Williamsburg Embraces iPad Politics
BY Nancy Scola | Tuesday, July 13 2010
The town of Williamsburg, Virginia is switching from paper-based city council agenda books to iPads, reports Dan Parsons of the Daily Press. (via Ellen Miller)
Transferring council materials to the iPad is meant to be a money saver. The city, reports Parsons, spends about $2,000 a year on council printing costs. iPads for the five city council members will run $3,000. "The computers should pay for themselves in 18 months," writes Parsons.
Here's a twist: the move is coming in for some criticism from a local transparency group. The executive director of the Virginia Coalition for Open Government worries that "some of those applications could make it easy for instant messaging and other communication, basically a meeting within a meeting without the public knowing."
But Mayor Molly Joseph Ward is a fan. "There are a number of different applications which allow you to take notes, highlight," she said. "It's great."
And yes, the whole thing's funny because of Colonial Williamsburg and all.
