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by luxurytent 492 days ago
How does the US do this? In Canada, everything is so splintered. Open Data is available at various levels (municipal, provincial), but it's in different formats, many government bodies don't expose anything, and it's all very .. uncooridnated.

But this is not the first time I've seen data from the US which feels so well organized. Is the secret sauce the data/providers, or is the creator of this site just very good at organizing a big mess?

3 comments

An open data commitment across gov agencies was an explicit commitment and project started in 2013 during the Obama administration.

“On May 9, 2013, President Obama signed an executive order that made open and machine-readable data the new default for government information. Making information about government operations more readily available and useful is also core to the promise of a more efficient and transparent government.”

https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/open

I know about this because the Australian government then followed and worked on doing the same.

Data.gov became a central place to access and even request that departments open specific data sets and in more formats.

https://data.gov

https://data.gov.au

The annual GovHack hackathon was supported by many agencies, leading to a strong prize pool and people from various agencies on hand looking for teams who over the weekend had done cool things with their data (specially if it was public interest). Some projects were further funded coming out of the hackathons.

https://govhack.org/about

Year on year ongoing commitment to open data in government got us to here.

It was a great long term initiative furthering values of cizitzen engagement, open data and open government.

This is a third party site that just scrapes utility websites. So open data initiatives are not relevant.
Over a decade of open data culture got us here.

Privatised electricity companies often seek to maintain a veneer of social good. Opening data for which you plan to not make open tools yourself can be a good way to have tools built that you don’t pay for that make you look good.

Most power companies in the U.S. are not run by the government.
Over a decade of open data culture got us here. As to what next that’s out of scope of my response.
i think the creator is good. I think they are just scraping different power company outage maps. If you look in some places there's 0 data because the power company doesn't have a true outage map
Yeah, and for context, there is a Canada version of the map.

https://poweroutage.com/ca/

Euh, I don't think Manitoba Hydro has 600,000 customers in Québec. I wouldn't trust that map.
If you go on the page for Manitoba Hydro, it says there is 1 customer in Quebec: "South Cypress". Although South Cypress is a municipality in Manitoba.

Seems like a data issue where the municipality was double-counted and one in Quebec for some reason.

https://poweroutage.com/ca/utility/1408

Hydro-Quebec has a web app that works very well to look at outages and service status.