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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for NYC Open Data Week
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260324T120000
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DTSTAMP:20260502T073027
CREATED:20260307T142200Z
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UID:10001944-1774353600-1774357200@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:What's New for Family History
DESCRIPTION:Ken Cobb and Marcia Kirk from the Department of Records and Information Services will present a discussion and demonstration of newly released voter registration records available on Ancestry.com. These records document the period from 1915-1956 and include several important events: women’s right to vote\, both World Wars\, and the Great Depression. \nOpen to researchers and people interested in researching genealogy\, family history\, local history\, voting patterns\, population movement. This is an in-person event at the NYC Department of Records and Information Services\, 31 Chambers Street\, NYC in Room 111.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/whats-new-for-family-history/
LOCATION:NYC Department of Records and Information Services\, 31 Chambers Street Room 111\, New York\, New York\, 10007\, United States of America
CATEGORIES:Presentation
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260324T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260324T130000
DTSTAMP:20260502T073027
CREATED:20260307T144456Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260311T160650Z
UID:10001882-1774353600-1774357200@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:NYC's Changing Landscape: Discover What's Being Built Around You
DESCRIPTION:We’ve all seen construction sites and scaffolding appear in our neighborhood\, tried to peek through the cracks and wondered: what are they building over there? This presentation will showcase how publicly available NYC Department of Buildings data can be brought together and deployed to give New Yorkers and industry pros alike a birds eye view on what’s rising up in their communities\, all at once and at a glance! \nJoin Bonnie Stefanick\, New Yorker and citizen data scientist\, through a high level overview of how the things that get built show up in permitting data using live demonstrations of data sets that capture the permitting process and a daily view of projects happening in NYC neighborhoods\, while giving a peek under the hood at the data in action from how it is pulled from the open data APIs and brought to life in tools.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/nycs-changing-landscape-discover-whats-being-built-around-you/
CATEGORIES:Presentation
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LOCATION:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/nycs-changing-landscape-discover-whats-being-built-around-you/
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260324T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260324T160000
DTSTAMP:20260502T073027
CREATED:20260303T150454Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260311T173155Z
UID:10001890-1774364400-1774368000@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:Exploring an Independent Perspective on Emergency Response Times
DESCRIPTION:The NYC Independent Budget Office (IBO) aims to enhance understanding of New York City’s budget\, public policy\, and economy through independent\, data-driven analysis. In this event\, IBO Budget and Policy Analyst Valerie Gudino will showcase how Open Data can be used to analyze and visualize fiscal years 2014-2024 citywide ambulance response times. Valerie will walk through how emergency response and dispatch data can be leveraged to examine patterns in emergency medical response by borough and citywide. This event is ideal for anyone interested in public safety\, emergency response or data visualization. Valerie will present the report findings and conclude with a Q&A session.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/exploring-an-independent-perspective-on-emergency-response-times/
CATEGORIES:Presentation
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LOCATION:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/exploring-an-independent-perspective-on-emergency-response-times/
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260324T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260324T170000
DTSTAMP:20260502T073027
CREATED:20260225T170737Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260311T154933Z
UID:10001861-1774368000-1774371600@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:The City That Never Sleeps: Forecasting NYC’s Noise Complaints with Bayesian Models
DESCRIPTION:This presentation looks at how everyday noise in New York City changes from neighborhood to neighborhood\, across the days of the week during the summer. Using several years of NYC 311 data\, it goes beyond simply counting complaints to ask a more practical question: how confident can we be that some areas are actually noisier than others? \nData Engineer Moses McCall will introduce Bayesian modeling in an intuitive\, non-technical way\, focusing on uncertainty as something we can measure rather than ignore. Interactive maps will be used alongside the analysis to make citywide patterns easy to explore and compare. Finally\, the models will be tested against more recent data to see how well these patterns hold up over time\, comparing what the models expected with what actually happened.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/the-city-that-never-sleeps/
CATEGORIES:Presentation
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LOCATION:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/the-city-that-never-sleeps/
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260324T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260324T180000
DTSTAMP:20260502T073027
CREATED:20260307T142049Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260318T145137Z
UID:10001925-1774371600-1774375200@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:Youth-Driven Map-Making with Open Data / Maps at MIXI Club
DESCRIPTION:In this session\, we present projects from Maps @ MIXI\, a mapping club about spatial justice\, open data\, and critical cartography. Throughout the year\, five NYC youth worked on four projects during the club in which they analyzed NYC Open Data and other open data sets like the US Census. The projects span a variety of topics – access to pools\, the housing crisis\, restaurant hygiene ratings\, and youth-targeting police activity. The projects are youth-driven and represent the questions youth bring to open data. \nFirst\, this will briefly introduce the Maps @ MIXI club. Then\, each youth/team will briefly discuss their project\, the motivation behind the work\, and the map they created. \nUnequal Pool Distribution Around NYC and How It Affects Overall Public Health by Zachary Kiselev\nHow can we use NYC Open Data to understand whether pool access is unevenly distributed between neighborhoods\, and how can this be used as a marker for overall public health? \nUsing NYC Open Data to Understand the Causes of New York City’s Housing Crisis by Oleksandra Borysova\nHow can NYC Open Data show why NYC has a housing crisis by looking at vacancy\, rents\, wages\, population changes\, transportation\, and Airbnb listings? \nPredicting Restaurant Hygiene Grades Across New York City by Gab Dechirico and Mariam Khan\nIn New York City\, to what extent do neighborhood socioeconomic indicators and cuisine types predict a restaurant’s likelihood of receiving an “A” hygiene grade\, after accounting for inspection frequency and violation patterns? \nPolicing and Youth: Analyzing Police Stops of Youth in New York City by Wen Chen\nHow does the racial composition of youth subjected to police stops within 700 feet of NYC public schools differ from the racial composition of youth residing in the surrounding census tracts?
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/youth-driven-map-making-with-open-data-maps-at-mixi-club/
CATEGORIES:Presentation
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LOCATION:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/youth-driven-map-making-with-open-data-maps-at-mixi-club/
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