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A
I
want
to
share
with
you
how
elated
we
are
to
welcome
you
to
the
launch
of
today
of
the
western
Pennsylvania
regional
data
center
I
think
we
can
all
agree
that
the
regional
data
center
will
be
a
tremendous
benefit
to
the
entire
western
Pennsylvania
region,
and
so
I
would
like
to
sincerely
thank
the
people
in
organizations
who
made
this
possible.
First.
Scott
is
0
and
the
Richard
King
mellon
Foundation.
A
Second,
the
digital
scholarship
services
team,
with
the
University
of
Pittsburgh,
Hillman
library
and
third
Laura
hillock,
who
is
with
our
Office
of
General
Counsel
for
all
of
the
legal
agreements
that
we
had
to
complete
in
order
to
make
the
data
center
happen.
Thanks
also
goes
out
to
the
mayor
and
the
county
executive.
A
Again,
we
are
excited
because
this
partnership
supports
the
university's
mission
of
advancing
development
and
innovation.
As
you
know,
we
live
in
a
world
and
a
region
being
transformed
by
data
at
the
University
of
Pittsburgh
hillman
library.
Our
digital
scholarship
services
group
is
dedicated
to
the
cause
of
data
management
and
advocating
for
accessing
data.
If
you
need
help
creating
a
denim
data
management
plan,
describing
your
data
making
it
accessible
or
format
formatting
it,
they
can
help
you.
They
are
willing
to
help
you.
They
are
excited
to
extend
our
hand.
A
They
are
committed
to
opening
up
a
dialogue
about
our
academic
access
and
through
initiatives
and
programming
like
open
access
at
Pitt
they've
been
began,
making
a
push
to
raise
awareness
about
data
sharing
within
the
University
of
Pittsburgh
and
our
regional
operations
and
partnerships.
In
addition,
for
more
than
three
years,
the
university,
through
its
center
for
social
and
urban
research,
has
been
providing
support
for
Mike
black
hearse,
who
has
been
working
with
the
data
center
to
develop
collaborations
around
open
data
with
government
and
nonprofit
and
academic
communities.
A
We
are
fortunate
to
have
Mike,
who
has
also
been
involved
with
similar
work
at
the
National
neighborhood
indicator
partnership
with
the
help
of
people
like
Mike
and
other
data
professionals
at
Carnegie,
Mellon
University.
We
can
really
make
this
project
a
great
success.
It
goes
without
saying
that
we
at
the
University
of
Pittsburgh
are
honored
to
be
involved
in
this
project,
a
project
of
this
magnitude
that
gathers
so
many
of
us.
Thank
you
so
much
for
being
with
us
today.
B
Thank,
You,
Kathy,
and
and
and
thank
you
for
your
support
and
your
participation,
your
cooperation
and
I
do
want
to
thank
Chancellor
Gallagher
for
his
continued
support.
In
doing
this,
the
university
of
pittsburgh
has
just
been
an
absolutely
terrific
partner
bob
and
all
the
guys
who
have
worked
on
this,
but
just
been
fantastic
and
Kathy
mentioned.
You
know
the
CMU
as
well
the
RK
mellon
Foundation
and
their
willingness
to
support
this.
You
know
this
idea
that
the
mayor
and
I
have.
B
Let
me
let
me
go
back
a
little
bit
in
history,
I'm
finishing
four
years
of
being
the
county
executive
and
this
started
actually
when,
when
Connie
manager,
McCain
came
on
board
and
early
late-2012
early
2013
and
talked
about
how
are
we
making
decisions
in
the
county?
What
kind
of
data
base
are
we
use
in
to
pave
roads
and
do
Health
Department
decisions
and
all
the
decisions
that
we
made?
We
didn't
really
have
any
very
good
decision,
so
the
county
manager
wanted
to
look
and
see
best
practices
around
the
country
he
went.
B
The
place
was
like
voldemort
in
New
York
City,
where
they
were
using
something
called
City
stats
to
make
again
data-driven
decisions.
At
the
same
time,
there
was
a
city
councilman
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
who
was
about
to
become
mayor,
who
kind
of
had
a
lot
of
the
same
ideas?
How
do
we
pave
roads?
How
do
we
do
building
permits?
How
do
we
do
police
deployment,
public
safety
decisions
etc?
B
How
do
we
make
data-driven
decisions,
so
we
said
about
you
know
on
this
course
to
bring
all
of
the
experts,
and
our
administration
is
to
figure
out
how
to
do
this,
and
there
were
a
lot
of
people
that
did
a
lot
of
work.
I
also
want
to
acknowledge
Councilwoman,
Natalia
Rudy
a
kiss
here
who
sponsored
the
legislation
in
city
council
dealing
with
open
data.
B
So
there's
been
a
lot
of
partners
who
have
come
together,
and
you
know
the
mayor
and
I
get
to
stand
here
and
cut
ribbons
or
you
know
announce
big
initiatives
and
that's
and
it's
you
know
we're
glad
to
do
that,
but
our
staffs
really
spent
a
lot
of
time.
