KCK opens up data portal for transparency, ‘public good’
December 1, 2016 | Bobby Burch
In an effort to increase transparency and improve services, the City of Kansas City, Kan. is offering access to large swaths of public data via a portal that makes the information more digestible.
Thanks to a new open data administrative order, KCK launched its new data portal Thursday for residents to see such information as property records, code infractions, expenditures, streets, recreation and more. City officials hope that the web-based interface will encourage residents, techies, nonprofits and businesses to further the public good.
The open data administrative order and portal emerged from the city’s work with Bloomberg Philanthropies’ What Works Cities initiative, which in part spurs the development of better open data practices. The effort also helped KCK to produce policies and processes to inventory, prioritize, release and maintain data publicly.
KCK Mayor Mark Holland said that he hopes the portal will help address a widespread abandoned property issue in the community.
“The housing and blight data now available in the portal will help us work with neighborhood and non-profit groups to create smarter, stronger solutions to address blighted properties,” Holland said in a release. “We can use better data to improve the health and vitality of our community.”
KCK’s new chief knowledge officer, Alan Howze, has been tasked with leading an open data committee that will develop data standards, identify new data sets to be released and provide an annual update on open data to the unified city-and-county commission.
Howze was appointed to his role with KCK in August to oversee the government’s IT department, the 311 service center and mapping group. He’s also working closely with Kansas City, Missouri’s chief innovation officer, Bob Bennett, to learn best practices and to identify potential collaboration opportunities between the two cities.
Check out the new KCK data portal by clicking here.
Featured Business

2016 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
GigaPower coming to northeastern Johnson County
AT&T announced this week that the company is expanding availability of U-Verse with GigaPower, its latest high-speed internet service aiming to compete against Google Fiber. The service is coming to Fairway, Mission Hills and Prairie Village, the company announced Monday. GigaPower appeared in the Kansas City metro area in February in parts of Kansas City,…
KC startup lands six PGA partnerships, more on the way
Jason Gregory is feeling pretty confident his company will be the exclusive partner for at least half of the PGA American independent sections by next year. CaddyX is a golf bag transportation company that takes the leg work out of golfer’s experience by letting them schedule pick up for their clubs with the click of…
Sprint Accelerator opens applications, dons new name
Kansas City’s top business accelerator is now accepting applications for a wider applicant pool after a recent — albeit minimal — name change. The Sprint Mobile Accelerator — formerly the Sprint Mobile Health Accelerator — lightened up its name to better reflect its broader focus on boosting mobile-centric startups. Led by Boulder-based Techstars, the accelerator…
KU lecture series brings Apple co-founder
A Jayhawk fan is coming back to Lawrence for this year’s Anderson Chandler business lecture. Oh, and the fan just happens to be one of Apple Computer Inc.’s co-founders. Steve Wozniak, who founded Apple alongside Steve Jobs, will be speaking at University of Kansas for their 2015 Global Entrepreneurship Week event. Austin Falley, the KU…
