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Local Government Contracts: Cerner, Motorola, NebuLogic Technologies, TriTech

Local governments are returning from spring recess and many have already released proposed budgets. Here are some expenditures to know from the first three weeks of May.

Local governments are returning from spring recess and many have already released proposed budgets. Here are the expenditures to know from the first three weeks of May.

1. San Diego City Council will vote Tuesday on extending the Tri Tech Corp. contract that provides services to the Fire-Rescue Department’s Computer Aided Dispatch System. The contract will cost no more than $835,550 annually.

2. The city of Sacramento will vote Tuesday on a contract with NebuLogic Technologies LLC. The contract would customize the city’s customer relationship management cloud service system responsible for 311 requests. Up to $177,180 could be spent on the project.

3. Sacramento will also vote on whether or not to spend $70,000 a year over three years on a memorandum of understanding. The agreement would be between the city and the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Department, creating a collaboration for Sacramento’s Internet Crime Against Children Task Force.

The city of Sacramento released its proposed budget May 9, which includes a call to create a citywide payment management system and about $5 million in proposed expenditures.

4. Los Angeles County voted May 9 to back state legislation, the Voting Modernization Bond Act of 2018. The act would include $450 million to replace voting machines across the state.

5. Los Angeles County will vote Tuesday on a contract with Motorola Solutions Inc. to provide radio repairs to currently used radios for the next 30 months. The contract will not exceed $555,000 over the life of the agreement.

6. Los Angeles will also vote on an amendment to its current Cerner Corp. contract that manages the Probation Department’s Electronic Medical Records System. The change would extend the contract another 36 months, until May 2020, and increase the contract price by almost $7.5 million

Kayla Nick-Kearney was a staff writer for Techwire from March 2017 through January 2019.