I,
don't
I
want
to
ignore
which
some
of
them
today,
because
they
they
don't
always
get
their
names
recognized,
but
they
deserve
to
be
Kai
mentioned.
B
You
got
to
make
sure
you
do
that
yeah,
but
but
there's
there's
so
many
opportunities
here,
not
just
for
the
city
and
the
county
to
improve
decision-making
and
policymaking
and
data
that
we
collect,
but
for
all
the
entities
out
there,
nonprofit
entities,
other
municipal
governments,
other
authorities
and
agencies
in
the
region
and
to
have
again
to
have
what
pits
doing
it
up.
Sir,
and
their
partnership
is
really
terrific
and
again
I
want
to
thank
those
folks.
B
Creating
the
sheer
data
system
is
going
to
make
it
easier
for
us
to
do
the
collaboration
we
want
to
do
to
help
government
be
more
efficient
and
transparent,
so
people
can
see
how
the
decisions
are
being
made
and
which
roads
are
being
paved
etc
and
allow
our
governments
to
really
become
models
for
community
engagement,
research
and
decision-making.
50
different
data
sets
from
property
assessments
to
sheriff
sales
to
property,
sale
transactions,
housing
and
community
environment
inspections.
Election
results.
B
They
have
to
be
the
right
results
by
the
way
to
make
sure
that
occurs,
not
just
getting
dumped
right
that
that
would
be
the
headline
water
fell
daily.
We
don't.
We
don't
manipulate
the
data,
we
transform
the
data
daily
census,
information
at
the
jail
and
Cain's
fatal
accident
overdose
data
dog,
license
air
quality,
daily
summaries,
plumbing
inspection,
information,
address
points,
beltway
information,
watershed
basins,
cemeteries,
councils
of
governments,
county
council,
districts,
county
parks
and
facilities,
dams,
Liam,
Hughes,
municipal
boundaries,
major
rivers,
PA
house
and
senate
districts,
congressional
districts,
polling
locations,
voting
districts,
watershed
boundaries,
etc,
etc.
B
It's
endless
the
things
that
the
opportunities
are
there
and
again,
I.
Think
it's
all
of
us
working
together.
The
partnership
that
we
have
is
going
to
be
very
key.
I
also
want
to
point
out
Joey
and
forest
or
who's
leading
this
at
the
county
level,
on
our
on
our
data
and
the
work
that
she's
done
as
well
with
the
other
partners
that
I
talked
about.
Let
me
give
one
example
of
use
and
how
some
of
this
could
be
done
and
I'll
talk
about
an
organization.
B
Does
some
great
work
called
gtech
gtech
stands
for
growth
through
energy
and
community
health
using
data.
The
organization
has
developed
the
lots
to
love
website,
which
is
an
online
resource
guide
for
those
who
have
an
interest
in
transforming
vacant
lots
in
their
neighborhoods
into
community
green
spaces.
This
interactive
map
on
the
website
shows
all
the
vacant
lots
across
Allegheny
County
and
provides
resources
to
help
organizations
and
residents
build
a
successful
project
on
the
vacant
lot
and
I.
The
website
I'll
give
out.
B
C
You
know
back
in
her
nandi
you're
gonna
have
to
correct
me
that
I
was
trying
to
google
it
before
I
got
up
around
the
1830s,
or
so
the
United
States
was
expanding
railroad
case
in
creating
an
opportunity
to
get
from
one
side
of
the
country
over
to
the
other
and
be
able
to
really
Network
a
system
throughout,
but
they
were
creating
railroads
based
on
different
gauges.
Then
you
couldn't
use
the
one
system
here
to
be
able
to
get
to
that
other
system
here,
because
the
size
of
the
railroad
tracks
were
different.
C
We
got
to
have
an
understanding
that
this
is
the
platform
by
which
we
are
able
to
do
great
things,
and
so
we
start
today
with
one
of
the
greatest
one
of
the
greatest
historic
days
of
City
County
consolidation,
an
understanding
of
an
open
data
platform
to
be
able
to
do
great
things,
and
what's
really
incredible
about
it
when
it
makes
it
different
than
most
of
the
other
open
data
platforms
in
this
country.
Is
it's
not
just
a
city
doing
it
or
a
county
doing
it?
C
It's
a
city
and
county
that
are
doing
it
in
partnership
with
the
foundation
community.
That's
all
the
need
and
the
understanding
and
stood
up
and
help
to
pull
it
all
together
and
then
utilizing
the
institution
of
a
university
to
be
able
to
make
it
all
come
together.
So
as
we
look
at
this-
and
we
have
so
many
different
data
sets
that
are
up
there,
you
know
government
usually
is
risk-averse.
