Hi folks -

As an introduction: I'm working with local non-profits that service
low-income people in the District of Columbia, and one of the common
problems (which we seem to share with communities everywhere) is the lack
of a comprehensive directory for what resources (food pantries, public
housing, health care, etc) are available in the community. (We've written
up a brief about this problem
here<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1sntMVolLvbhpAFvM0L9pHlcp0LXwXiqcRF89MqZbUGM/edit#heading=h.1adwzueis5zw>
.)

Later this month, I'll try to tackle this project as part of a research
residency <http://provisionslibrary.com/?page_id=16614>. We have access to
at least three large databases of social services that we can try to merge
together and make usable and peer-productive, so to speak. I can assemble a
team of social workers, software developers, data geeks, and regular users.


I wonder if the Wikidata project could be what our effort needs -- whether
our developers could experiment with your technology to try to merge and
open up these community resource data sets. If so, how would I go about
exploring that opportunity? If however the time is not yet ripe, you may
have other valuable insights for us as we undertake this experiment.

Thanks for any help you can offer!
-- 
• gjb <http://flavors.me/gjb> •
202.643.3648
_______________________________________________
Wikidata-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikidata-l

Reply via email to