McCaffrey President, because Nassau OTB employees have NEVER been provided with a current SENIORITY LIST by TEAMSTERS LOCAL 707 or its predecessor TEAMSTERS LOCAL 858
which also represented the dearly departed bankrupt workers of NEW YORK CITY OTB which went to heaven in a Chapter 9 Bankruptcy filing.
Small Business
Open Data a Boon for Entrepreneurs
Government Data Creating Business Opportunities for Tech-Savvy Entrepreneurs
Jan. 8, 2014 5:22 p.m. ET
Matt Ehrlichman, a Seattle entrepreneur who
developed Porch.com, used publicly available government data to create
his business. Seattle has put more than 200 data sets online.
Mike Kane for The Wall Street Journal
More cities are putting information
on everything from street-cleaning schedules to police-response times
and restaurant inspection reports in the public domain, in the hope that
people will find a way to make money off the data.
Supporters
of such programs often see them as a local economic stimulus plan,
allowing software developers and entrepreneurs in cities ranging from
San Francisco to South Bend, Ind., to New York, to build new businesses
based on the information they get from government websites.
When
Los Angeles Mayor
Eric Garcetti
issued an executive directive last month to launch the city's
open-data program, he cited entrepreneurs and businesses as important
beneficiaries. Open-data promotes innovation and "gives companies,
individuals, and nonprofit organizations the opportunity to leverage one
of government's greatest assets: public information," according to the
Dec. 18 directive.
A poster child for
the movement might be 34-year-old
Matt Ehrlichman
of Seattle, who last year built an online business in part using
Seattle work permits, professional licenses and other home-construction
information gathered up by the city's Department of Planning and
Development.
While his website is free,
his business, called Porch.com, has more than 80 employees and charges a
$35 monthly fee to industry professionals who want to boost the
visibility of their projects on the site.
The
site gathers raw public data—such as addresses for homes under
renovation, what they are doing, who is doing the work and how much they
are charging—and combines it with photos and other information from
industry professionals and homeowners. It then creates a searchable
database for users to compare ideas and costs for projects near their
own neighborhood.
Mr. Ehrlichman raised
$6.25 million from angel investors in October 2012, and expects to hire
nearly 80 more workers by the end of 2014, as he continues to expand
the online service nationally.
The
origins of city open-data programs can be traced back to a December 2009
Obama administration directive to federal agencies to post more public
information online. Since then, some 175 federal agencies—including the
Defense and Justice departments—have posted more than 88,000 data sets
on data.gov, the federal government's open-data site. And more than 43
cities have followed suit.
Some city
agencies remain reluctant to turn over data, concerned about competition
from the private sector, among other issues, says
Bruce Blood,
the city of Seattle's Web team manager, who oversees its
open-data website. "It's really a cultural change for these agencies, so
you have to do some arm-twisting," he says.
Since
2010, the city has put more than 200 data sets online, including crime
rates, 911 calls and the precise locations of bicycle racks. Mr. Blood
says he hopes to post at least 75 more data sets on Seattle's website
this year.
Natalia Carrizosa,
a legislative analyst at Montgomery County's Office of
Legislative Oversight in Maryland, says another issue is the lack of
standards for storing digital records, which can make it difficult for
smaller tech firms to expand from city to city.
Ian Kalin,
director of open-data services at Socrata, a Seattle-based
software firm that makes the back-end applications for many of these
government open-data sites, says he's worked with hundreds of companies
that were formed around open data.
Among
them is Climate Corp., a San Francisco-based firm that collects weather
and yield-forecasting data to help farmers decide when and where to
plant crops. Launched in 2006, the firm was acquired in October by
Monsanto Co.
MON -2.90%
, the seed-company giant, for $930 million.
Overall,
the rate of new business formation declined nationally between 2006 and
2010. But according to the latest data from the Ewing Marion Kauffman
Foundation, an entrepreneurship advocacy group in Kansas City, Mo., the
rate of new business formation in Seattle in 2011 rose 9.41% in 2011,
compared with the national average of 3.9%.
Other
cities where new business formation was ahead of the national average
include Chicago, Austin, Texas, Baltimore, and South Bend, Ind.—all
cities that also have open-data programs. Still, how effective the
ventures are in creating jobs is difficult to gauge.
One wrinkle: privacy concerns about the potential for information—such as property tax and foreclosure data—to be misused.
Some
privacy advocates fear that government data that include names,
addresses and other sensitive information could be used by fraudsters to
target victims.
Jerry Paffendorf,
chief executive of Detroit-based Loveland Technologies, says
concerns about privacy and fraud dog his online service, Why Don't We
Own This?, or WDWOT?, a website that tracks the city's home foreclosure
auctions, among other data.
The firm,
which has six employees, uses government data to create and sell custom
applications for clients, ranging from nonprofit groups to land banks
and real-estate developers, charging upward of $10,000 a year. It is
currently working on a contract with the Michigan housing authority to
track property data for 380,000 Detroit residences.
A
free site, WDWOT? makes some of these data sets available to the
public, including the locations of distressed properties and it charges a
$25 annual fee for membership for those seeking custom tools. But last
year a local housing group complained that the data could be used by
scammers to target vulnerable homeowners seeking emergency cash.
Mr.
Paffendorf says there is no indication that the data is being misused,
but he adds: "I get their concern. You don't know how people are going
to use any information."
Write to Angus Loten at angus.loten@wsj.com
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