Quick links: Mayor’s migrant/AI challenge | Colorado’s $14M quantum campus | Colorado unemployment rate up to 4% | Interest rate cut | Take the poll: AI in your life?
When it comes to adopting artificial intelligence technology for the city of Denver, the potential misuse or harm caused to consumers is top of mind. But sometimes, the boring stuff is what attracts the attention of someone like Mayor Mike Johnston, who with his team dreamed up this week’s DenAI Summit.
“I think the places where we find the greatest concerns are around things like national security and warfare, and particularly around personally identifiable health information or other data,” Johnston said. “But we think there are much simpler use cases that we can adopt earlier.”
Take for example, Boltwise, he said. The Denver startup uses AI to identify nuts, bolts, fasteners and other hardware that professional contractors need for bids, quotes and construction projects. In an industry where contractors typically describe what they need, the apparently wide inability to nail down the exact nut could delay a project. AI takes the descriptions to find the right items without the back-and-forth or guesswork.
“If you saw Boltwise, they’re changing the way you prioritize ordering nuts and bolts — literally nuts and bolts — that can be much simpler, much faster than having someone from our general services team have to run down to Home Depot every couple days and search for 75 new bolts,” Johnston said. “We think these are the kind of easy, compelling innovations that will make the city run more smoothly.”
The city is also “having conversations” with CivCheck to pilot AI tech that would speed up the city permitting process.
“We are piloting an AI tool on permitting intake right now, which is when you just apply for a permit. Often it takes eight days for us just to intake, which is just to give us your name and info and the rest,” he said.
CivCheck relies on AI to make sure applicants fill out forms completely and correctly. The Boston company’s AI software helped the city of Honolulu reduce plan review time by 70% by educating applicants, finding code conflicts and prescreening so city staffers didn’t waste time with incomplete or noncompliant forms.
Could AI have helped Denver’s migrant influx?
But here’s one use case that Johnston put out for any interested AI startup: help with the migrant crisis. Thousands of immigrants arrived in the city in the past year and needed help filing asylum claims, which can be a 40-hour legal process, he said. That meant they needed translators and attorneys, not to mention the individual must fill out numerous state and federal forms.
“This would be a great place where there could be an AI tool to do this,” he said. “Someone could give a 20-minute interview and we could just say, tell us your story, how you got here, where you came from, what the experience was.”
AI would then translate it from Spanish to English and fill out the appropriate spots in the 40-page questionnaire. Then instead of a lawyer working with the applicant and translator to do the interview and fill out the form over dozens of hours, it could take just one hour.
Don’t Miss: AI & Colorado
Sept. 27, 2024: Curious about how generative AI is developing in Colorado? Then don’t miss this panel discussion with state and city IT officials, investors and startups. >> Details
“We could 100X the number of asylum claims we could have done,” he said. “We would have used just as many immigration attorneys but just would have been able to use their time more efficiently. … These are places where technology solutions could be win-win.”
Someone needs to build it, though, and that’s why DenAI was a worthwhile effort for Denver, he said.
“But if it did exist,” he said, “we would use it.”
Earlier: Artificial intelligence takes center stage at Denver’s inaugural DenAI Summit
Colorado’s $14 million quantum update
Earlier this week, the state’s quantum Tech Hub had a ceremonial groundbreaking for a 70-acre campus in Arvada, the former home of oil-shale company Tosco and its old 180-foot lift pipe used to research the extraction of oil shale from rocks. But the fresh mound of dirt won’t be where the action will take place. The main operations of the Elevate Quantum Consortium are to the east, where about 60,000 square feet of buildings sit in need of renovation.
