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HomeMy WebLinkAboutFCS Agenda - 2018-02-05Finance & Corporate Services Committee Agenda Monday, February 5, 2018 1:00 p.m. - 2:00 p.m. Office of the City Clerk Council Chamber Kitchener City Hall nd 200 King St.W. - 2 Floor Kitchener ON N2G 4G7 Page 1 Chair - Councillor S. Davey Vice-Chair - Councillor D. Schnider Consent Items The following matters are considered not to require debate and should be approved by one motion in accordance with the recommendation contained in each staff report. A majority vote is required to discuss any report listed as under this section. 1. CSD-18-018 - Accessibility Plan (2018-2022) 2. FCS-18-007 - 2018 Donations Made to City-Related Organizations 3. INS-18-004 - Mobile Workforce Management System - Purchase Order Extension -law, delegations are permitted to address the Committee for a maximum of 5 minutes. None at this time. 4. FCS-18-009 - Digital Kitchener 2017-2018 Update (45 min) (Staff will provide a 10 minute presentation on this matter) None. Jeff Bunn Manager, Council & Committee Services/Deputy City Clerk ** Accessible formats and communication supports are available upon request. If you require assistance to take part in a city meeting or event, please call 519-741-2345 or TTY 1-866-969-9994 ** REPORT TO: Finance and Corporate Services Committee DATE OF MEETING: February 5, 2018 SUBMITTED BY: Mark Hildebrand, Director Community Programs and Services, 519-741-2200 ext.7687 PREPARED BY: Lolita Paroski, Inclusion Coordinator, 519-741-2200ext. 7226 WARD(S) INVOLVED: All DATE OF REPORT: January 4, 2018 REPORT NO.: CSD-18-018 SUBJECT: ACCESSIBILITY PLAN (2018-2022) ____________________________________________________________________________ RECOMMENDATION: That the 2018-2022 Accessibility Plan, as attached to CSD-18-018, be approved EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: The Integrated Accessibility Standards Regulation 191/11 (Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act, 2005)requires public sector organizations to establish, implement, maintain and document a multi-year accessibility plan. The Province has indicated that the goal of the multi-year accessibility plan is to outline an prevent and remove barriers and to meet its requirements under the Regulation. On January 28, 2013 Council approved the Accessibility Plan (2013-2017), staff report CSD-13-011, in response to the Regulation. The Province of Ontario has since not introduced any new compliance deadlines and therefore the draft Accessibility Plan (2018-2022) is a continuation of the previous plan. This approach is similar to other municipalities and models how the Province is proceeding. Once approved, the Accessibility Plan (2018-2022) will continue to guide and provide direction to staff in meeting legislative requirements. BACKGROUND: The Integrated Accessibility Standards Regulation 191/11 requires municipalities to: Prepare a multi-year Accessibility Plan Consult with an Accessibility Advisory Committee Post the Accessibility Plan on their website 1 - 1 Provide the Accessibility Plan in an alternate format upon request Review and update the Accessibility Plan every five years Prepare an Annual Status Update on the Accessibility Plan Post the Annual Status Update on their website Provide the Annual Status Update in an alternate format upon request The Integrated Accessibility Standards Regulation 191/11 (IASR) has five standards: information and communications, employment, transportation, design of public spaces and customer service. It should be noted that the requirements in the transportation standard fall within the jurisdiction of the Region of Waterloo. The IASR became law in 2011 and the requirements of the IASR are being phased in between 2011 and 2025. The Grand River Accessibility Advisory Committee (GRAAC) serves as the Corporary committee and provides input, advice and recommendations as it relates to a broad range of municipal construction/design projects, policies, procedures and services. REPORT: cessible Ontario on or before January st 1 2025, the City of Kitchener coordinates accessibility planning to ensure compliance with the legislative requirements. The requirements of the IASR are ongoing; therefore, the draft Accessibility Plan has been prepared as a continuation of the previous Accessibility Plan. To ensure the corporation is meeting the accessibility requirements staff will prepare annual status updates to the plan. The Province of Ontario has periodic reviews of the standards within the IASR and revisions to current standards or the introduction of new standards and compliance deadlines can result. Should this occur any associated actions will be included in the appropriate status update. Significant changes with the potential to impact staff resources or existing budgets will be brought to Council for further consideration. ALIGNMENT WITH CITY OF KITCHENER STRATEGIC PLAN: The draft Accessibility Plan supports the following directions noted in the City of Safe and Thriving Neighbourhoods The Grand River Accessibility Advisory Committee provides persons with disabilities the opportunity to discuss, define and address their shared vision in regards to the identification, removal and prevention of barriers in City facilities, programs, goods and services. Consulting with persons with disabilities in an advisory role increases the capacity of the City to ensure a greater degree of access, equity and inclusion in the life of the Corporation. 