Is there a civic hacker in you?

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There is a civic hacker in you! He or she is in there... I promise! Today, technology has evolved into a perfect storm of open source tools, code, social networks, and lots of data. Civic technologists thrive on all of these getting together with like-minded hackers and turning all these sources into useful applications, websites and visualizations.

The personal aspect

Regardless of your level of technical skill, you can still contribute to the civic tech movement. Are you a policy wonk? We need you to draft open data legislation and executive orders. Maybe you're a graphic designer? We could use some of your UX skill on our hacks. Is your focus on storytelling or social media? We need you to make our outreach successful; to tell the amazing stories happening in the civic technology world. Maybe you fancy yourself a techie... some are GIS people, some are front-end web developers, some are full-on software engineers. We've got data scientists, and DevOps people too, stitching it all together. Whatever your skillset, we've got a niche for you.

I bet you've already got some "there should be an app for that" ideas in your head. Whether it has to do with your job or trash pickup at home, maybe you think your polling place could work better. Do you have ideas about commuter rail or mass transit? Is there a Neighborhood Watch where you live? You already know how you'd make it better with technology.

One of the great things is whatever civic issue you're interested in, it's almost guaranteed that there are people in your community doing something about it. Whether it's scraping data, FOILing information, mapping things, doing analysis, writing apps, or just brainstorming like crazy, the civic tech world is full of journalists, academics, researchers, community groups, activists, students, and planners who touch all sectors of government–transportation, health, housing, public safety, land use, taxation, environmental protection, recreation, quality of life, education.

Civic hackers are engaged with local government and communities to bring efficiency, clarity, and sunlight to these pressing issues, one hack at a time.

The technical aspect

You don't need to be a software engineer or a professional web developer to start hacking. Whatever you want to do, someone out there has done a lot of the work for you and shared their code on GitHub. Whatever you want to make, there is a YouTube tutorial that will show how someone else has done something similar. Someone has asked the same questions you have on StackExchange, and more experienced programmers have answered those questions and provided code snippets. If you want to learn coding, start coding. You won't be a pro overnight, but each success opens new doors for you.

Whatever you do, don't be shy about sharing it. Be a self-promoter. Let the world know that you're scraping the school districts website or created a website that maps what every legislator has voted for and against. Blog about it, tweet it, post it on Facebook. Share your code, your data, and your techniques on GitHub or other platform. Blog about your successes, your challenges, and your setbacks. You'll be surprised who speaks up and offers help. Share your project and you'll be surprised who's been lurking for months thinking they were the only ones who cared about the same thing. Connections will be made, networks will form, and community will grow.

This community is amazing in whichever form it takes. I popped my head to see what it was about and before long, they had me out of my comfort zone–making interactive web apps, programming on a daily basis, and giving an insider's perspective on how government works. It's helped me as a person and helped make me a better employee.

A local event that I participate in every year is CityCampNCit connects civic hackers from all over North Carolina, and, as part of Code for America's Brigade program, we represent North Carolina in a global network of of grass-roots civic tech groups, all contributing stories and lessons. Community, at every level, is our strength.

There's a civic hacker in you... join us today and get involved!

Open Gov
& Open Data

A collection of articles about the latest in open government and open data.

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I'm the senior DBA and Open Data Engineer for Wake County, NC. That means I spend half my time protecting data and making sure only the right people can see it and the other half of my time freeing all the data for everyone to see. It's amazing that I'm not crazier than I am.

2 Comments

Wow!

This is the most informative AND most motivating article I read in a while!

Thanks. That means a lot.

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