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August 2015 In This Issue
GMIS International Update
Member Spotlight
Legislative Issues
Professional Development and Leadership
Geek's Corner
Naylor Association Solutions
Naylor Association Solutions
Naylor Association Solutions
GMIS International Update
I had the honor and privilege to represent GMIS International at the MISA Ontario "Internet of Things" Conference May 31-June 3 in London, Ontario. The conference was attended by more than 500 MISA members and nearly 70 vendors.
 
 
   
Thanks to our membership, our sponsors and most certainly our management team at CMP Management, led by Savanna Lott, for a wonderful year of GMIS! 2014-2015 has proven to be very successful, with synergy and team play the keys to success. As I bid adieu to my term as President of the organization, I am proud to have accepted the baton from 2013-2014 President and current Executive Director Janet Claggett last August. I also look forward to passing that same joy of leadership on to 2015-2016 President-Elect Brian Kelley.
 
Member Spotlight
 
   
Michael Leiker, IT Director
GMIS member since 1997
Number of IT Staff: 3.5
Population: 28,000
IT Budget: $556,000
 
Naylor Association Solutions
Naylor Association Solutions
Legislative Issues
Municipal governments are underestimating the value of transparency and the role online access plays in building trust with the public. (State Scoop)
 
For all of its advantages, cost isn't always one of them. But there are ways to keep them down. (Government Technology)
 
Security needs to be a shared mission between the public sector, education and industry. (State Tech)
 
The state of Georgia has filed a federal lawsuit against a well-known public records activist that claims that he is engaging in a "strategy of terrorism" by publishing an annotated version of Georgia state law on his website. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
 
Professional Development and Leadership
Public employment, long seen as a secure job with good benefits, took a series of hits during the recession, with state and local governments implementing hiring freezes and layoffs. But job-seekers can take solace: Many states and localities are now hiring, buoyed by an improving economy and better-than-expected revenue. (Stateline)
 
Increasingly, governments want technology officers to deliver services that make it easier for agencies to accomplish their goals and for citizens to interact with their lawmakers. The same shift is happening in the private sector as well. (State Scoop)
 
CIOs share their best advice for keeping disengagement at bay. (IT World)
 
Geek's Corner
From autonomous drones to emergent AI to digital genomes, this year’s list from the World Economic Forum offers its latest glimpse of our fast-approaching technological future. (Scientific America)
 
Amid the debate in New York City on limiting the number of drivers for ride share companies such as Uber, one key point was glaringly absent: Uber and similar companies born of the recent tech boom — Airbnb, Lyft and others — aren’t just disrupting the services of old-fashioned industries like taxi cabs. They’re disrupting government services too. (TechCrunch)
 
The risks to holding onto legacy systems are many, but modernizing IT in any sector is not easy or cheap. These tips can help. (Government Technology)
 
 
GMIS International Headquarters
PO Box 27923 Austin, TX 78755 | 877-963-4647
www.gmis.org

 

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