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www.smartcitiesweek.com 2www.smartcitiesweek.com 2
The third-annual Smart Cities Week D.C. attracted 1,500 people from around the world to discuss ways smart infrastructure enables smart cities. This guide collects some of the key lessons from the conference.
Don’t miss our next Smart Cities Week. Smart Cities Week Silicon Valley is May 7-9 in Santa Clara, CA.
Save the date and sign up to receive conference updates.
www.smartcitiesweek.com 3
Why Climate Hope Begins with Cities / Inclusive Mobility – Building Smart Transit Systems as Lifelines for Vulnerable Populations
Cities generate more than their share of carbon emissions. The good news is that
cities also have the capacity to provide innovative, effective solutions to climate
change problems despite regulatory and other obstacles in their way.
Another primary responsibility for cities is ensuring equity, equal opportunities
for advancement and better lives for all citizens. Transportation is a practical first
step toward achieving that goal — if it can provide safe, convenient, efficient
transportation options that serve all citizens regardless of income or location.
READ MORE
PRESENTERS:
Carl Pope, Former Executive
Director and Chairman, Sierra
Club
Colleen Casey, Urban and
Community Development
Policy Expert, Toyota North
America
Jordan Davis, Director, Smart
Cities, Columbus Partnership
Mark Dowd, Mobility,
Technology, Smart Cities,
and Environmental Policy,
University of California,
Berkeley
Shima Hamidi, Director,
Center for Transportation
Equity, Decisions & Dollars,
University of Texas, Arlington
• The best way to solve climate change? Unleash cities
• Yes, we DO need to provide mobility for everyone
www.smartcitiesweek.com 4
Happiness as a City Indicator
As cities become smarter, they collect more data. But one of the most important
indicators isn’t collected by any sensors; it’s how people feel in their daily lives.
Are people thriving? Struggling? Suffering? Knowing how they feel is an essential
element of developing a people-centered approach resulting in conditions that
allow them to thrive.
PRESENTERS:
Sarah Alexander, Senior Vice
President, Credentialing and
Certification, Green Business
Certification
Justin Bibb, Senior Adviser,
Gallup
Kay Meyer, Principal Industry
Consultant, SAS State and
Local Government
Julie Rusk, Chief of Civic
Wellbeing, City of Santa
Monica, CA
Anthony Sardella, CEO,
evolve24
www.smartcitiesweek.com 5
Strengthening City Service Delivery with Mobile Networks Session
Mobile network operators are playing a special role as cities evolve. Their role is
a role that no one else can play, but the job isn’t easy. But as telecommunications
companies morph into technology companies, there are notable, positive impacts
throughout the city from enabling robust, real-time analytics to helping first
responders respond faster.
PRESENTERS:
Neill Young, Smart Cities
Lead, IoT Team, GSMA
Lani Ingram, Vice President
of Smart Communities &
Venues, Verizon
Peter Murray, Executive
Director, Dense Networks
Vijay Gogineni, Deputy CIO,
City of Atlanta, GA
Mike Zeto, Executive Director
of Smart Cities, AT&T
www.smartcitiesweek.com 6
Readying the Roads, Planning for Autonomous Vehicles
Autonomous vehicles are coming, and the expectation is that they will
dramatically change our concept of mobility and the transportation networks that
support it. But what city leaders and planners need to know is that driverless
vehicles aren’t simply a transportation issue. They will also heavily influence how
our cities evolve in at least four critical ways.
READ MORE
PRESENTERS:
David Rouse, Managing
Director of Research and
Advisory Services, American
Planning Association
Russell Brooks, Director of
Smart Cities, Transportation for
America
Nico Larco, Associate
Professor of Architecture,
Co-Founder and Co-Director,
Sustainable Cities Initiative,
University of Oregon
Michael Lim, Executive
Fellow, City of Los Angeles,
CA, Department of
Transportation
• Driverless cars: They’re about a whole lot more than
roads and traffic signals
www.smartcitiesweek.com 7
Opioid Addiction: How a New, Data-Driven Social Safety Net Can Save Lives in Your City Session
Accidental deaths from opioid addiction claim more lives in the U.S. than guns
and traffic accidents. And most cities are strapped for the money and other
resources they need to combat it. While there are challenges, promising early
intervention solutions are coming — solutions that focus on four key elements:
engagement, data, technology and funding.
