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The technology that runs Congress lags so far behind the modern world that its flag-tracking system just caught up to 2017-era Pizza Hut

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Written by: Lorelei Kelly, Georgetown University
Published: 27 January 2025

 

Tracking one of these items to your door has been possible since 2017 – tracking the other is all new. FTiare/iStock / Getty Images Plus

On a typical day, you can’t turn on the news without hearing someone say that Congress is broken. The implication is that this dereliction explains why the institution is inert and unresponsive to the American people.

There’s one element often missing from that discussion: Congress is confounding in large part because its members can’t hear the American people, or even each other. I mean that literally. Congressional staff serve in thousands of district offices across the nation, and their communications technology doesn’t match that of most businesses and even many homes.

Members’ district offices only got connected to secure Wi-Fi internet service in 2023. Discussions among members and congressional staff were at times cut short at 40 minutes because some government workers were relying on the free version of Zoom, according to congressional testimony in March 2024.

Congressional testimony discusses meetings being cut off at 40 minutes.

The information systems Congress uses have existed largely unchanged for decades, while the world has experienced an information revolution, integrating smartphones and the internet into people’s daily personal and professional lives. The technologies that have transformed modern life and political campaigning are not yet available to improve the ability of members of Congress to govern once they win office.

Slow to adapt

Like many institutions, Congress resists change; only the COVID-19 pandemic pushed it to allow online hearings and bill introductions. Before 2020, whiteboards, sticky notes and interns with clipboards dominated the halls of Congress.

Electronic signatures arrived on Capitol Hill in 2021 – more than two decades after Congress passed the ESIGN Act to allow electronic signatures and records in commerce.

The nation spends about US$10 million a year on technology innovation in the House of Representatives – the institution that declares war and pays all the federal government’s bills. That’s just 1% of the amount theater fans have spent to see ‶Hamilton“ on Broadway since 2015.

It seems the story of American democracy is attractive to the public, but investing in making it work is less so for Congress itself.

The chief administrative office in Congress, a nonlegislative staff that helps run the operations of Congress, decides what types of technology can be used by members. These internal rules exist to protect Congress and national security, but that caution can also inhibit new ways to use technology to better serve the public.

Finding a happy medium between innovation and caution can result in a livelier public discourse.

A group of people sit around a desk facing a television monitor, and with cameras facing them.
The pandemic compelled Congress to allow witnesses to testify before committees by videoconference. Stefani Reynolds-Pool/Getty Images

A modernization effort

Congress has been working to modernize itself, including experimenting with new ways to hear local voices in their districts, including gathering constituent feedback in a standardized way that can be easily processed by computers.

The House Natural Resources Committee was also an early adopter of technology for collaborative lawmaking. In 2020, members and committee staff used a platform called Madison to collaboratively write and edit proposed environmental justice legislation with communities across the country that had been affected by pollution.

House leaders are also looking at what is called deliberative technology, which uses specially designed websites to facilitate digital participation by pairing collective human intelligence with artificial intelligence. People post their ideas online and respond to others’ posts. Then the systems can screen and summarize posts so users better understand each other’s perspectives.

These systems can even handle massive group discussions involving large numbers of people who hold a wide range of positions on a vast set of issues and interests. In general, these technologies make it easier for people to find consensus and have their voices heard by policymakers in ways the policymakers can understand and respond to.

Governments in Finland, the U.K., Canada and Brazil are already piloting deliberative technologies. In Finland, roughly one-third of young people between 12 and 17 participate in setting budget priorities for the city of Helsinki.

In May 2024, 45 U.S.-based nonprofit organizations signed a letter to Congress asking that deliberative technology platforms be included in the approved tools for civic engagement.

In the meantime, Congress is looking at ways to use artificial intelligence as part of a more integrated digital strategy based on lessons from other democratic legislatures.

A panel discussion of various ideas for modernizing how Congress hears from the American people.

Finding benefits

Modernization efforts have opened connections within Congress and with the public. For example, hearings held by video conference during the pandemic enabled witnesses to share expertise with Congress from a distance and open up a process that is notoriously unrepresentative. I was home in rural New Mexico during the pandemic and know three people who remotely testified on tribal education, methane pollution and environmental harms from abandoned oil wells.

New House Rules passed on Jan. 3, 2025, encourage the use of artificial intelligence in day-to-day operations and allow for remote witness testimony.

Other efforts that are new to Congress but long established in business and personal settings include the ability to track changes in legislation and a scheduling feature that reduces overlaps in meetings. Members are regularly scheduled to be two places at once.

Another effort in development is an internal digital staff directory that replaces expensive directories compiled by private companies assembling contact information for congressional staff.

The road ahead

In 2022, what is now called ”member-directed spending“ returned to Congress with some digital improvements. Formerly known as "earmarks,” this is the practice of allowing members of Congress to handpick specific projects in their home districts to receive federal money. Earmarks were abolished in 2011 amid concerns of abuse and opposition by fiscal hardliners. Their 2022 return and rebranding introduced publicly available project lists, ethics rules and a search engine to track the spending as efforts to provide public transparency about earmarks.

