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Santa Fe staff outline citywide asset‑management rollout, select OpenGov and plan AI risk tool
Summary
City water and public‑works staff told the Public Works and Utilities Committee on Jan. 6 that they have selected OpenGov for asset‑management software, plan to procure a machine‑learning tool to target high‑risk mains, and will build a public‑works work‑order/GIS system tied to sidewalks funding and BPAC direction.
Taylor Jurgens, an engineer with the City of Santa Fe water division, told the Public Works and Utilities Committee on Jan. 6 that the city has selected OpenGov as its asset‑management software vendor and has finalized the scope of work with the firm. Jurgens said the OpenGov contract is in review and staff expects implementation to take about six to nine months once the contract is placed.
The asset program covers the water division’s infrastructure and will be rolled out across public utilities, wastewater and the city’s bus depot division (BDD), Jurgens said. “Really, add all this up, and we have roughly a billion dollars in assets excluding BDD,” he said. He described features the city expects to use from OpenGov, including work‑order management, life‑cycle cost analysis, capital improvement planning, GIS integration and a mobile app for field crews.
Jurgens also described plans to procure a second tool — described in the presentation as a machine‑learning model…
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