1 - 2 FINANCIAL IMPLICATIONS: In September 2005, Council approved the establishment of a capital budget (Corporate Accessibility Fund) for the purpose of funding the costs associated with implementing the legislation as well as to fund corporate projects that remove barriers and improve access. This fund will assist in mitigating any financial impacts related to compliance with the legislation or its associated standards. COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT: The Accessibility Plan was developed in consultation with the Grand River Accessibility Advisory Committee and with input from staff. In order to assist with the successful implementation of the Accessibility Plan, staff will continue to engage with community agencies that provide services for persons with disabilities. ACKNOWLEDGED BY:Jon Rehill,Acting Deputy CAO, Community Services 1 - 3 2018-2022 The Corporation of the City of Kitchener Accessibility Plan The City of KitchenerAccessibility Plan for 2018-2022 outlines how the Corporation will continue to prevent and remove accessibility barriers. This plan builds on the previous accessibility plan which was approved by Council in 2013. Our Accessibility Commitment The Corporation of the City of Kitchener values the contributions and participation of all citizens in the life of the City. To facilitate this involvement, the City is committed to providing goods, services and facilities that are accessible to all. Introduction Under the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act, 2005 (AODA) organizations are required to develop multi-year accessibility plans. The Accessibility Plan addresses how the City of Kitchener will continue to meet the AODA requirements. The AODA legislative requirements serve as the framework of the Accessibility Plan. Legislative Background The Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act, 2005 (AODA) focuses on improving accessibility in areas such as buildings, outdoor spaces, employment, procurement, training, customer service, information and communications and transportation. The AODA applies to all private, government and broader public sectors. The AODA intends to achieve a more accessible Ontario on or before January 1, 2025. To do so, mandatory and enforceable standards have been created. The five standards are: Information and Communications Standards Employment Standards Design of Public Spaces Standards Customer Service Standards Transportation Standards (Region of Waterloo responsibility) The general requirements for all five standards include the development and implementation of an accessibility policy, an accessibility plan, procurement processes and policies and a training program. More information on the Standards can be found on the Province of Ontario website at www.ontario.ca/laws/regulation/110191 Inclusion Services Coordinated Approach The City of Kitchener, Community Services Department, Inclusion Services is responsible for coordinating all aspects of the Accessibility Plan including staff support to the Grand River Accessibility Advisory Committee (GRAAC) and its subcommittees on behalf of the City of Waterloo, in order to 1 1 - 4 ensure AODA compliance. It is important to note that while Inclusion Services staff serve in a facilitative role in this process, this work could not be accomplished without the involvement, dedication and leadership of City of Waterloo staff across the Corporation. Grand River Accessibility Advisory Committee (GRAAC) Under the requirements of the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act, 2005 (AODA), municipalities with a population of 10,000 or greater are required to establish an Accessibility Advisory Committee to advise Council on the prevention, identification and removal of barriers for persons with disabilities. The Grand River Accessibility Advisory Committee (GRAAC) is a joint committee of the Cities of Waterloo and Kitchener, Region of Waterloo and the Townships of North Dumfries, Wellesley, Woolwich and Wilmot and is appointed the task of advising the participating municipalities on the preparation, implementation and effectiveness of their respective Accessibility Plans. Councils also seek advice from GRAAC on the accessibility of buildings, structures or premises that the municipalities purchase, build, renovate or lease. GRAAC reviews site plans and drawings for new municipal buildings or developments. The Built Environment Sub Committee of GRAAC was formed