READ MORE
PRESENTERS:
Kevin Bingham, Deloitte
Consulting’s Actuarial, Risk
and Analytics Practice and
Co-Chair of the Casualty
Actuarial Society’s Innovation
Council
Brian Arrigo, Mayor, Revere,
MA
Jacob Levenson, Founder
and CEO, MAP Health
Management
Evan Behrle, Director of
Addiction Treatment, Baltimore
City Health Department
Stephen Kearney, PharmD,
Medical Director, State and
Local Government, SAS
Institute
• What cities can do with social safety nets (and data) to
reduce opioid addiction and deaths
www.smartcitiesweek.com 8
A New Digital Deal
What does a smart city look like? Bas Boorsma, author of A New Digital
Deal, describes them as service-centric cities where everything is connected
seamlessly. The first five winners of a Smart Cities Council Readiness Challenge
Grant also shared their visions of a smarter future and the progress they’ve
made so far.
PRESENTERS:
Bas Boorsma, Digitization
Lead, North Europe, Cisco
Ted Lehr, Data Architect, City
of Austin, TX
Ken Clark, Chief Information
Officer, City of Indianapolis, IN
Kevin Burns, Chief
Information Officer, City of
Miami, FL
Charles Ramdatt, Director
of Smart Cities and Special
Projects, City of Orlando, FL
Charles Brennan, Chief
Innovation Officer, City of
Philadelphia, PA
www.smartcitiesweek.com 9
Clearing the Roadblocks to Smart Infrastructure
The world’s population is exploding, putting more pressure on cities, which are
being called on to serve an ever-increasing percentage of it. Technology has a
unifying power, but it’s critical to use it as an enabler, not a goal in and of itself.
Smart cities also focus on resiliency and equity — and they ensure that residents
in the process.
READ MORE
PRESENTERS:
Jesse Berst, Chairman,
Smart Cities Council
Peter Auhl, Chief Information
Officer, City of Adelaide, South
Australia
Jeff Merritt, Chief Innovation
Officer, City of New York, NY
Jeff Stovall, Chief Information
Officer, City of Charlotte, NC
Andrew Therriault, Chief
Data Officer, City of Boston,
MA
Archana Vemulapalli, Chief
Technology Officer, City of
Washington, D.C.
Pat Vincent-Collawn,
Chairman, President and
CEO of PNM Resources, and
Chairman, EEI
• Five smart cities leaders share their top tips for success
www.smartcitiesweek.com 10
Overcoming the Six Key Challenges to Smart City Progress (from Those Who’ve Gone Before)
There are a lot of different things that hold smart cities initiatives back, but you
can create an environment that allows your city to leap over those obstacles.
For starters, you need to know what success looks like so you can plot a plan
to get there. You also need accurate and timely intelligence, engagement across
departments and with citizens and to cultivate an environment where trial and
error is the norm.
PRESENTERS:
Meghan Cook, Program
Director for the Center for
Technology in Government
(CTG) at the University at
Albany/SUNY
Michael Sherwood, Director
of Technology and Innovation,
City of Las Vegas, NV
Ken Clark, Chief Information
Officer for the City of
Indianapolis & Marion County,
IN
Kendra Parlock, Director,
Sustainable Solutions, City of
Baltimore, MD
www.smartcitiesweek.com 11
Shining Cities Upon a Hill: Climate Leadership in a New Era
Cities matter. Climate change threatens to put health, justice and jobs at risk —
and mayors are the front line with citizens. While it may feel like we’re moving
quickly, our estimates of the impacts are too low and there are increasing
numbers of wake-up calls to alert us to that fact. We can … but will we?
PRESENTERS:
George Atalla, Global Sector
Leader, Government and
Public Sector, EY
David Nemtzow, Director,
Building Technology Office,
U.S. Department of Energy
Tom Steyer, Founder and
President, NextGen Climate
Join us in Silicon ValleyThe next Smart Cities Week is Smart Cities Week Silicon Valley, May 7-9 in Santa Clara, CA. Save the date and sign up to receive conference updates.