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Philadelphia Officials Seek More Civic Engagement Via PCs, LPFM and More

Internet, radio and TV are key tools​ for connecting local communities with their government, said city, anchor institution and public broadcast officials Friday. "Technology helps us narrow the gap between government and its complicated processes, and our residents,” said Philadelphia…

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Chief Data Officer Tim Wisniewski at the Technology Learning Collaborative annual conference there. The city seeks to encourage innovative uses of open data by developers and overhaul the city’s website to better engage local citizens, he said: “Technology on its own just looks really neat. The only way to truly improve civic engagement with government is through empathy.” The city is seeking beta testers for its new website, beta.phila.gov, and plans to test usability at the city’s Keyspot computer labs across the city over the next couple of months, he said. The presidential election makes digital literacy an even more critical issue for Philadelphians, said Free Library of Philadelphia Director Siobhan Reardon. “We have an opportunity in the next three weeks” as the political parties’ presidential nominees try to win Pennsylvania, a key battleground in the election, she said. “It’s a giant opportunity for us to get in front of these candidates to ensure that our agenda around literacy, around information [and] informed citizenry are in front of these people.” Reardon also highlighted the importance of making PCs available to communities, and also accessible. People must be able to get to the computers to use them, so the Free Library launched an effort to increase accessibility at each of its libraries, she said. While not as fresh as the internet, radio and TV remain important channels for community media, said PhillyCAM Executive Director Gretjen Clausing. PhillyCAM is the city’s public access TV provider and licensee of WPPM(LP). Radio and TV aren’t mere “legacy media,” she said. “I see these as incredibly … important and vibrant platforms.” PhillyCAM provides training in TV and radio production to empower people to report and have conversations about their communities, she said. WPPM, dubbed "people powered media," which covers a two-mile radius in Center City and went on the air for the first time Thursday, wouldn’t have been possible without congressional and FCC actions in the past five years on low-power FM radio, Clausing said.