in order to manage the volume of municipal projects requiring the attention of GRAAC. More information on GRAAC can be found on the City of Kitchener website. www.kitchener.ca/en/employment-and-volunteering/grand-river-accessibility-advisory-committee.aspx The Accessibility Plan 2018-2022 Commitments: The new Accessibility Plan includes how the City of Kitchener will continue to meet its commitments in providing goods, services and facilities that are accessible to all. General Requirements Commitments: Accessibility Policy Continue to review and update the Accessibility Policy as required. Continue to make the Accessibility Policy available to the public on the city website. Update all staff on any revisions made to the Accessibility Policy. Accessibility Plan Continue to make the Accessibility Plan available to the public on the city website. Continue to provide the annual status updates to GRAAC. Continue to make the annual status update available to the public on the city website. Procurement Incorporate accessibility design, criteria and features when procuring or acquiring goods, services or facilities, except where it is not practicable to do so. Provide, upon request, an explanation if it is not practicable to incorporate accessibility. Continue to include accessible procurement practices in training materials as a resource for staff. Continue to incorporate accessibility features when designing, procuring or acquiring self- service kiosks. 2 1 - 5 Training Continue to provide mandatory accessibility training to all new staff. Continue to update and provide accessibility training to staff as required. Continue to review and update the corporate training brochures for staff and volunteers. Continue to update and provide new resources for staff on the intranet. Continue to provide the staff leads of city affiliates and volunteers with updated training brochures. Standards Commitments: Information and Communications Standards Continue to provide emergency procedures, plans or public safety information in an accessible format or with appropriate communication support to the public, upon request, as soon as practicable. Continue to notify the public about the availability of accessible formats and communication supports. Continue to provide, upon request, accessible formats and communication supports. Continue to achieve compliance with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) to ensure that websites and web content are accessible to people with disabilities. Continue to train new staff on the creation of accessible documents. Continue to provide staff with resources on the staff intranet. Employment Standards Review policies and practices with respect to recruitment, hiring and interviewing as per the requirements under the employment standards as required. Continue to notify employees and the public about the availability of accommodations for applicants with disabilities in its recruitment processes. Continue to notify successful applicants of policies for accommodating employees with disabilities. Continue to inform all current and new employees through the IASR training brochure and through the mandatory accessibility online training of procedures used to support employees with disabilities. Continue to provide or arrange for the provision of accessible formats and communication supports for employees. Continue to provide individualized workplace emergency response information to employees who have a disability. Continue to have in place a written process for the development of documented individual accommodation plans for employees with disabilities. Continue to have in place a return to work process and plan for employees who have been absent from work due to a disability. 3 1 - 6 Design of Public Spaces Standards Continue to consult with GRAAC, the public and persons with disabilities before constructing new or redeveloping existing municipal recreational trails, outdoor play spaces, exterior paths of travel, rest areas and on-street parking spaces. Continue to meet technical requirements when constructing new or redeveloping existing municipal recreational trails, outdoor public use eating areas, outdoor play spaces, exterior paths of travel, accessible parking both on and off street, service counters, fixed queuing guides and waiting areas. Continue to review and update the City of Kitchener procedures for preventative and emergency maintenance of the accessible elements in public spaces and procedures for dealing with temporary disruptions when accessible elements are not in working order. Customer Service Standards Continue to include the customer service standards in the Accessibility Policy. Continue to include the customer service standards in the corporate training brochures for staff and volunteers. Continue to include the customer service standards in mandatory accessibility training for staff. Continue to review and update staff resources related to customer service standards on the staff