Additional reforms could make the federal government even more responsive to the American people.

Some recent improvements are already familiar. Just as customers can follow their pizza delivery from the oven to the doorstep, Congress in late 2024 created a flag-tracking app that has dramatically improved a program that allows constituents to receive a flag that has flown over the U.S. Capitol. Before, different procedures in the House and Senate caused time-consuming snags in this delivery system.

At last, the world’s most powerful legislature caught up with Pizza Hut, which rolled out this technology in 2017 to track customers’ pizzas from the store to the delivery driver to their front door.The Conversation

Lorelei Kelly, Research Lead, Modernizing Congress, McCourt School of Public Policy, Georgetown University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Authorities investigate Friday night stabbing; suspect arrested

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 26 January 2025
KELSEYVILLE, Calif. — The Lake County Sheriff’s Office said it has made one arrest in a Friday night stabbing in Kelseyville.

The agency said Anthony Lee Black, 40, of Kelseyville was taken into custody for the assault.

On Friday at approximately 7:30 p.m., deputies responded to the Kelseyville Fire Protection District’s Station 55 in downtown Kelseyville for a report of a person who walked in for medical treatment due to being stabbed, the sheriff’s office reported.

The sheriff’s office said deputies spoke with the victim, who said they were stabbed at Pioneer Park in Kelseyville following a verbal argument.

The victim was transported to an out-of-county hospital and was last reported to be in stable condition. Authorities have so far not identified the individuals.

After further investigation, the suspect was determined to be Black, the sheriff’s office said.

Black was arrested shortly before 9 p.m. Friday on charges of attempted murder, assault with a deadly weapon and resisting arrest, according to the sheriff’s report.

Black was transported to the Hill Road Correctional Facility, where he was booked. Jail records show he is being held on bail totaling $246,000.

If anyone has any information related to this investigation, please call the Major Crimes Unit Tip Line at 707-262-4088.

Lake County Symphony Association to hold Feb. 2 audition event

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Written by: Lake County Symphony Association
Published: 26 January 2025
KELSEYVILLE, Calif. — The Lake County Symphony Association is holding an audition event for their newly organized Lake County Adult & Youth Concert Orchestra on Sunday, Feb. 2.

It will take place beginning at 4 p.m. in the Friendship Hall at Kelseyville Presbyterian Church, 4021 Church St.

This invitational performance group is for intermediate to advanced musicians of all ages from Lake County and the surrounding areas.

Membership in this elite ensemble is determined through audition and/or by recommendation.

Adult and youth musicians who have demonstrable intermediate to advanced skills on an orchestral instrument are encouraged to audition.

Adult musicians with a music degree or college-level music studies and performance experience may bypass the audition process and are asked to participate in the Feb. 2 audition event to determine placement in the orchestra.

Youth musicians may bypass the audition process if they have a recommendation from a school music teacher or a recognized private music instructor affirming their intermediate to advanced skill level. Instead, recommended youth are asked to participate in the Feb. 2 audition event to determine placement in the orchestra.

By playing in an orchestral setting, participation in this group can serve as an enhancement to a student's musical experience alongside their regular musical activities.

Dedicated youth members of the Concert Orchestra can become eligible for scholarships for future studies of any collegiate subject from both the Lake County Symphony Association and the Allegro Scholarship Program.

The Lake County Adult & Youth Concert Orchestra performs at least four times a year, both opening for the Lake County Symphony during their regular season and in exclusive concerts.

The orchestra's next concert is at 2 p.m. Sunday, March 23, at the Soper Reese Theatre in Lakeport.

Please visit the orchestra's website www.lakecountyayco.org for more information.

Helping Paws: Shiba Inus and shepherds

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 26 January 2025
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Lake County Animal Care and Control is ready to connect the many dogs in its shelter with new homes.

The dogs available for adoption this week include mixes of Australian shepherd, border collie, boxer, Cardigan Welsh Corgi, cattle dog, German shepherd, Great Pyrenees, husky, Labrador Retriever, pit bull terrier, pug, Rhodesian ridgeback, Shiba Inu and terrier.

Dogs that are adopted from Lake County Animal Care and Control are either neutered or spayed, microchipped and, if old enough, given a rabies shot and county license before being released to their new owner. License fees do not apply to residents of the cities of Lakeport or Clearlake.

Those dogs and the others shown on this page at the Lake County Animal Care and Control shelter have been cleared for adoption.

Call Lake County Animal Care and Control at 707-263-0278 or visit the shelter online for information on visiting or adopting.

The shelter is located at 4949 Helbush in Lakeport.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, and on Bluesky, @erlarson.bsky.social. Find Lake County News on the following platforms: Facebook, @LakeCoNews; X, @LakeCoNews; Threads, @lakeconews, and on Bluesky, @lakeconews.bsky.social.


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