Planning

“Open” is one of our principles here at Smart Chicago. Right now, most of the small staff and talented consultants who work here are working on our Chicago School of Data project. As is our wont, based on our software philosophy, (“making the smallest amount of software to be useful to the largest amount of people in connecting residents to their government, their institutions, and each other”), we are using lots of lightweight tools to get things done. Here’s a look at them:

Eventbrite: We use this leading ticket tool for managing conference attendance. We have an event page and we get individual emails every time someone signs up to come to the conference on September 19 and 20, 2014. We’re going to use the Eventbrite API to pick up all of the information from event signups and write that to our master list.

Mailchimp: We use Mailchimp in all sorts of our work here– we love it. Great API, great analytics, and easy-to-use email templates. We use it in this project to manage our communication to potential and actual attendees. Their segmenting tools are great, so we’re able to send different emails to people who are already signed up for the conference and people who have yet to get started with our initial data census form.

Wufoo: Wufoo is a wonder. It’s probably the most essential outside tool for us, because it helps us gather so much information and it has a great API that allows us to pull that info into other systems we maintain, include Patterns, which is an in-house tool we use to manage our Civic User Testing Group. We’re using it to

WordPress: We use WordPress for all sorts of websites, including our own. We’re making the conference website using WordPress, and we will be using all sorts of plugins and APIs to use data we collected from other tools. Since lots of the info we want to put on this site is being collected via Wufoo forms, we’ll probably be using something like

Dropbox:  We have a Dropbox for Business account where we keep all of our key documents and do lots of sharing with our core stakeholder team. We also use Dropbox integration with Wufoo to allow organizations to upload examples of datasets and reports that they use in their daily work.

Google Docs: We use Google Docs and Sheets mainly for project management and joint composition of things like the agenda and draft emails. All of this content ends up in other systems via simple copy/ paste— no API needed!

Evernote: We used this early on, when doing some initial interviews. We also stored individual complete audio transcripts of interviews, which were later https://dev.evernote.com/doc/

Microsoft Excel: We are working with Oprima-1, a bilingual call center, to do research on and outlook to Chicago organizations that use data to make lives better.They send us daily reports on their work, and we now (after the fact– argghh!) are working to embed that into our own knowledge about these places.

Josh Kalov, who works with Smart Chicago on the Cook County Open Data project and other items, is pulling all of these tools into a cohesive system. More to come!

Meantime, here’s a picture of an awesome Brutalist parking lot in Baltimore, where I was for their Data Day.

Brutalist Parking Lot Entrances!

Brutalist Parking Lot Entrances!