Overview

July 27

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With a focus on safely reopening, it is critical for state and local governments to track the latest policy changes impacting their communities. Fortunately, legislative tracking software lets government employees map, track, change, and report on the policy landscape – all in one place. This makes it easier to be more proactive about changes and better manage their relationships with officials in the federal government, meaning employees have more time to focus on recovery.


Join Government Technology on July 27th for a 30-minute lunch and learn webinar to hear how your government can use similar technology to:

• Better preserve institutional knowledge by making it easier to log important meeting details
• Track the bills and dialogue from federal officials to gain more actionable data
• Learn how policy changes may impact your government or agency now and in the future

Speakers

 

Cait Molloy

Government Account Executive, Quorum

Cait Molloy joined Quorum in January 2020 as a Government Account Executive. Previously, Molloy spent over 6 years at Gartner, Inc. (and formerly CEB, Inc.) in various Account Executive roles with many years focusing on support for Federal, State, and Local Government agencies. Cait graduated from Boston College with B.A. in Economics.

 

William (Bill) Rials, Ph.D. — Moderator

Associate Director and IT Professor, Tulane University and Senior Fellow, Center for Digital Government

William (Bill) Rials, Ph.D., is a professor and associate director (department chair) of the Tulane University School of Professional Advancement IT and Cybersecurity Program, where he focuses on continually delivering and updating the program curriculum based on innovative and emerging technologies. Before transitioning to academia and higher education, he had a diverse government technology career delivering value to state agencies, local governments, and law enforcement agencies throughout the State of Mississippi. He has served in CIO, CTO, and CISO roles for local governments and also in various leadership positions within the state of Mississippi’s IT organization as a deputy to the state CIO.