That's
just
in
the
DNA
of
government,
and
you
know
a
lot
of
people
say
you
need
to
take
more
risks.
C
You
have
to
not
be
afraid
to
fail,
but
if
we
can
provide
the
information
that
we
have
is
government
to
people
with
entrepreneurial
minds
to
be
able
to
pull
together
data
sets
that
maybe
not
have
been
looked
at
together
before
and
be
able
to
provide
back
to
people
that
information
people
become
empowered
and
when
they
start
to
feel
that
they
have
that
power,
they
want
more,
they
start
to
do
more,
and
then
you
create
a
government
truly
by
the
people.
That's
what
this
is
about.
This
is
a
very
big
step
forward.
C
It
may
seem
like
well
it's
just
putting
information
out
there,
but
right
now
that
information
is
not
made
available
to
anyone
except
those
that
work
in
City
Hall
or
over
in
the
county.
Now
it's
going
to
be
made
available
to
all
and
to
be
able
to
utilize
it
to
do
great
things.
Steel
city
code,
Fest,
is
a
good
example
of
where
that
is
actually
happened
in
the
past.
C
It's
just
the
beginning,
because
now
that
we
have
that
gage
didn't
work
from
imagine
the
information
that
all
of
your
organizations
have
in
serving
people
and
then
imagine
adding
to
it
bus
routes
in
housing,
that's
available
in
opportunities
for
food
and
opportunities
for
healthcare
in
n,
hav
check-in
point
and
the
opportunity
to
combine
all
of
these
things
together
to
serve
people
simply
by
sitting
at
the
desk
at
a
computer.
What
a
great
step
for
taking
today
we'll
give
you
one
other
example:
some
kids
at
CMU
came
up
with
it.
C
C
The
power
of
technology
will
be
transformative
for
cities
around
the
world,
and
today
pittsburgh
has
launched
a
program
that
is
beyond
what
is
being
offered
in
other
cities.
We
should
be
very
proud
of
this
partnership
that
has
come
together.
The
next
phase
is
engaging
all
of
you
in
becoming
a
part
of
it
with
your
information
so
that
we
can
all
better
serve
the
people
that
were
responsible
to
serve
now.
C
None
of
that
happens
like
I,
said
without
a
partnership,
and
we
have
probably
the
most
progressive
City
Council
that
we
have
ever
had
in
this
city
and
not
only
progressive
in
the
side
of
understanding
the
social
needs
of
people,
the
progressive
and
understanding
technology
data
and
really
then
I
travel.
Quite
a
bit,
listen
tribune-review,
says:
I,
don't
know
why
I'm
working
on
the
trim.
D
The
mayor
graciously
pulled
me
up
here
at
the
last
minute,
so
I
want
to
thank
him.
I
want
to
thank
all
of
you
for
being
here
and
I
just
want
to
briefly
mention
why
I
am
here
today.
So
my
background
I
actually
come
from
deloitte
consulting
I
did
strategy
and
operations.
I
went
to
the
hind
school
for
public
policy,
I'm
actually
my
60
or
Pittsburgh
City
Council
I
represent
our
southernmost
neighborhoods
Carrick
overbrook
bonaire,
Brookline
beach.
D
You
part
about
Washington
and
when
I
first
started
and
we
first
started
getting
phone
calls
in
the
office,
we
got
a
lot
of
phone
calls
about
problem
properties.
Now
what
you
ought
to
imagine
a
house,
maybe
house
in
your
neighborhood.
Maybe
a
house-
that's
that's!
That's
a
little
rough
around
the
edges.
Let's
say
that
the
window
is
broken
or
the
fire
escape
is
falling
off
or
something
like
that.
That's
actually
a
problem
of
the
Bureau
of
building
inspection.
Let's
say
that
there's
trash
in
the
yard.
That's
a
problem
of
Environmental
Services.
D
Let's
say
that:
there's
high
grass
that's
also
building
inspection.
Let's
say
that.
There's
animal
problems
don't
get
me
started
if
it's
a
groundhog,
that's
actually
the
city.
If
it's
a
rat,
it
may
may
or
not
be
the
health
department.
If
it's
a
roach,
it's
the
health
department,
if
it's
a
deer
or
turkey,
that's
the
stage.
So
this
is
how
far
we
have
to
go
to
consolidate
our
data.
D
So
what
was
happening
is
that
we
weren't
necessarily
able
to
put
together
a
full
case
study
to
help
people
to
not
only
help
people
living
in
those
situations
but
help
the
perpetrators
that
are
perpetrating
these
situations
and
make
our
neighborhoods
better.
So
when
I
first
started,
I
remember
talking
to
councilman,
Peduto
and
I
was
like
really
this.
This
is
how
we
do
this.
You
know
what
I
asked
for
a
facilities
list.
I
got
a
list
of
facilities
with
fire
houses
that
maybe
were
closed.
D
D
We
literally
put
it
on
a
Google
Doc
for
a
public
comment.
