Municipal Monitor Q2 2017 | Page 17

SMART LEAD E RSH IP We believe that digital inclusion can break down barriers and unlock potential we never knew existed. One of the core components of Kitchener’s reputation is that we are progressive. If that is true, we think that in a smart community access to things like training or a computer should be as easy as visiting a park in your neighbourhood. This idea is becoming even more relevant as more consumer services move online. Digital Kitchener is about more than tech, it’s about building a legacy. Independently, each of these focus areas can and will help us build a smarter community. Intertwined, however, all four areas will truly leverage Kitchener’s strengths to build a dynamic city of the future. Each of Digital Kitchener’s four themes is tackled through annual work plans, or what we affection- ately refer to as our annual brave plan. In 2017 Kitchener identified six action areas, two of which will be game changers for Canadian municipalities: the creation of a civic innovation lab and the establishment of a city-wide Internet of Things (IoT) network. It’s well known that companies from around North America come to Kitchener to establish innova- tion outposts. Organizations such as General Motors, TD Bank and Thomson Reuters have all ben- efited from establishing labs at Communitech — North America’s largest tech incubator — and more recently, public sector agencies such as the LCBO have established labs here as well. In Kitchener, we think the best way to become a leader in civic innovation is to use this same proven model to our advantage. Approved in February 2017, Kitchener’s innovation lab at the Communitech hub will allow staff from all departments to bring com- plex service challenges out of city hall and into a more disruptive envi- ronment. Here, potential solutions using the IoT will be investigated, prototypes built and pilot projects completed. The lab itself will not result in full-scale implementation of solutions, but will seek to prove the overall value of an idea and develop new business cases. Once the lab is fully operational, there could be several projects on the go in various stages of the development cycle. More recently, Toronto — Canada’s largest city — also announced the establishment of a municipal lab to tackle civic challenges of its own. This creates another exciting opportunity for the Toronto-Waterloo Region innovation corridor to demonstrate its capacity for transformation to the rest of the world. While we believe Kitchener’s civic innovation lab will fundamentally change the way we think about our service challenges, the IoT solutions developed from it will provide little utility without a network to operate from in the real world. That is why in 2017, Kitchener will also establish a city-wide narrowband mesh net- work exclusively for the Internet of Things. One of the first of its kind in Canada, this initiative will transform MUNICIPAL MONITOR 15