intranet. All Standards are reviewed by the Province of Ontario, therefore requiring updates to existing policies, training, manuals, bylaws etc. As a result of the reviews, revisions to current standards or new standards may be introduced by the Province of Ontario which will include new requirements and compliance deadlines. Those revisions and any actions related to them will be captured in the City of Kitchener annual status update. As municipal projects arise, city site plans will continue to be reviewed by the Grand River Accessibility Advisory Committee for suggestions on how to best improve and achieve accessibility. Consultation Commitment: The City of Kitchener recognizes that broader public engagement along with GRAAC, agencies that provide services to persons with disabilities and citizens with disabilities is beneficial to the successful implementation of the Accessibility Plan. Staff will continue to work with GRAAC, local service providers and citizens throughout the duration of the Accessibility Plan in order to further identify, prevent and remove barriers for people with disabilities. Looking Forward: As required by legislation, once approved, the Accessibility Plan will be posted on the City of Kitchener website so that it is available to the public. The Accessibility Plan will be reviewed and updated every five years or as determined by further changes to the legislation. An annual status update will be posted on the City of Kitchener website. Staff Contact Lolita Paroski Inclusion Services Coordinator 519-741-2200 ext 7226 Email: lolita.paroski@kitchener.ca 4 1 - 7 REPORT TO: Finance and Corporate Services Committee DATE OF MEETING: February 5, 2018 SUBMITTED BY: Brenda Johnson, Director of Accounting, 519-741-2200 Ext 7647 PREPARED BY: Brenda Johnson, Director of Accounting, 519-741-2200 Ext 7647 WARD(S) INVOLVED: All DATE OF REPORT: January 15, 2018 REPORT NO.: FCS-18-007 SUBJECT: 2018 Donations Made to City-Related Organizations __________________________________________________________________________ RECOMMENDATION: That for the fiscal year 2018, donations received by the City of Kitchener on behalf of City- related organizations, namely Minor Sports Groups, Neighbourhood Associations, KW Golf Committee,KW Chamber of Commerce Physicians Recruitment and Advocacy Group,and Tier 1 and Tier 2 grant recipients, be redistributed to those organizations as intended by the donor. BACKGROUND: The City of Kitchener is authorized to issue donation receipts for income tax purposes when a donation that legally qualifies as a gift is made to amunicipality as per Section 110 1a of the Income Tax Act. REPORT: Canada Revenue Agency requires that for donations to be eligible for income tax receipts, all funds must be made payable directly to the City of Kitchener and that any funds re-distributed to City-related organizations must be approved by Council. Council has granted this approval in the past on an annual basis. ALIGNMENT WITH CITY OF KITCHENER STRATEGIC PLAN: The recommendation of this report supports the achieve through the delivery of core service. *** This information is available in accessible formats upon request. *** Please call 519-741-2345 or TTY 1-866-969-9994 for assistance. 2 - 1 FINANCIAL IMPLICATIONS: The City issued approximately 200 donation receipts in 2017, totalling just over $62,000. Nine per cent of donations were made to the city in general and 91 per cent of the donations werere- directed to city-related organizations as requested by the donor. The cost to process receipts is minimal and includes postage,paper and staff processing time. COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT: INFORM advance of the council / committee meeting. ACKNOWLEDGED BY: Lesley MacDonald, Acting Deputy CAO Finance and Corporate Services 2 - 2 REPORT TO: Finance and Corporate Services DATE OF MEETING: 2018-02-05 SUBMITTED BY: Greg St. Louis, P. Eng., Director, Utilities PREPARED BY: Les Jones, P. Eng., Utilities Engineer (Gas) WARD(S) INVOLVED: ALL DATE OF REPORT: 2018-01-24 REPORT NO.: INS-18-004 SUBJECT: Mobile Workforce Management System Purchase Order Extension ___________________________________________________________________________ RECOMMENDATION: That an extension of the purchase order be issued to Clevest Solutions Inc. for the mobile workforce management system in the amount of $221,055, plus H.S.T. of $28,737.15, for a total of $249,792.15 BACKGROUND: Through a request for proposal process, the City awarded the development and implementation of a mobile workforce management system for the three (3) Kitchener Utilities business areas: water meter, gas meter, and the rental water heater program/gas service to Clevest Solutions Inc. for $587,540.11 including H.S.T. The Clevest mobile workforce management system is asoftwareinterface to SAP and will replace the current manual intensive paper based system used to manage gas and water and rental water heater activities.With this software,SAP service orders will be scheduled and dispatched to becompleted by a Utilities technician using a mobile device in the field.The automation will increase efficiency and provide a seamless integration with other systems within the City. *** This information is available in accessible formats upon request. *** Please call 519-741-2345 or TTY 1-866-969-9994 for assistance. 