We
got
comments
from
as
far
as
Oakland,
California
and
Philadelphia
of
people
saying
you
should
add
this.
You
should
add
this
and
I
that's
the
kind
of
scale
and
collaboration
that
we
really
back
to
the
table
that
we've
come
leaps
and
bounds
ahead
of
many
of
our
partners.
D
This
university
partnership
that
we
have
is,
unlike
any
in
the
world,
it's
unlike
any
in
the
world,
and
we
need
to
understand
that
that
is
in
our
own
backyard
and
I'm
so
excited
of
the
work
that
we
can
all
do
together.
I
know
that
there's
so
much
work
to
do.
I
stick
still
can't
get
all
those
datasets
to
help
solve
the
problems
in
that
one
house,
but
that's
something
that
we're
working
towards
that's.
D
Working
towards
an
all
the
data
sets
that
were
just
mentioned
by
County
Executive,
rich
Fitzgerald.
That's
going
to
go
a
long
way
to
helping
us
at
the
end
of
the
day,
help
people
live
better
lives
and
self
actualize
and
reach
their
full
potential,
which
is
why
we're
all
coming
here
together
today.
So
thank
you
so
much
for
being
partners
in
this
and
thank
you
for
hosting
this
and
I'm
looking
forward
to
the
launch.
Thank
you.
I.
E
A
lot
of
people
have
been
thanked
already,
but
Purdue
I'd
like
to
call
out
one,
is
our
center
of
the
the
director
of
this
university
center
for
social
nerve
and
research,
rich
tools
for
providing
me
with
such
a
good
home
and
telling
me
not
to
stop
whenever
I
started
going
down
this
path,
and
the
second
is
to
being
a
Dietrich
who's.
Been
it
been
with
me
for
the
last
10
years,
working
on
a
lot
of
neighborhood
data,
related
projects
and
the
support
of
huckster.
E
The
university's
just
been
wonderful,
it's,
but
it's
been
a
great
place
to
work
and
I
am
an
urban
studies.
Gratitude
from
pitt,
so
Animal
Care
Act,
two
did
I
mention
that,
and-
and
so
the
history
that
we
have
at
the
university
is
that
we
are
what's
called
an
information
intermediary
and
we're
really
proud
to
be
part
of
the
National
neighborhood
indicators.
Partnership
not
even
have
a
laptop
sticker
up
here
too.
So
it's
it's
a
it's
a
community
of
practice
of
over
30
cities
that
do
what
we
do
help
people
find
and
use
information.
E
E
Why
didn't
we
also
operated
a
GIS
server
where
organizations
could
come
and
make
maps
and
data
and
the
way
that
this
project
worked
is
called
the
Pittsburgh,
neighbor
and
community
information
system
is
organizations
that
wanted
to
share
data.
It
would
be
an
email
or
a
conversation,
an
informal
agreement
that
we
would
have
that
I
wouldn't
share
it
with
anybody
that
was
gonna
do
anything
too
bad.
E
So
that's
how
we
used
to
share
data
and
it
worked.
Okay,
we
did
a
lot
of
cool
things
with
it
a
lot,
a
lot
of
good
outcomes,
but
it
wasn't
anything
that
we
could
scale
and
I
really
wanted
to
really
do
this
a
lot
differently
and
learn
a
lot
from
what
pip
was
happening
in
a
lot
of
other
cities
and
one
of
the
things
that
we're
going
to
continue
to
do
with
this
project
is
help
people
use
data
and
some
of
the
work
that
we've
done.
E
We've
heard
a
lot
of
good
projects,
but
a
lot
of
the
best
projects
that
we've
done
have
been
with
our
partners
in
homewood
at
operation
better
block.
This
is
just
an
example,
the
kind
of
stuff
that
we
do.
This
is
a
map
of
property
vacancy
in
the
neighborhood,
not
only
vacant
structures,
but
vacant
lots
and
they're.
Using
this
data
with
with
support
from
us
and
our
colleague
Liz
monk,
here,
as
well
as
working
on
that
now
to
really
do
a
block-by-block
strategy
for
do
we
demolish
a
property?
Do
we
preserve
a
property?
E
Do
we
aggregate
a
lot
of
vacant,
lots
together
and
do
something
different
with
it?
So
having
data
is
really
kind
of
fundamental
to
doing
a
very
targeted
strategy
like
this
and
really
glad
that
we're
gonna
have
more
of
it
to
work
with
so
we're
now
moving
into
the
world
of
open
data
right.
Anybody
really
know
what
open
data
is
other
than
hearing
about
it.
It's
kind
of
a
buzz
word
anymore,
see
a
few
hands
will
be
a
quiz
later,
but
I'm
really
kind
of
glad.
E
You
asked,
even
though
you
didn't
really
ask
me,
but
it's
really
nothing
more
than
a
complete
set
of
primary
data
made
easily
and
permanently
available.
