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Innovation, Emerging Tech Committee in the Works for Los Angeles County

Following the sunset of its Information Systems Committee, county officials are exploring formation of an innovation and emerging technologies committee, and the potential for an innovation incubator.

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Los Angeles County, which won acclaim in recent years for its public-facing open data portal, is exploring additional ways to drive innovation.

The county’s Board of Supervisors approved the Open Data Initiative in 2015, and teamed with private software company Socrata to launch an Open Data website that would enable public access to everything from restaurant inspection reports and employee salaries to neighborhood crime stats.

Los Angeles County CIO Bill Kehoe said the agency is also looking into the creation of a permanent development lab, among other efforts.

“The Board of Supervisors has directed us to look at an innovative and emerging technologies working group and come back with a recommendation in six months. Right now, we’re just exploring the function and what are the possibilities,” Kehoe said.

The new group will be an “innovation and emerging technologies committee,” and is intended to replace the county’s Information Systems Committee, which sunsetted in January.


The committee’s exact focus is not yet clear, and Kehoe said it “could be more of a high-level Information Technology (IT) governance group than innovation.” But, he added, it will likely have eight to 10 members and comprise representatives from his office, the county executive office, from the office of each county supervisor, and “outside members as well.”

“It will go to the board, the recommendation for what the committee’s charter is, and the membership, and then we’ll take that and see if there’s additional need to be built around innovation,” he said.

The committee will be designed by a working group that will also include representatives of the county CIO and CEO, the agency’s executive board, its county supervisors and its IT services division.

The county is also exploring the potential for an innovation lab or technology incubator, although a decision on that will likely come after the tech committee is operational and able to advise the agency, Kehoe said.

“I’m seeing the start of some Internet of Things (projects) and I’m seeing a lot of need around data analytics and predictive models. Those are perfect candidates for an innovation lab. There’s a need to be able to try out new technologies within the business use cases that it could support,” Kehoe said, noting that areas of artificial intelligence and chatbot deployment could also be of interest.

The county is further along in its exploitation of a Data Hub, which Kehoe said went live in 2017 but predates his own arrival at the agency. So far, utilizing the concept of coordinated care — linking clients to services they have received — officials have connected data across departments, reducing siloing and better serving at-risk populations like the homeless.

Kehoe said the agency intends to layer in analytics and continue linking data and clients.

“We definitely see the capabilities, and there’s definitely some reports that we’ve produced around homelessness, but we’ve just scratched the surface,” he said.

This story originally appeared on Government Technology.

Theo Douglas is Assistant Managing Editor of Industry Insider — California.