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CalAlert

Envisioning a universal Emergency Alert System for the State of California

CalAlert

CalAlert is a consolidated emergency alert and response system. This system allows residents and visitors to California to view information from multiple verified state and federal agencies and local, crowdsourced information. This system allows local municipalities, police,  fire, and other emergency response organizations to push information with little to no overhead.

The climate crisis is the existential threat we will all face in the upcoming decades. In 2020 alone over 4 million acres burned in California. Fires, hurricanes, and floods are only going to get worse, so we must build accessible platforms and communications infrastructure to warn people of danger.

Sign up flow

Designed to gather helpful information to local fire departments and law enforcement.

Customizable Loading screens for Local agencies

Agencies can use custom images or choose from a palette of colors to create a branded visual design.

Cal Bear Systemmap

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CityTestSF

CityTestSF is a Covid19 appointment-only testing spot for essential workers by the City of San Francisco in partnership with Color, Carbon Health, and One Medical. My team at SF Digital services designed the onsite signage, the online booking system, and a solution for safe distance on-site communications.

Rapid response in a global emergency

 
 
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CityTestSF is a Covid19 appointment only testing spots for essential workers by the City of San Francisco in partnership with Color, Carbon Health, and One Medical. My team at SF Digital services designed the onsite signage, the online booking system, and a solution for safe distance on-site communications.

Things we considered:

Clarity.
Being clear about what this is, who it is for, and what to expect.

Safety
From gathering information prior to arrival to anticipating questions and creating a safe way to handle questions so we never put people working on the test site in harm’s way.

Friendliness
Getting a test for a potentially dangerous virus is scary. We wanted people to know we care. And did this by using some small touches like simply emojis in strategic areas to take the edge off a stressful situation.

Consistency
It had to feel like it came from SF. We wanted to make sure that from the first touchpoint like an email, or poster, to the test results, everything felt like a cohesive system.

One of the many services we are launching to help the people of San Francisco and the people who protect and serve them.

Learn about it at:

https://sf.gov/citytestsf

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Design in the time of a pandemic

This last month has been the most rewarding time I have had in years. I have been delighted to be able to roll up my sleeves and pitch in to help during this crisis.

Going digital, fast.

In the Fall of 2018 I saw an opportunity that I couldn’t possibly turn down.  I saw an opening for the Design Director for the City and County of San Francisco Digital Services.  The fact that I already had a job was certainly a deep complication, but the opportunity to serve the city I love to lead the design team and apply what I have learned all these years in tech and design was too tempting to pass up.

The first few months were an adjustment.  I had a new team who didn’t know me and who I didn’t know either. While I understand the hierarchies and politics of big companies, I didn’t know how to navigate the waters of Government from the inside. I found that the timelines were paced differently than I was used to, and while the problems we were solving were complex, they were not complex in the more experimental/pushing the envelope on technology that I was used to. I thought the biggest challenge ahead of me for 2020 was design operations, scaling the team, and evolving the existing design system. And then, the COVID-19 Pandemic happened. 

The first signs things were changing were so small they were almost imperceptible.  I attended a conference in Milan, Italy, and we discussed the possibility of something major happening, but still, it was in a distant, academic way.  And then came the day we were told to work from home.  And suddenly, everything sped up and slowed down at once.

The city suddenly needed to go digital and fast. In a month or so my team delivered:

High-level UX flow for worker and family first program

SF.gov COVID Response Content News and information for everyone in the city

Workers and Family Fund: A program to help small businesses pay sick leave to employees

Electronic Plan Review: An online Electronic plan review process and service to keep critical building permits moving along 

SF VolunteerAn online service for people to volunteer to help seniors

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One of the mentions The Mayor made of a program I worked on.

City TestSF A COVID testing site and the online scheduling tool used to book an appointment and a touch-free communications platform for on-site communications.

My team members worked in the Emergency response command center and created the signage anyone could see throughout the city.

I was delighted to be able to roll up my sleeves and pitch in to help during this crisis. I have been proud and amazed by the team who has been working tirelessly to make this frightening and bewildering situation calmer and organized for the staff of the city and, most importantly, to the residents and businesses of San Francisco that we serve. 

 

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