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The mission of the State Information Technology Services Division is to provide standardized, strategic, secure, and state-of-the art information technology to advance the efficiency and delivery of government services to citizens.

Why Your Government Needs to Be a Hipster Organization

The millennials who will replace today’s government workers are looking for a very different workplace culture.

Bozeman looks to future with proposed budget

One significant change this year – an increase in property taxes for both residents and businesses.

Analysis Tool Helps Longmont, Colo., Rate Large-Scale Projects

The new system would ensure that a project done by the city’s Public Works and Natural Resources department is taking the effects on the environment, the economy and the community into consideration.

Edmonton: City of Open Data Champions

A common theme running through Edmonton’s activities is constant striving to integrate as broad an array of individuals into the community’s civic life as possible.

What it would really take to run the government like a business

Want to improve the country’s bottom line tomorrow? Invest in the human capital of toddlers today.

Senators press new postmaster general on troubled rural mail service

"You mail a letter in Helena," said Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.), who attended Tuesday’s meeting, "and it really has to go 90 miles out of the way to get to a destination a few blocks away. It gets to be a death spiral."

How Strategic Sourcing Can Save a Bundle

It’s a way to do procurement with proven benefits, and it’s catching on at all levels of government. But some myths need to be dispelled.

Texas.gov Relaunches as a One-Page Website

Thoreau said our lives are frittered away by detail, and someone in Texas was listening.

Decision-Making Software Shapes Government Budgets Transparently

Decision Lens puts an organization’s priorities into a transparent and interactive framework, so everyone can see why projects were ranked the way they were, and then they can proceed accordingly.

Billings, Montana considers spending from reserves to fund capital improvements – Other cities need to catch up

Montana’s aging infrastructure is approaching a critical state of disrepair.