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Electronic voting in Niimi. (Niimi City) |
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KEEPING IN TOUCH:
Local Governments Make Use of IT
August 7, 2002
Many local governments are trying a number of different
ideas to revitalize their areas, and information technology is proving
to be one of the most promising methods. Remote towns and villages have
high hopes that IT will allow them to overcome the disadvantages that
come from being located so far from metropolitan areas.
Village Quadruples "Population" Through
E-mail
Oguchi (site is Japanese only) is
a village located in Ishikawa Prefecture. With fewer than 800 residents,
Oguchi is the smallest municipality in all of Ishikawa. In November 1999,
though, this village office launched what it calls the "E-mail Oguchi
Citizens Program," and as of July 2002 its virtual population had
grown to include 3,251 people across Japan. Anyone can register online
to receive an e-mail magazine published by the village office, and most
of the subscribers live outside Oguchi. About half of the readers reside
in Ishikawa Prefecture, but many of the others are located in cities like
Tokyo and Osaka and even in faraway places like Hokkaido to the north
and Okinawa to the south.
One of the good things about e-mail is that distance is never an issue;
subscribers can receive their copies of the e-mail magazine from the village
office in an instant, no matter where they may be. The magazine offers
seasonal information, informs readers about such events as organized hikes
in the woods, and provides details pertaining to local ski resorts and
hot springs. People are encouraged to make inquiries by e-mail if they
desire additional information.
Four times a year, the village office holds a get-together for all the
"netizens" of Oguchi via e-mail. People from outside the village
are taking part in the events, and the local tourism industry is seeing
some benefits. Some of the participants say that they have become attached
to Oguchi through being in contact with its residents.
New System Improves Transparency in Bidding
Procedure
Kanagawa Prefecture's Yokosuka
City is making an effort to bring its city office online, and the
local government launched what it calls the "Online Bidding System"
in 1999. The computerized system has greatly improved transparency in
public-works projects by handling the entire process from when companies
make bids until the contractor is chosen.
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Yokosuka had already put in place a system for expanding
competition among firms in the bidding process, and the new online system
has taken this effort one step further. Information on each order is posted
publicly on the city office's website, and interested contractors can
download an application form. After filling in the relevant information,
they can send it back online. After reviewing applications, the city office
then decides whether or not the contractors are qualified. Once a decision
has been made, the city office posts the results of the successful bid
along with the other bids on the Internet. One contractor said of the
new system, "The winning bidder is no longer chosen arbitrarily,
and everything is now above board."
Other local governments have expressed a great deal of interest in
this system and have made inquiries to the city office.
Electronic Voting Debuts in Japan
Electronic voting was tried for the first time in Japan this past June
in Okayama Prefecture's Niimi
City (site is Japanese only), as citizens chose their mayor and representatives for the municipal
assembly by touching the names of candidates displayed on a computer screen.
People's choices were stored on CompactFlash cards, and once the polls
had closed, these cards were taken to a central location where the votes
were counted electronically.
There were two candidates for mayor and 22 candidates for 18 positions
in the municipal assembly. A total of 19,381 people cast ballots, a figure
equal to more than 86% of registered voters in the city. While two officials
tallied all of the electronic ballots and had the results within just
25 minutes, the 1,763 absentee ballots that were cast required 56 workers
and two hours to count by hand. Electronic voting has proven to be very
efficient, and the example in Niimi has increased the chances of it being
embraced across Japan.
Copyright (c) 2002 Japan
Information Network. Edited by Japan Echo Inc. based on domestic Japanese
news sources. Articles presented here are offered for reference purposes
and do not necessarily represent the policy or views of the Japanese
Government. |
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