You
don't
have
to
go
to
a
website
and
download
a
thousand
records
at
a
time
like
you
used
to
have
to
on
our
site.
It's
everything
you
push
a
button.
You've
got
500,000
property
records
right
at
your
fingertips,
and,
and
so
that's
what
open
data
is.
It
also
does
not
contain
sensitive
personally
identifiable
information.
E
You
know
it
might
have
campaign
finance
records
and
things
like
that,
but
it's
not
going
to
have
medical
records
or
educational
records
with
people's
names
and
addresses
attached
to
it.
That's
not
what
we're
about
there
are
some
really
great
projects.
You're,
like
the
County
Department
of
Human
Services,
has
with
their
data
warehouse
that
has
the
capacity
to
do
those
kind
of
things
within
the
right,
secure
environment,
and
we
are
not
that
make
that
clear.
E
We
also
don't
place
any
unreasonable
restrictions
or
barriers
on
accessibility
sharing
and
reused
and
I'm
not
going
to
read
too
many
slides
back
to
you.
So
don't
worry,
but
you
know
we
don't
want
to
have
to
have
you
register
for
open
data
and
sign
a
form
and
send
it
back
or
say
that
you're
not
going
to
do
anything
bad
with
it.
That's
not
what
open
data
is,
and
then
the
final
piece
of
this
is
that
it's
provided
through
electronic
machine,
readable
non-proprietary
file
formats.
So
it's
all
computer
data
is
not
PDFs.
E
It's
not
Excel
spreadsheets
at
CSPs
the
format's
not
going
to
change,
because
some
company
wants
to
change
it.
So
that's
nice,
so
the
project
structure
this-
and
this
is
my-
but
the
best
I-
can
do
on
PowerPoint
I'm,
not
very
good,
but
you
can
see
at
the
center
of
this
and
really
what
we're
going
to
launch
today
is
more
than
just
an
open
data
portal.
E
But
it's
going
to
be
the
most
visible
piece
of
what
we
do
on
the
left
side,
we're
equipped
to
go
at
scale,
we're
going
to
have
multiple
governments
beyond
the
city
and
county,
hopefully,
sharing
data
with
us,
academic
institutions
beyond
the
university
of
pittsburgh
and
then
a
lot
of
nonprofit
organizations
that
want
to
make
data
publicly
available
will
help
them
with
a
lot
of
services
and
technical
assistance
with
our
friends
at
the
library
that
dr.
Humphrey
talked
about
at
the
digital
scholarship
service
per
set,
I.
E
Think
of
what
their
name
is
they're,
not
like
a
center
anything,
it's
very
confusing
digital
scholarship
services.
I
want
to
call
them
a
group
with
whatever.
So
we
want
to
take
data
from
all
these
organizations,
help
them
provide
it
to
us
in
the
right
way,
automate
the
process
of
publishing
it
put
it
into
this
open
data
portal
that
show
talk
to
you
more
about
and
then
allow
people
to
use
it
for
whatever
they
want
to
use
it.
For
we
don't
know
what
the
highest
and
best
purpose
of
data
is
going
to
be.
E
So
that's
why
it's
taken
so
long.
A
lot
of
details.
We
got
to
get
right,
but
based
on
a
lot
of
the
work
that
we've
done
over
the
past
10
years
with
the
Pittsburgh
neighborhood
and
community
information
system,
any
users
here
all
right.
We
got
a
few
good,
just
some
observations
that
really
guided
us
in
this
project.
The
first
is
that
demand
for
data
is
growing
most
people.
E
They
either
want
the
raw
data,
or
they
just
want
a
number
they
can
put
into
a
foundation
proposal
or
something
they
can
take
the
community
meetings
so
the
way
that
our
products
that
ucks
our
work
kind
of
put
them
into
three
buckets.
If
you
want
the
raw
data,
that's
what
we're
here
for
today,
the
western
Pennsylvania
regional
data
center.
That's
your
first
peek
at
the
open
data
portal,
the
second
piece
that
I
worked
on
for
a
little
while
southwestern
Pennsylvania
community
profiles.
This
is
a
great
place
to
go
and
get
neighborhood
statistics.
E
You
don't
need
to
be
an
expert
at
working
with
raw
data
to
use
this
stuff
lots
of
data
on
there
over
a
hundred
indicators,
great
stuff.
This
does
a
great
job
with
it.
So
do
trainings.
If
you
want
to
have
the
training
done
to
so
Liz
wave
there
she
is,
and
the
third
piece
is
Pittsburgh
today,
the
regional
indicators
project.
So
if
you
want
to
see
how
this
region
compares
to
others,
those
are
our
friends
at
Pittsburgh
today,
just
down
the
hall
observation,
two
people
want
to
use
their
own
tools
to
explore
data.