3 - 1 REPORT: This report is being brought to council for approval in accordance with the Purchasing By-Law 2017-106, as the additional funding request is greater than $100,000 or 10% of the original contract price. Within the request for proposal process, staff looked for vendors to propose various systems which would provide a solution which would include varying levels of configuration and integration with our existing financial system SAP. The request for proposal process focused on obtaining the solution which provided the best value and staff wanted to enable the potential vendors to provide a creative solution to the resourcing constraint. During the initial stages of working with Clevest through the solution design document, it was identified that a significant amount of dedicated staff time would be required under their plan.Clevest had proposed a twelve (12) month project, from start-up to project completion in the Request For Proposal. This plan required blended project tasks so that all Utilities business areas would be engaged at the same time.Although this approach may be efficient for an aggressive project timeline, it was soon realized that staff could not devote the proposed amount of time on the development of the software, without affecting their day to day duties. This approach would likely impede or stop work groups within Utilities from completing their daily work and could ultimately prohibit customers receiving gas, water or rental water services in a timely fashion. Staff considered backfilling the positions however, itwas estimated that in order for City staff to accommodate the timeline, up to five (5) City staff would have to be dedicated to the project essentially full time during this twelve (12) month span. Based on the cost and learning curve required for these positions, this was not pursued. Working together, Clevest and the City identified that changing the approach to be multi-phased and extending it over an eighteen (18) month period will allow City staff to concentrate on the implementation of the software that affects their specific business area. Essentially, staff will be required to be engaged on project tasks that only affect their business area for shorter periods of time, with longer breaks to allow them to complete their regular duties, and minimize delays in delivering core services.This will also allow for any adjustments to the implementation/ training approach from lessons learned, for subsequent rollout to the other business areas. To accommodate this change Clevest will need their configuration and implementation teams to be dedicated to the project longer and to be engaged in three separate testing ort the three City workgroups. From the Clevest viewpoint, this will be aless efficient process requiring them to dedicate more resources. As an example, during the later stages of the project as one team is engaged in user acceptance testing for City business area, another team is working on configuration and implementation for the other two City business areas. 3 - 2 The extended implementation schedule will also require greater onsite presence by Clevest. Clevest has increased the number of onsite visits to ensure thorough requirements gathering, proper training of City staff as trainers and support during the separate rollout. Increased onsite visits will ensure better communication between our teams, lower the chances of unexpected project delays due to misinterpretations or missing information thereby reducing the likelihood of change requests and additional costs. The extension of the purchase order also incorporates the purchase (including maintenance and support for a ten year period) of two software tools. The first software is a routing tool called Nokia HERE which assists the scheduling engine to provide optimal routing and therefore sequencing of appointments within the Clevest solution. The alternative to utilizing the Nokia HERE software tool is to create the module.Using the ESRI software would require enabling the Network Analyst module within the Citys ESRI licencing agreement with an associated cost greater than using Nokia HERE software. The second software is a configuration tool called Genesis. With the purchase of the Genesis configuration tool, the City will be able to make any future modifications to the system without requiring the procurement of services from Clevest and will enable emerging end user business requirements to be completed in a timely manner. This ability to implement any modifications in a short period of time will provide City field technicians to see visible response to their feedback leading to greater ownership and adoption of the technology. Often these modification projects can have a cost between $15,000 to $45,000 depending on the scope of the requested changes and based on the cost benefit analysis, the purchase of this software configuration tool would be justified in the event the City has three modification projects within a 10 year period. ALIGNMENT WITH CITY OF KITCHENER STRATEGIC PLAN: vision through the delivery of core service. 