LLRXBuzz - January 13, 2003
By Tara Calishain, Published on January 13, 2003
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GREE-TINGS! This is the next-to-the-last
tour of the state capitals. Next week we'll finish up the tour and get to
the two cities we weren't able to cover so far-- Harrisburg and Boise!
(Thanks to all the people who suggested Harrisburg
links; apparently the Harrisburg site didn't launch until December 18.)
** SC -- South Carolina -- Columbia
http://www.columbiasc.net/
The city of Columbia must take its city council meetings very seriously,
because its upcoming meeting dates are on its front page. Actually that's
pretty cool, since that makes it very easy for a citizen to get that
information.
As to the rest of the site: it's mostly text-based, with menus at the top
and side of the page. The top of the page provides links to things like
city search, city jobs, and an interesting thing called "online city
requests." Using a
city request you can send a request or comment to the city. That's just a
suggestion box, but with this system you can log in to track the status of
your requests.
The menu on the left of the front page includes a quick phone list, city
government (including a list of city agendas, of course, and a link to
apply for building permits online) city parks, a council of neighborhoods,
links (which
is a more thorough list of city departments and also includes phone
numbers), and a brief list of city reports. I almost wish I had a request
for South Carolina so I could check out that online city request system.
** SD -- South Dakota -- Pierre
http://ci.pierre.sd.us/
Most of the city pages I've seen have been left to right, with multiple
columns, but the city of Pierre is top to bottom, with featured items on
the top and a general index on the bottom.
The top of the page includes the Pierre City Ordinances, a variety of city
maps (in PDF format), and a directory of city employee addresses. Some of
the pages appear to be out of date -- for example, the airport information
page
provides a schedule that is listed as "As of 8/6/01" and "Good till
9/28/01."
At the bottom of the page is a general index of city topics including city
agendas, police department information, employment, taxi fare information,
and "city clips," which is kinda like a FAQ of city services.
** TN -- Tennessee -- Nashville
http://www.nashville.gov/flashpgs/flashhome.htm
As you can probably tell from the URL, this is a page with some Flash in
it. Not a whole lot, though; it appears to be just the title at the top of
the page and the menu on the left. There does appear to be a non-Flash
version, but since
the site automatically forwards to the right place I can't be sure.
Nashville.gov has lots of photographs; the middle column contains news,
site update information, and a variety of photographs about said updates
and improvements. The right column contains site features; I'm not
surprised to see a digital photograph gallery there. There's also a Flash
movie about Nashville, a variety of video on demand, and a couple of
online services (report graffiti, pay property taxes, etc.)
On the left side of the page is the main site index. There you can check
out business information, find employment opportunities, a pretty good
link list (including metro-area links of interest) and a good local links
section (greenway maps! Public golf courses! A zoo! Chip's Nashville
Links!) Beneath that is a drop-down list of links from the ag extension
service to water services. I'm normally not a big Flash fan but this is a
good usage.
** TX -- Texas -- Austin
http://www.ci.austin.tx.us/
Mostly black and white, and very slick, Austin's Web site is the standard
three-column layout, but a lot of space makes it very easy to read.
The middle column's for news. Save on buying a rain barrel! Sign up for
the Citizens Police Academy! And learn about the Austin Police Department
(and the financial crimes unit.) On the right side of the page you'll see
several calendars (including for city council meetings, parks and rec, and
city music) while on the left of the page you'll find general link
information (for the airport, city jobs, a nice city news page, etc.)
Need something more specific? Check the top of the page. There you'll find
a search box, a list of city services (from the Austin Housing Finance
Corporation to Zoning (wow, Austin has a nice solid waste services page))
and a dizzying array of maps (area maps and bike maps, sure. But you'll
also find, among other things, airport maps, fire stations, Free-Net
locations, and a map of sister cities.)
** UT -- Utah -- Salt Lake City
http://www.ci.slc.ut.us/
Funny. The first thing that came to mind when I thought about Utah used to
be genealogy and The Great Brain series. Now I think about images that
need ALT text and navigation graphics with really small fonts. (There is a
text-only version at
http://www.ci.slc.ut.us/textonly/.)
It's 32 degrees and foggy in Utah as I write this. I know that because
it's on the front page of the site in the middle of the page. In the
middle of that are news items, one dated and the others not. At the top of
the page you'll find a search box and a link to an info center. The info
center is a series of drop-down menus that address a series of topics,
including general interest, newsletters (city
council, etc.), ordinances and codes, and "Where Do I Go To..." (pay a
parking ticket, get tax forms, vote, etc.)
The menu links on the left are a series of guides. There's a guide to city
government (mayor's office, rules and ordinances, etc.), guide to visitors
(a nice set of external links to other sites with skiing and other
visiting information) resident information (neighborhoods, parks, garbage
pickup information, libraries, etc.) and a guide to government (with an
overview document, "How to do Business with Salt Lake City", and including
bid notices, permits, licenses, and zoning information.)
** VA -- Virginia -- Richmond
http://www.ci.richmond.va.us/indexnew.asp
There's a Java applet going on here but my install of Opera doesn't have
Java, so instead I see a Java-less page. Much like South Dakota, Virginia
is using a "top to bottom" approach. The top of the page has a series of
links in four
categories: Citizen, Business, eCitizen, and Visitors. The eCitizen
section allows visitors to download several online forms, send an
e-postcard, make some online payments (Parking Violations, Personal
Property Taxes, Real Estate Taxes, and Utility Bills)
Further down the page you'll find other items of interest, separated into
news, features, and hot links. News includes a page of downtown parking
information, an online guide to citizen's services (nice, but a heavy
download. You can also
order a free print copy) while the feature mentions a new supermarket in
downtown Richmond. The Hot Links menu repeats some of the links found at
the top of the page and includes schools, libraries, and the very
interesting-sounding City Speakers Bureau.
Don't miss the FAQ link at the bottom of the screen or the site map. I
don't think I missed a lot by not having Java..
** VT -- Vermont -- Montpelier
http://www.montpelier-vt.org/
Montpelier has a population of about 8,000, making it the smallest state
capital in the country. But you wouldn't know it by this Web site, which
would be a great testimonial for a much larger city.
There's contact information in the right column, but the vast majority of
information is on the left side of the page. Here you'll find information
about Montpelier, doing business (including a substantial permit section
and a link
to available business properties in Montpelier) getting to Montpelier and
getting around (I'm jealous of their free downtown shuttle system)
calendar (viewable by month or by category), a one-screen document
library, and a site map.
Nicely designed; not too fancy, but pleasant to look at.
** WA -- Washington -- Olympia
http://www.ci.olympia.wa.us/
Olympia's a somewhat minimalist blue-and-white design, and feels retro,
but I can't figure out what it's retro to.
Anyway, Olympia's site has minimal graphics and two columns. The middle
column has featured sites and city council information, as well as
genealogy and earthquake (!) information.
On the left side is the main menu, featuring city information (forms,
contact information, earthquake archives, etc.) background information and
links for Olympia itself, city jobs, how to get involved (a variety of
city-related
volunteer opportunities, nice list) maps, a link to state government
information, and a link list of local attractions and media.
You might miss it under the picture of the Fourth Avenue Bridge, but there
are also links to the Olympia Municipal Code, Olympia Comprehensive Plan,
and Olympia Development Guidelines.
