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City of San Antonio

Northside, North East, Judson, Alamo Heights, Schertz-Cibolo-Universal City, Southside, East Central and Edgewood independent school districts were among the Texas school systems that lost access.
Newly digitized archives date to the early 18th century and are publicly searchable. The $18 million preservation effort was supported by records fees.
Airport visitors will need to use the Metropolis mobile app, which will log parking lot entrances and exits. A contract was put in motion earlier this year.
Jon Gary Herrera, whose current title is senior vice president of public engagement, will be the first Latino CEO for the agency, which was created in 1978.
In addition to gunshots, Wytec International Inc. sensors can detect smoke, fire, drugs and even chemical and biological agents.
The department has been allocated $26.4 million for seven capital projects in 2025.
The desired solution would allow the city to market to visitors near tracked locations based on foot traffic and demographic data.
The San Antonio energy utility is requesting engineering services in preparation for an expansion of its communication systems.
The 2024-25 proposed $3.96 billion budget includes more than $3.6 million for traffic tech.
City officials are considering asking for at least $200,000 in the San Antonio Police Department's next fiscal year budget for about 10 security cameras that will be installed as part of a one-year pilot program.
The San Antonio-based energy provider requires administrative technical support for its current system.
As the city readies itself for its budget proposal, it still has two IT solicitations left from its annual procurement plan. The City Council has also recently approved several tech purchases.
The chosen vendor will be expected to provide project management, budgeting, performance tracking, technical expertise and vendor management services.
The city's World Heritage Office may pilot a project to collect tourism metrics and data; balancing privacy along with planning needs will be paramount.
The system must have the ability to collect data continuously, as well as real-time load monitoring, remote device control, interoperability with other systems and remote access.
Kate Kinnison has been with the city for more than a decade, with the majority in the Office of Innovation.
The municipal gas and electric utility of San Antonio is seeking software capable of identifying potential approach distance hazards.
The city of San Antonio’s former chief innovation officer has arrived at VIA Metropolitan Transit, bringing a strong cyber and innovation background.
The budget includes at least nine new IT projects with budgets of at least $1 million, as well as a $36 million budget for its IT Department.
The national defense contractor, based in Virginia, is working with education, venture capital and other partners to expand its presence in Texas.
With the Great American Eclipse emerging first at the Texas-Mexico border and arcing across the state, government leaders have emergency preparedness and constituent comfort at top of mind.
Data to be collected and stored includes market pricing, market specifics, industry data, power price forecasting, weather news, emissions allowances, renewable energy credits and more.
Opportunity Home is in search of a web-based rent reasonableness subscription service to ensure compliance with the federal Section 8 regulations.
City public works unveiled the latest dashboards to help constituents visualize projects across the city and interact with municipal employees.
A fiber company has entered a partnership to create an intelligent infrastructure economic zone.
CPS Energy intends to replace its current Hitachi Energy Network Manager Advanced Distribution Management System with AspenTech ADMS.
The city has issued two requests for information on behalf of CPS Energy for forecasting and modeling software.
Across Texas, CIOs and other leaders looked this year to long-term missions and goals and how to support them with IT, tech and communications.
Bexar County and San Antonio have a growing data center presence, and the municipal energy provider needs to expand capacity.
San Antonio, with a large population of cyber professionals, plays host to the national communications and electronics conference each year.
The Tech Hubs Strategy Development Grant is part of the federal government’s economic development initiative to strengthen a given region’s capacity to research, manufacture and deploy new technologies.
The cost of the new system at the county is estimated at $133,000 to implement and $750,000 annually.
“Sometimes the operational tempo can be long and tough, but this team of skilled technicians, leaders and high-performing teammates never says no to a request or a challenge. They always ask how we can solve it.”
The city's budget outlines multiple capital tech projects.
These cities are large, fast-growing and have potential for big IT initiatives; one has started its fiscal year.
San Antonio's Metro Health, also serving Bexar County, will take competitive sealed bids to automate and better manage its data workflows and reporting requirements.
The city boasts several military sites with cyber capabilities, a large number of cyber workers and robust higher ed programming.
First responders are using an app to help them when faced with a person needing these services.
In addition to working in city government, she is an MBA in IT candidate at Texas Tech University.
Projects include cloud services, infrastructure, a regional radio system and cybersecurity.
The alliance named 32 municipalities across the U.S., each working on various facets of digital inclusion.
Final questions should be submitted by Friday regarding this request for proposal.
Four neighborhood-based projects seek to connect the underserved.
A toll road that is an innovation corridor uses high-tech satellite imaging to find tiny flaws in pavement and other structures in need of maintenance.
Multiple requests for proposals are due in August and some in the coming months.
“I’m passionate about how civically minded and collaboratively built technology can play an important role in providing better services, improving resiliency, and creating more equitable communities,” Geoffrey Urbach says.
Planning and paying for trips across multiple transportation modes in San Antonio can now be accomplished in a single app, enabling a long-sought customer convenience.