Colorado School of Mines paid $14 million for the property and plans to spend another $6 million or so to fix up the site by turning the existing facilities into labs, clean-space fabrication plants and offices. More details of how much money is going into the project is here: “Colorado’s multimillion dollar investment in quantum gets 70-acre campus in Arvada”
Some other bits that didn’t get into the main story:
Sun economy stories you may have missed
➔ Department of Homeland Security adds sniffing device to AI tools helping fight wildfires in Colorado. Gilpin County was the first place in the U.S. to adopt a sensor with the smelling power of a dog that has detected three fires, including one that was extinguished and reignited >> Read story
➔ Denver’s newly homeless can soon receive guidance and resources from others who used to live on the streets. The neighborhood resource hub, which is expected to launch in early 2025, will link those in need to critical services, such as housing, healthcare, job services and help with credit card debt >> Read story
➔ Colorado state budget woes grow as property tax cuts, Medicaid costs and economic slowdown take a toll. Colorado lawmakers will have to cut an estimated $900 million in spending or dip into the state’s reserves to balance next year’s budget as tax collections shrink and spending grows >> Read story
➔ A Colorado cemetery’s red phone booth to the dead dials up tension over what counts as a memorial. Nancy Brockman’s larger-than-life resting place — her gift to those left behind as she fought cancer — has Silverton talking >> Read story
➔ Billionaire philanthropist MacKenzie Scott funds 7 grants for Colorado infants, toddlers with $2.5M gift. The grants from the nonprofit Early Milestones Colorado focus on prenatal and birth-to-3 issues >> Read story
➔ WM’s $100 million Denver East sorting center aims to boost Colorado recycling. Gov. Jared Polis and local officials break ground on massive complex to support surge in state’s “circular economy” effort >> Read story
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Interest rates dropped. Big whoop, readers say
As expected, the Federal Reserve cut interest rates Wednesday by a half point. But mortgage rates went up the next day. That’s because the cut has long been expected and, as Mortgage News Daily reported, the 30-year-fixed rate increased a day after the Fed cut to 6.17% because “it was never about the rate cut itself,” says the housing news site.
What’s Working readers were largely in the same mindset, with 67.6% of the 102 folks responding to the latest reader saying they planned to do nothing when rates were cut. But about 15% said they’d buy a house, car or other big ticket item.
Some folks who shared a comment about what their plans were exactly included Tara from Fort Collins, who plans to continue paying off her existing debt and then get a home-equity loan to fix other parts of her home. Jim over in Highlands Ranch plans to buy a refrigerator and dishwasher.
A few folks who didn’t share their names mentioned they need to buy a newer car, build a garage or fix up their basement. One person from Maryland has been watching rates closely because they’re “retired and waiting to move to Colorado.”
But for sure, one industry that is feeling relief is residential real estate and all those who are supported by it. Says George Burson in Louisville about what he’s going to do:
“Be happy,” Burson wrote, “especially since one of my sons is a mortgage broker.”
Thanks for playing along and taking the poll everyone!
New reader poll: Thoughts on AI?
AI seems like it’s everywhere. But do you know where it is in Colorado? Share your thoughts in this fun little poll for What’s Working readers. ➔ cosun.co/WWai
Other working bits
➔ Colorado unemployment rate hits 4%. As the nation’s unemployment rate dropped one-tenth of a percentage point to 4.2%, Colorado’s rate went up by the same fraction in August. The last time the state was at 4% was January 2022. What happened in August? Roughly 2,200 more people were unemployed last month, outnumbering the 2,000 Coloradans who joined the labor force with a job. A look at the change in jobs still shows that jobs are growing, at 1.4% forever the past year (slightly below the nation’s growth of 1.5%). Employers added 7,400 jobs last month with the educational and health services industries adding the most. No industry had significant job declines. >> See the state’s August job report
➔ Colorado tops nation for growth in quitters, tied for 3rd for layoffs. That’s according to the July Job Openings and Labor Turnover survey by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. But these are growth rates, which caused the BLS to call the state out. But in looking at the data, Colorado ranked a bit lower for the month of July, the latest available. For job quitters, Colorado’s rate ranked second highest at 3.2% compared with number one Alaska at 3.5%. For all job separations, the state tied for fifth at 4.7%. Alaska, again, took the lead at 5.9%. While the monthly JOLTS data relies on small survey samples, the monthly trends help economists figure the state’s job situation. In July, that amounted to 1.7 job openings per unemployed Coloradan, or about where it’s been for months, according to our analysis. >> See JOLTS data
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