David Fletcher's Government and Technology Weblog : news & perspectives from a long-time egov advocate
Updated: 10/1/2003; 7:14:46 AM.

 



















 
 

Monday, September 15, 2003


The next InfraGard (of the Wasatch) meeting will be on 9/17/03 at 12 pm.  The meeting will be held at the Parks Department, 2nd Floor, 1965 West 500 South, Salt Lake City, UT instead of at the usual location at the City & County Building. If you will be attending the meeting and have not yet rsvp'd, please e-mail Cheney to let him know that you will be attending.

The speaker will be Brian Grayek, Technology Strategist to the Office of the CTO, Computer Associates.  Brian has over 20 years experience in security and is highly regarding for his security expertise in the industry.  The topic of his presentation will be Total Security Management.


5:36:20 PM    comment []

Rory Perry comments on how separation of powers should extend to egovernment.  I think Utah's websites (executive, legislative, and judicial), although the main portal certainly provides easy access to all branches of government, included local jurisdictions within the state.  At the same time, however, I can't claim that we weren't interested in having all branches use the same utah.gov header.  It didn't happen - our legislative and judicial branches are strongly independent.


3:10:38 PM    comment []

Utah plunged to #17 in this year's Brown study on egovernment.  The researchers heaped criticism on states for developing websites that are inaccessible in terms of average readability.  According to the survey, Utah's websites are geared toward a grade level of 11.7 (higher than any other state in the country).  Rhode Island did the best in this category - its websites are geared toward a 10.1 grade level.  Brown thinks that sites should be geared toward something closer to an eighth grade reading level.  I think that this whole section of the survey is somewhat invalid unless statistics are considered that account for the literacy level of the target population.  For example, according to the latest census, 91% of Utahns over 25 completed high school compared to 80.1% of the Rhode Island population.  The survey should consider the gap between average literacy of the target population and what is actually on the website rather than a straight across comparison in order to be more valid as a criteria.  Utah also ranked very low for the number of websites transated into other languages.  I agree with this criteria, but unfortunately, a group called US English helped pass an initiative here a couple of years ago that really restricts what we can do with translation.

Brown's Top Twenty States (last year's scores in parentheses):

Rank

State

Rating Out of 100 Pts

Rank

State

Rating Out of 100

1.(24)

Massachusetts

46.3(45.6)

2.(6)

Texas

43(52.8)

3.(12)

Indiana

42.4(51.5)

4.(1)

Tennessee

41.4(56)

5.(3)

California

41.1(54.8)

6.(19)

Michigan

40.6(48.2)

7.(5)

Pennsylvania

40.5(52.9)

8.(11)

New York

40.5(51.6)

9.(13)

Florida

40.3(51.5)

10.(44)

Kentucky

40(42)

11.(16)

Illinois

39.7(49.3)

12.(22)

Missouri

39.7(46.3)

13.(2)

New Jersey

39.6(55)

14.(9)

S. Dakota

39.5(51.9)

15.(32)

Arizona

39.1(44.2)

16.(7)

Washington

38.6(52.4)

17.(10)

Utah

38.1(51.7)

18.(27)

Maryland

38.1(44.9)

19.(15)

Virginia

38.1(49.6)

20.(17)

N. Carolina

38(48.6)

Regarding Massachussetts, the survey said:

Most of the sites that linked to the portal (agencies, elected officials, etc.) carried the same banner heading that provided links to the 48 online services offered, a listing of agency sites, a search option, and a link to the portal. With this heading, the user could visit any site under the Massachusetts portal and still have immediate access to all online services.

Based on that, MA received a score of 25.4 online services per website.  Utah has a similar header on almost all of its websites which points to online services (a lot more than 25), but somehow received a score of only 0.7 for this category.  Something is seriously wrong with the evaluation in this area.


10:19:58 AM    comment []

Iran's attempts to filter hundreds of sites from its users.  It won't work.  The Iranian blogger community is huge and with the U.S. government teaming with companies like Anonymizer to provide ways to bypass the censors, it will continue to grow and provide a venue for supporters of a more open Iran.  For example, Hossein Derakhshan has over 2,000 Bloglet subscribers to his English language Iran blog.
9:42:10 AM    comment []

© Copyright 2003 David Fletcher.



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