Overview

June 12

Watch Now

Over the past two months, state and local government agencies have rapidly adjusted their workforces and operations to a new normal in response to COVID-19. As state and localities begin their reopening processes it has become vital for these agencies to adjust and comply with an evolving legislative landscape leveraging new tools and processes. During this webinar, Governing has joined forces with Quorum to surface the most important post-COVID-19 legislative trends and explain how agencies can leverage new technologies to keep up with tracking legislative issues for the new normal.

Specifically, you’ll learn:

  1. The top 5 current legislative issues for state & local government.
  2. Emerging Post-COVID-19 legislative trends to be aware of.
  3. How to develop a legislative tracking program for the new normal.

Speakers

Cait Molloy headshot

Cait Molloy

Account Executive, Quorum

Cait Molloy joined Quorum in January 2020 as a Government Account Executive. Previously, Molloy spent over 6 years at Gartner, Inc. (and formerly CEB, Inc.) in various Account Executive roles with many years focusing on support for Federal, State, and Local Government agencies. Cait graduated from Boston College with B.A. in Economics.

Dustin Haisler headshot

Dustin Haisler — Moderator

Chief Innovation Officer, e.Republic

Dustin Haisler is the Chief Innovation Officer for e.Republic. As the finance director and later CIO for Manor, TX, a small city outside Austin, Haisler quickly built a track record and reputation as an early innovator in civic tech. A member of Code for America’s original steering committee, Haisler pioneered government use of commercial technologies not before used in the public sector – including Quick-Response (QR) barcodes, crowdsourcing and gamification. In 2010 Haisler launched Manor Labs, a website that let residents submit their own ideas and vote other peoples’ ideas up or down. The most popular suggestions went to city officials for review and possible implementation. Haisler looked to the private sector to help broaden the adoption of these and other civic innovations, joining California-based Spigit as director of government innovation.