E
E
We
want
to
enable
people
to
use
what
they
want
to
use,
and
so,
when
you
get
into
the
site,
you're
gonna
see
a
lot
of
data,
but
as
we
do
trainings
and
talk
to
people
how
to
use
it
will
show
you
easy
ways
so
that
you
could
pull
this
data
into
whatever
visualization
tools.
You
want
to
pull
it
into
and
we're
excited
that
Carnegie
Library
is
also
very,
very
interested
in
being
a
partner
with
us
as
well.
E
You
know
just
think
about
trying
to
work
on
regional
scale,
issues
like
vacant
and
blighted
property
solutions
for
that
might
be
land
banking.
But
if
you're
trying
to
talk
about
data
across
all
these
different
communities,
it's
really
tough.
If
you
don't
have
the
right
infrastructure
and
even
then
it's
gonna
be
really
hard.
So
you
start
with
the
infrastructure.
Then
you
build
the
standards
and
you
start
talking
about
data
in
the
same
way,
so
you
can
see
that
doing
it.
E
Just
one
city
at
a
time
or
just
for
the
city
isn't
gonna
work
for
a
lot
of
the
issues
that
we
have,
and
so
one
of
the
ways
that
new
organizations
can
plug
into
this
initiative
is
just
to
fill
out
this
two-page
agreement.
That's
on
our
website.
We're
gonna,
do
a
new
data
provider
information
session
in
December,
so
we're
excited
over
the
next
few
months
to
really
get
get
up
and
running
for
for
more
on
their
data
and
more
and
more
data
providers.
E
But
all
you
have
to
do
is
claim
you
on
the
data,
provide
us
with
a
default,
license
and
sign
a
thing
and
commit
to
keeping
private
information.
Private
and
publishing
everything
else
that
can
be
for
public
consumption
that
you
want
to
put
out
there
observation
for
a
hell
of
two
fingers
actually
for
most
data
owners
aren't
very
good
at
publishing.
Anybody
tried
to
get
data
out
of
the
city-county.
Any
other
governmental
agency
show
hands.
E
How
was
it
would
you
rate
it
on
a
scale
of
like
1
to
10,
10
being
best,
probably
somewhere
in,
like
the
low
single
digits
right,
so
we're
trying
to
step
into
the
gap
to
really
help
governments
become
better
publishers
with
our
friends
at
the
library?
So
it's
not
just
how
to
load
data.
The
website,
that's
gonna,
be
part
of
it.
It's
writing
metadata.
How
do
you
make
a
record
of
your
data
so
that
other
people
and
find
and
use
it?
How
do
you
protect
sensitive
information?
E
We
don't
want
to
see
any
breaches
of
privacy,
so
we
take
this
very
seriously.
We
can
help
organizations
prioritize
data
releases
like
we've
done
with
the
city
in
the
county,
and
we
can
also
talk
about
adopting
data
standards
that
allow
you
to
do
sharing
data
across
jurisdictions.
Even
though
it's
not
the
same
data
set
or
you
might
have
separate
systems
in
the
IT
department,
we're
also
I
mentioned
before
metadata
is
going
to
be
there
for
all
data.
It's
part
of
what
we
require.
E
E
We
hope
that
it's
it's
gonna
allow
for
the
most
reuse
to
have
a
license
with
the
data.
One
of
the
things
that
has
come
up
is,
if
you
know
data
is
not
licensed.
Does
that
mean
you
can
really
use
it
for
anything?
That
was
one
of
the
questions
we
had
in
the
past.
Where
was
all
handshake
agreements?
We
don't
know,
are
we
gonna
get
somebody
in
trouble,
we
don't
know,
but
with
licenses,
it's
a
lot
easier
to
manage,
and
so
data
is
like
bread.
E
It
gets
stale
over
time,
that's
number
five,
and
so
what
we're
really
trying
to
do
with
our
partners,
the
city
and
county
to
start,
is
to
automate
the
publishing
of
key
data
through
a
term
called
ETL
extract,
transform
load
it.
It's
really
all
about
getting
data
out
of
one
system,
improving
the
quality
and
putting
it
into
something
else,
and
in
our
case
it's
the
open
data
portal,
and
so,
if
you
think
of
it,
this
analogy
I've
used
before
raw
government
data
unrefined
is
like
that
little
ball
of
green
play-doh.
E
So,
if
you
think
of
it,
we
want
to
put
some
form
into
that
data.
So
we
want
to
build
a
tool
like
here.
The
play-doh
extruder
is
that
so
that
we
can
actually
put
some
form
and
structure
to
this
data
so
that
it's
a
lot
easier
to
use
like
it.
You
know
you
want
to
build
a
snake,
it's
already
there.
You
can
just
like
roll
it,
please,
okay,
so
that
ETL
process
is
something
that
we're
actually
putting
a
lot
of
resources
into.
E
So
people
also
don't
talk
to
each
other
about
how
they're
using
data
or
how
they
want
to
use
it,
and
so
we're
gonna
formdata
user
groups.
