Ask HN: What is your vision for the best high tech government experience?
I am occasionally pleasantly surprised at the occasional government experience (ease of renewing vehicle license), but generally dealing with the government is slow, requires old technology (like printed forms or a telephone), requires lots of repetitive actions (identification, sending contact info, tree traversal, separate payment processing per department, etc) and I am aware that lots of different departments have requirements/forms that could be unified for those who seek more benefits.
If there were no policy or budget/talent limitations, what is your vision for the best possible experience as a resident/citizen with national, state/provincial and locality governments?
I am looking for ideas around using things like QR codes, SMS, notifications, natural language processing, reviews and suggestions, one-click licensing/permitting, etc to make the experience of interacting with the government far more efficient and pleasant.
12 comments
[ 3.5 ms ] story [ 43.4 ms ] threadGiven this assumption, are you willing to humor my scenario for the question?
I think the government has most or all information it could possibly need - from my employer, school, doctor. I don't recall filling any form that was necessary, everything I've ever done with the government was a waste of time, because everything has already been in their system; thus my answer was mostly about making a proper computer system that does most if not all things automatically, asking for my time only when absolutely necessary.
I don't think I agree that the government always has this info, but I do agree that where the info already exists, different silos of the same government should be able to access this data. In a sense this already exists (eg. DMV records tend to be reused for election + jury duty rolls, car insurance info is automatically submitted to DMV), but I think it should be far more streamlined.
I guess I had hoped for specific examples of where there are tasks which could be streamlined, but currently aren't.
In my country our state has a 'one stop shop' website that handles most routine state government licencing payments.
This is much better than say 10 years ago when it was a multitude of separate mailed paper bills.
I can log in and see where my car licence and registration is due, a lot of other potential Govt. services (most of the welfare services I don't use) my fishing licence (funds cover policing of regulations and community projects to conserve fish habitats).
The car rego is linked to my car service shop so when I get an annual safety check my old car requires it's automatically sent through. This used to be a painful process 20 years ago, queuing up at the motor registry that used to close at lunchtime so the staff could have lunch.
It's not the ideal Libertarian tradeoff, but much better than what it used to be and a lot cheaper for the Government to run. They actually dropped registration charges a while back, with a refund! Virtue signalling maybe, but it's the kind I like.
There are US initiatives (Code For America, US Digital Service, 18F, etc) which aim to make the government experience better for the user on an app-by-app basis, but I'm hoping to get a glimpse of what the entirety of government could be if there was a holistic approach to redesign the entire experience (from licensing+permitting to taxes to benefits to giving+incorporating feedback, etc).
* Improved version control and auditability of all Government documents - the authoritative source of all bills/legislation should be a markdown file in a public Git repository with each contributor accurately recorded, rather than a hard-to-find PDF on an obscure website
* Mandatory open-sourcing of code that is funded by taxpayers, in-line with what https://publiccode.eu are campaigning for
* Competitive salaries for technical IT staff - the IT requirements of Governments are so complex and diverse, yet they have the lowest-paid IT staff working on them
Existing apps would be optional to use, offered by competing private enterprises or not necessary at all
My hope was to put the pain of interfacing with current bureaucracies side-by-side with a better alternative. Then describing what design guidelines would help bureaucracies improve those features.
I actually don't want to do the work. The tech debt of all government employees working hard to maintain the status quo will always overpower my ability as a single developer to make change. I think there needs to be a marketing campaign to shame governments who have terrible interfaces, reduced friction for them to adopt better standards/guidelines, and citizens need to complain that they want the change prioritized.