3 - 3 FINANCIAL IMPLICATIONS: The net cost for this tender (A), is fair and reasonable for a purchase of this scope and the upset limit is within the budget allowance (B) provided within the budget. The Operating costs are for 10 years annual maintenance. The estimated surplus (D) will remain in the account to fund similar work conducted by the City. P16-055 Mobile Workforce Management System as at Jan. 24, 2018 Original PO Extension Estimated Cost TenderRequestedNew Total Proposal P16-055 costs, including HST587,540.11 249,792.15 837,332.26 less: HST rebate(67,593.11)(28,737.15)(96,330.26) Net Cost Being Awarded519,947.00 221,055.00 741,002.00 A Projected Costs: Hardware purchases -tablets273,179.71 Staff Time -data conversion100,000.00 100,000.00 Total Estimated Cost for this Phase of Work619,947.00 221,055.00 1,114,181.71 C Funding Available Operating Costs134,947.00 60,825.00 195,772.00 Capital Costs493,409.71 425,000.00 918,409.71 Total Budget for this Phase of Work628,356.71 485,825.00 1,114,181.71 B Estimated Surplus/(Deficit) forthis Phase of Work (B -C)8,409.71 -D This project has been in the capital budget since 2015. With this proposed increase, which is funded by the 2018 approved budget, the Clevest software solution is still significantly lower cost than the other proposals which had been received for this project, and provides the best value to theCity COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT: INFORM with the agenda in advance of the council / committee meeting. PREVIOUS CONSIDERATION OF THIS MATTER: FCS-17-116 Award of the Mobile Workforce Management System June 5, 2017 Committee of the Whole ACKNOWLEDGED BY: Cynthia Fletcher,Executive Director,Infrastructure Services 3 - 4 REPORT TO: Finance and Corporate Services Committee DATE OF MEETING: February 5, 2018 SUBMITTED BY: Dan Murray, Director of Technology Innovation and Services, 519-741-2200 x7825 PREPARED BY: Dan Murray, Director of Technology Innovation and Services Justin Watkins, Manager of Digital Transformation and Strategy WARD(S) INVOLVED: All DATE OF REPORT: January 22, 2018 REPORT NO.: FCS-18-009 SUBJECT: Digital Kitchener 2017-2018 Update ___________________________________________________________________________ RECOMMENDATION: THAT staff be directed to begin work on the proposed opportunities for Digital Kitchener in 2018, as outlined in FCS-18-009. BACKGROUND: As council will recall, work began in January 2015 to create a new digital strategy for the City of Kitchener. Over the course of 18 months, staff developed and implemented a technology strategies.These engagement efforts included, but were not limited to: Reaching roughly 150 staff fr through workshops, questionnaires and in-person interviews Hosting sessions with postsecondary students at the University of Waterloo and Wilfred Laurier University Soliciting ideas from local tech leadership and other community visionaries Brave Symposium (June 2015) Reaching over 800 online users through two social media campaigns Co-developing a questionnaire with a local non-profit that generated 440 responses *** This information is available in accessible formats upon request. *** Please call 519-741-2345 or TTY 1-866-969-9994 for assistance. 4 - 1 The result of these efforts was anew, multi-year vision for the use of information and technology called Digital Kitchener. Approved by council in January 2017, Digital Kitchener focuses on four strategic objectives: Connected: building smarter infrastructure to become a more competitive, more productive and more attractive place to live and work. Innovative: inspiring a community of creative minds to drive change that has meaningful impact. On Demand: enhancing access to open data and online services. Inclusive: improving digital literacy and access so that Kitchener can be a community where no citizen is left behind. Digital Kitc deployment of technology solutions, staff have utilized a more flexible approach to implementation through annual work planning. By selecting five to six focused opportunities on a yearly basis, Digital Kitchener has been able to exercise greater flexibility in pursuing the best path forward rather than betied to a static, tactical work plan. It has also generated more opportunities for the City to create excitement around Digital Kitchener as a distinct body of work. This report provides work plan and its proposed work for 2018. REPORT: Digital Kitchener 2017 Work Plan Below is a summary of ThemeFocusOutcome Since January 2017, Kitchener has participated