We're
gonna
get
some
on
the
calendar
pretty
soon,
where
it's
just
this
using
data
as
a
basis
for
shared
conversation,
a
series
of
rotating
topics
open
to
everyone.
So
we've
talked
to
a
lot
of
our
government
partners
already
about,
and
let's
have
a
geospatial
data
user
group.
Let's
have
the
county
GIS
staff
in
the
city
GIS
out
there
to
just
answer.
Questions
about
the
data.
E
E
We
also
want
to
turn
What's
in
people's
brains
into
a
user
guide,
because
there's
so
much
knowledge
that
is
untapped
in
people's
heads
about
how
they've
used
data,
whether
they're
in
government
people
like
me
that
have
worked
with
it
for
ten
years.
If
somebody
in
the
neighborhood,
that's
just
tried
to
use
it
for
the
first
time
having
this
community
process
to
document,
this
data
is
going
to
be
really
important.
E
We
also
have
built-in
feedback
mechanisms
into
the
data
portal,
so
this
isn't
a
formal
request
for
data,
but
it
is
saying
that
you
know:
hey
I,
have
a
question
about
this
data
set.
Can
you
answer
for
me
or
I,
really
love
this
data
set
and
I?
Think
Joanne
the
county
knows
what
theta
said.
This
is
right.
I
have
my
favorite
dog,
my
dog
licenses,
yeah.
E
So
that
I
could
actually
put
that
on
a
comment
this
morning
and
we
also
have
a
process
to
informally
request
data.
This
is
not
a
right
to
know
request,
it's
not
a
formal
request,
but
it's
something
that
we
can
put
onto
our
partners.
Agendas
and
say:
hey
we'd
love
to
have
this
data.
Can
you
make
it
available
and
there
is?
E
E
And
then,
which
information
infrastructure
is
really
just
an
afterthought
in
a
lot
of
ways,
you
think
about
information
for
that
one
particular
project
that
you're
doing,
but
you
don't
think
about
it
as
part
of
a
bigger
system
as
part
of
serving
other
people's
needs,
and
so
we're
thinking
about
that
and
the
biggest
part
of
infrastructure.
You
know:
Matt
Burton
at
the
library's
been
just
a
huge
help
to
us
and
he
calls
infrastructure
is
all
about
people
and
the
people
that
we
have
on
this
team.
E
We
actually
made
everybody
get
dressed
up
in
these
costumes,
so
Joanne
was
there.
What's
one
were
you
Joanne
I
was
always
brownie
the
burger
nevermind,
but
it's
all
about
people,
and
you
can
see
the
team
that
we
have
here.
It's
not
just
the
University
of
Pittsburgh
and
the
staff
a
duck,
sir.
It's
our
partners
at
the
county
is
our
partners
at
the
city,
increasingly,
so
our
partners
at
Carnegie
Mellon.
So
this
is
a
partnership.
It's
all
about
people
and
people
built
the
infrastructure,
but
another
part
of
the
infrastructure
had
already
built
the
legal
infrastructure.
E
So
I
talked
about
the
data
deposit
agreement
that
to
page
thing
we
also
have
a
partnership
agreement
that
binds
the
three
parties
together
on
this
project
and
then
the
terms
of
you.
So
when
you
go
into
the
data
website,
don't
be
scared,
you'll
see
the
Terms
of
Use.
It's
just
part
of
the
whole
process
of
making
sure
that
the
legal
framework
is
in
place
to
just
click
through
it
like
a
license
to
you
know,
download
the
latest
version
of
itunes
or
something
like
that.
So
it's
there
for
you,
so
don't
be
scared.
E
It's
okay,
you'll
get
the
data,
and
so
the
last
piece
of
our
infrastructure
is
the
actual
open
data
portal
itself.
We
went
through
a
really
robust
selection
process
early
in
the
year.
We
wound
up
choosing
an
open
source
version.
C-Can
that's
hosted
on
our
University
servers
and
the
neat
thing
about
that
is,
you
know,
hey
we're
part
of
a
big
development
community,
but
we
can
also
just
point
to
data
wherever
it
is.
So
you
know
if
there's
a
website
that
has
data
like
the
Port
Authority
has
the
data
for
the
real-time
transit
feeds.
E
E
I'll
show
you
that
in
a
second
you
can
download
the
data
and,
if
you're
a
programmer-
or
you
want
to
use
it
through
tools
like
cardo
of
cardio,
TV
or
tableau,
something
called
an
API
which
is
really
just
the
language
that
computers
use
to
talk
to
each
other
over
the
internet,
and
so
this
is
what
you're
gonna
see
on
the
front
page
and
I've
been
told
not
to
do
a
live
demo
because
of
wireless
in
the
in
the
off
in
the
room
here.
So
this
is
the
vest
you
gets
to
pretend
like
I'm
typing.
E
This
is
this:
is
the
home
page
is
live?
