In this episode
In December of 2019, a small, ad hoc team assembled for a 90-day experimental project. Called California Alpha, its goal was to help the state rethink government digital service delivery. Its members – picked from government and private sector – had never collectively worked together. Their mission was to create – in three months – a culture and product that embodied a new way of delivering services to Californians – one that focused on designing for user needs and challenged the status quo of digital delivery in state government.
This is the story of California Alpha, why it was stood up, how it worked, and the resulting impact it had on the government digital ecosystem, inside the state and beyond.
This is a series on California Alpha, where I speak with Angie Quirarte, who played a key role in its creation and then led the project’s work.
In this episode, Angie and I discuss setting the California Alpha foundation.
Links
- California domain name policy
- California open data policy
- CalData
- California web standards policy
- Digital Services Network
- California 2019 Budget- Creation of ODI
- How civic hackers helped California’s DMV get digital momentum
- Francis Maude 2013 Letter on Open Government and Digital Strategy in UK
About Angie
Angie Quirarte most recently served as Senior Advisor in the White House Office of Management and Budget where she led efforts to fix federal hiring and talent policy. She is a 2025 Federal 100 awardee. Angie has built digital service teams including leading Alpha, helped transform the California DMV, led the COVID-19 digital response team, matched hundreds of technologists in the public sector, and implemented policies and programs around open data, open source, web standards, and web accessibility.