in an internet speed test pilot by the Canadian Internet Registry Authority. We will seek to better During that periodnearly understand what motivates Connected10,000 tests have been run new investment in by Kitchener residentsand fibre/wireless infrastructure. businesses. The insights from the speed test later became an asset inworking with the Region 4 - 2 of Waterloo to support the Southwestern Integrated Fibre Technology (SWIFT) networkproject.This work willcontinue into 2018. This opportunity was retrofit of street lights to LED. The conversionand installation of the IoT We will build one of the first network was completed in city-wide Internet of Things 2017. (IoT)mesh networks in Canada.Work to optimize these street lights, including dimming,has already commenced and will continue into 2018. A recommendation to establish an innovation lab at Communitech was approved by council in February. The Digital Kitchener Innovation Lab was officially launched on November 28, 2017.Its operations are now We will adopt start-up underway and will continue Innovativebehaviors to better challenge throughout 2018-2020. our status quo. Kitchener is also participating in the Open Data Exchange (ODX) National Civic Challenge. Two opportunities have been identified as part of this endeavor, which will continuein 2018. Many online service We will make our data more projects have been On Demandmeaningful by putting it in the completed in 2017 that hands of more people.align with this commitment, including: 4 - 3 A new open data websitewith a consistent look and feel asother municipalities within Waterloo region The completion of Tax and Utility Portal Arefresh of Kitchener.ca A comprehensive review of -Fi We will propose one ofthe network and publicaccess first minimum public computers is currently Inclusive standards for computer and underway.Targeted internet access in Canada.completion of this review is spring 2018. While only in its first year, the work of Digital Kitchener has enjoyed great success. In addition to both local and national media coverage of our efforts, Digital Kitchener has also been profiled by several publications; showcased at various conferences; and a recipient of the Willis Municipal Innovation Award (Canadian Association of Municipal Administrators). These opportunities have all allowed Kitchener to continue telling its story more effectively both here at home and around the world. A Look Ahead at 2018 While much of the work pursued in 2017 will continue into the coming year, staff have also been assessing further opportunities Areas for opportunity in 2018 include: ThemeOpportunity Workingwith local stakeholders,including the Region of Waterloo,toprepare forthe implementation of the Southwestern Integrated Fibre Technologynetwork (SWIFT). Connected Undertaking 5G cellular technology research in preparation forfuture private sector deployment. Participation in a regional application for the Government Innovative 4 - 4 Exploration of more functional, collaborative work space at Kitchener facilitiesfor staff and community groups. The Digital Kitchener Innovation Lab will beundertaking itsfirst year of Internet of Things (IoT) pilot projects. This willbeginwith sensor integrationintoournarrowband network, streetlight optimizationand data collection/ analysis. Development of a new digital service model to improve the design and delivery of city services through technology (internal/external). On Demand Piloting of cloud technologies and deployment of Windows 10across the Kitchener public service to increase mobility, collaboration and productivity. A more comprehensive approach to City-facilitated inclusioninitiatives, including detailed plans for public Wi- Inclusive Fi improvements and the delivery of public access computers. These proposed areas of opportunity in 2018 will be presented at committee on February 5. As with the work of Digital Kitchener in 2017, certain actions will be brought forward to council for further consideration in the form of a staff report, including any financial considerations. ALIGNMENT WITH CITY OF KITCHENER STRATEGIC PLAN: Strategic Priority: Effective and Efficient City Services Strategy: 5.2 - Improve the design and delivery of city services so that they provide what citizens want in the most reliable, convenient and cost efficient way Strategic Action: #68 - Corporate Technology Strategic Plan and Digital Strategy FINANCIAL IMPLICATIONS: No financial implications at this time. Any initiatives resulting from Digital Kitchener with budget implications will be brought forward to council for consideration. 4 - 5 COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT: INFORM advance of the council / committee meeting. CONSULT The Digital Kitchener Strategy was approved in January 2017 after extensive consultation with stakeholders. COLLABORATE collaboration with various internal and external partners. ACKNOWLEDGED BY: Lesley MacDonald, Acting DCAO of Finance and Corporate Services 4 - 6