Now
you
can
look
at
the
different
organizations.
We
hope
to
have
a
big
huge
list
of
these
over
time.
Right
now,
county
city
and
university.
We've
actually
put
a
lot
of
our
one
of
our
reports
up
here.
We're
gonna
do
more
of
that.
I'm
threw
up,
sir,
so
you
can
search
by
organization,
and
so
here
in
this
case,
I'm
typing,
the
word
property
I
type,
it
so
fast.
E
You
don't
see
the
cursor
but
I
typed
it
and
then
I
hit
Search
and
I
wound
up
with
14
data
sets
and
so
I
scroll
through
the
list.
I
found
the
Allegheny
County
property
assessments,
my
second
most
favorite
dataset
after
dog
licenses.
It's
really
a
valuable
data
set
and
then
I
have
all
the
all
the
resources
there.
I
have
the
data
dictionary
which
I
have
to
go.
You
know
and
call
somebody
for
in
the
past
or
people
call
me
for
it.
It's
right
there
for
you.
E
What
all
the
fields
mean,
what
the
values
are
in
there.
So
it's
really
great
to
be
able
to
put
all
this
stuff
out
there
for
people,
and
so
there's
your
data
right.
You
can
sort
not
you
know
it's
not
all
that
glamorous
there.
But
if
you
hit
the
go-to
resource,
you
can
actually
download
the
whole
thing
and
have
it
there
as
a
CSV
depending
on
your
internet
speed,
it
could
be
less
than
a
minute
and
then
the
data
API
link
this
there
as
well.
E
If
you
want
to
build
something
out
of
that
data,
you
can
you
can
build
it,
you
can
make
it
all
happen
and
it's
going
to
be
great
stuff
and
then
the
final
piece
that
we're
really
featuring
through
the
website
is
a
showcase.
So,
as
tools
get
built
in
the
community,
we
talked
about
4012
food
rescue,
lots
of
different,
find
your
bus
applications
and
all
kind
of
things.
E
So
all
this
stuff's
on
there.
So
if
you
build
tools,
if
you
build
some
cool
stuff
or
if
you
see
something,
let
us
know
about
it,
we're
gonna
get
yours
on
there,
Andrew
and
hence
so
really.
My
final
observation
is
that
the
role
of
the
information
intermediary,
the
organization
that
helps
people
finding
these
data
is
just
more
important
than
ever.
There's
so
much
data
people
need
help
and
shameless
way
to
put
the
Ducks
light
up
there
again
and
then
we
are
live.
So
that's
our
website,
twitter,
handle
and
our
project
email.
So
thank
you.
I.
B
Think
this
is
really
an
example
of
the
progressive
nature
of
how
this
region's
be
coming,
and
we
again
are
so
fortunate
to
have
the
University
of
Pittsburgh
and
dr.
Gallagher
and
at
CMU
dr.
Suresh.
You
know
to
folks
who
are
really
understand
technology
understand
the
great
role
technology
can
have
from
the
backgrounds
that
they
had
previously
and
coming
here,
and-
and
this
is
the
reason
why
so
many
companies
Boeing
kennametal
uber-
you
go
on
and
on
that
want
to
be
here
and
why
the
talent
wants
to
be
in
Pittsburgh.
B
This
is
just
one
more
reason
why
you
know
we're
such
a
desirable
place
to
be.
We
want
to
continue
to
build
on
that
with
with
really
all
the
partnerships
that
we
have
in
this
room
and
throughout
the
community.
So
this
is
an
exciting
day.
I
think
you're
you're
here
at
a
time
a
transfer
murder
the
transformative
time
in
this
region
to
launch
this
and
again,
our
partners
have
been
been
terrific
to
work
with
Mayor
t1i
had
anything.
C
Yeah
I
can't
figure
out
the
technology
that
microphone
I'm
just
wanted
to
turn
the
button
office.
I
got
about
20
different
messages
sent
to
me.
No,
it's
a
partnership.
That's
I'm
going
to
use
that
word
over
and
over
again.
That's
what
makes
this
different
than
any
other
cities
open
data
portal.
Every
other
city
just
is
taking
its
data
and
basically
made
it
available
to
people
and
sit
here.
Do
with
it.
What
you
want?
C
B
A
Think
one
of
the
best
ways
to
get
this
message
out
is
that
every
person
in
this
room
tries
to
use
the
system,
because,
if
you
use
the
system,
you'll
tell
other
people
about
the
system
and
that's
going
to
give
us
much
more
mileage
than
any
article.
Any
tweet,
because
those
are
easily
and
soon
forgotten.
But
your
good
experience
with
using
the
data
and
that's
allowing
us
to
help
you
manipulate
and
form
the
data
into
the
information
that
you
need
is
really
what's
going
to
be.
B
Well,
thank
you
thank
you
for
being
here
and
those
of
you
who
want
to
go
to
what's
it
called
hack
night
I
had.