-------------------------- Original Message --------------------------
Subject: [Politech] LA city councilman says open source = more cops
onstreets [ip] From:    "Declan McCullagh" <[email protected]>
Date:    Wed, February 2, 2005 7:23 pm
To:      [email protected]
----------------------------------------------------------------------



-------- Original Message --------
Subject: LA city councilman says open source = more cops on streets
Date: Wed, 2 Feb 2005 15:13:07 -0800
From: Xeni Jardin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>

BOING BOING

Wednesday, February 2, 2005

http://www.boingboing.net/2005/02/02/_la_city_councilman_.html

Los Angeles city councilman Eric Garcetti is proposing that the city
convert to open source software, and divert the anticipated savings
into hiring more police. That's a sore spot for the city -- the
cop-to-citizen ratio in LA is thinner than an anorexic actress.
Garcetti believes the move could save the city millions, and fund a
long-overdue hiring expansion for the LAPD.

I'll be reporting on this for tomorrow's edition of the NPR radio show
"Day to Day." Here's a snip from Garcetti's announcement:

- - -

The motion asks the Information Technology Agency to report on how the
city could forgo paying for proprietary software licenses and instead
transition to open source platforms and programs. "Open source" means
that any programmer can see the software code and propose changes; a
community of users creates, supports, and freely distributes
applications. Some users pay a fee for technical support, but free
support is available on internet message boards. The city spent $5.8
million on proprietary software licenses in FY2003-4.

"For taxpayers, this is a no-brainer," said Councilmember Eric
Garcetti, member of the Information Technology and General Services
committee. "By engaging this online community, we can make our own
communities safer. Free open source software can be as capable and
more secure than products that cost the city millions."

(...) The city already uses some open-source applications to run
network servers. Widely used programs include OpenOffice.org, a
desktop suite including a word processor and spreadsheet, and Linux,
an operating system. It is not expected that all proprietary software
will be replaced by open source; some is custom-made directly for the
city and cannot be replaced. The motion recommends that savings from
open source transitioning be placed in the Special Fund for Efficiency
Projects and Police Hiring.

- - -

Link to councilman Garcetti's website.
http://www.lacity.org/council/cd13/

Related documents: motion (9K PDF)
http://www.boingboing.net/images/OpenSourceMotion.pdf

and press release (28K PDF)
http://www.boingboing.net/images/newsOpenSource.pdf.

posted by Xeni Jardin at 02:53:19 PM permalink | Other blogs
commenting on this pos

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