Data Nerds and Open Source Activists Are Filling Crucial COVID-19 Information Gaps
From the start, the COVID-19 pandemic has, in large part, been a crisis of information. As schools and businesses closed and stay-at-home orders spread across the country, Americans scrambled to understand the nature of the threat鈥攂ut while there鈥檚 been wall-to-wall news coverage, reliable, up-to-date online resources compiling state-by-state and country-by-country infection and testing levels have been harder to come by.
The federal government the nationwide rollout of testing kits early on, hobbling efforts to understand the extent of the virus鈥 spread; even now, the CDC isn鈥檛 publishing detailed . And overwhelmed state governments lack the capacity to quickly build digital tools that provide residents with urgently needed information about the virus.
Seeing these gaps, nongovernmental organizations and volunteers have stepped in with open source solutions. Two prominent early examples are the created by a group of journalists, researchers, and programmers鈥攚hich tracks testing counts by U.S. state, and Johns Hopkins University鈥檚 , which tracks global case counts.
Both are filling crucial public health data gaps鈥攁nd they showcase the power of open source during this unprecedented and overwhelming moment, noted Mark Lerner, a fellow at 麻豆果冻传媒.
鈥淓veryone is trying to understand vast amounts of public health data and economic data,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e all solving the same problems. We can find solutions faster if we work together.鈥
At 麻豆果冻传媒, Lerner鈥攁 former deputy executive director of the U.S Digital Service at the Department of Homeland Security鈥攈as focused on how to bring more governments into the open source world. As the pandemic intensified in late March, he realized a repository collecting open source COVID-19 resources could help spread solutions while underscoring the power of open source.
Thus, 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 was born. Launched earlier this month by 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 Digital Impact and Governance Initiative (DIGI) and Public Interest Technology (PIT) teams, the repository collects a wide array of open source COVID-19 resources beyond data tracking sites: a used in both Alberta and Ontario, an 鈥溾 connecting New Jersey residents to various emergency assistance programs, and a that helps people donate personal protective equipment. The repo will throughout the pandemic.
A particularly effective resource in the repository, according to Lerner, is the 鈥,鈥 created by the state of New Jersey: 鈥淚t鈥檚 super easy: You type in a question, and it will give you an answer collected from various authorities and provide resources you might need 鈥 [W]e鈥檝e seen tons of interest from a variety of states in using this.鈥
Having built up its digital innovation workforce in the last few years, the New Jersey state government has emerged as a U.S. leader in developing open source platforms for the public sector. But that doesn鈥檛 mean it hasn鈥檛 called on volunteer members of the civic tech community for help. (USDR), a nonpartisan organization that connects state and local governments with skilled volunteers, has supported New Jersey鈥檚 digital innovation team with a few additional engineers.
鈥淲e were able to provide them with more software engineers to help them double their output,鈥 said Raylene Yung, USDR鈥檚 CEO. Previously an engineering and product executive at Facebook and Stripe, Yung co-founded the organization in March with . In the space of weeks, the volunteer-run organization has evolved from little more than a Google form collecting volunteer info to what Yung says feels more like a startup. As of publication, more than 5,000 people have indicated their interest in volunteering, and more than 200 volunteers have been deployed in various government organizations.
鈥淚t鈥檚 grown up fast,鈥 said Yung.
Governments have asked for a wide variety of support: USDR has helped state public health experts develop data models of virus impacts and cities digitize workflows and streamline communications. It鈥檚 also built new tools from scratch: , for example, helps communities connect volunteers to vulnerable people in need of food and other essential items. First launched in Concord, California, the open source platform has since been replicated in nearby Walnut Creek as well as in Paterson, New Jersey.
鈥淢obilizing local volunteers is something every community is trying to figure out how to do,鈥 Yung said.
Because so many governments are now struggling with the same challenges, USDR sees its core role as helping people scale solutions to their problems using technology.
鈥淲e鈥檝e seen that we can provide the most value by building or surfacing more reusable tools than can be reused across jurisdictions,鈥 Yung said. 鈥淓very state and city doesn鈥檛 need to reinvent the wheel and design a new coronavirus website. We want to build a tool once, and then make it extensible.鈥
With the COVID-19 crisis persisting and the attendant economic crisis growing, USDR volunteers are now assisting states in building tools that help residents and businesses navigate various assistance programs. New Jersey, for instance, built its emergency assistance 鈥溾 in conjunction with USDR.
From a digital tech perspective, both Yung and Lerner see opportunities for positive change to emerge from the pandemic. Yung forecasts a big wave of remote collaboration tools and digitized workflows coming to governments, along with healthy evolution beyond the legacy mainframes that often run state unemployment insurance systems.
鈥淧eople are seeing that you can move quickly and build tech that works without having to wait an extremely long time,鈥 Lerner said. 鈥淭his is going to be a moment when people realize that there is a better alternative to what they鈥檝e been seeing with technology.鈥