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Hi Paul,
I asked Richard and he assured me that the project was not dead but he also mentioned that it may have some issues based on the project sponsor.
I am not sure how much background you want on the project and realize that I can only give a historical perspective.
The project started as a request from the City Administrator’s Office to the Innovation Office in Department of Technology to help find a software product that will allow the sharing of contacts between departments. Contacts would be neighborhood groups, other organizations (business, churches, etc.), and individuals. The goal was to create a database that would allow a single view of the contact’s main information such as Name, maybe address, maybe phone, maybe email, related associations and Interests. The vision was then for each department to store individual metadata on the contact. The contact would have the ability to change their main information and each department could change their stored metadata on the contact.When this project kicked off, it was stated in the proposal that:
• Application content will be maintained by GSA.
• The online database will require a partial FTE to maintain after delivery
And
• Funding by Members of the Working GroupThe funding was to be used to hire consultants that would manipulate the open source product named CiviCRM to fit our usecase. The fact that the funding was never secured meant that I continued to work on a proof of concept but a final product would likely never come to fruition.
As you know I have l left the innovation team and have handed off the project to Phebe Wang and Richard Isen. I don’t believe there has been much progress on the project and I have reiterated to them that the project’s success is contingent on it being funded. As far as I know, that has not occurred.
And the then we got this email from Richard Isen
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