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City Council reviews OpenGov demonstration for asset, procurement and grants software

December 10, 2025 | City Council , Ellsworth, Hancock, Maine


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City Council reviews OpenGov demonstration for asset, procurement and grants software
City officials and OpenGov representatives on Monday demonstrated a suite of cloud-based systems the city says would replace long-running paper-based processes for assets, procurement and grants management.

Charlie, the city manager, told the City Council the project is the administration's top policy initiative for this year and argued the tools would improve transparency, reduce wasted labor and help the city meet audit requirements. "This year, the kind of big policy initiative that I'm looking to move forward on is a digital modernization of really kind of the remaining pieces of city government, that are really still mostly in a paper based system," he said.

OpenGov engineers walked councilors through three modules. Jim Krausman, a solutions engineer, showed the enterprise asset-management map that ties GIS locations to individual work tasks and work orders and automatically records labor, equipment and material use. "I'm Jim Krausman. I'm 1 of the solution engineers here at OpenGov," he said before the demo. Krausman demonstrated mobile work-order completion, inventory reduction when materials are used and dashboards that roll up performance indicators (for example, average days to close requests and percent of requests closed).

Morgan Roberts, another OpenGov engineer, demonstrated procurement and contract-management features that publish opportunities, host vendor Q&A, build RFP templates and track contract milestones and insurance expirations. "You can do all of your purchasing and contract management with under under 1 solution," Roberts said, highlighting vendor access and audit trails.

Alan Corby gave a rapid overview of the grants-management tools: centralized grant records, budgeting and compliance tasks, expense tracking that can mirror the city's finance system, and calendar views to ensure reporting deadlines are not missed. Corby said the platform is designed to show where grant funds are allocated across capital projects and to produce post-award compliance reports.

Councilors and staff pressed OpenGov on integration and practical examples. Tabitha asked whether budgeted versus actual estimates are entered manually or learned by the system; Krausman said both options are available. Roddy, the parks and recreation director, described a holiday-lighting problem in which a third of lamppost outlets failed and said an asset-tracking system would have let crews identify exactly which posts needed repair. Pat, who said they work with the Maine Department of Transportation, endorsed the benefits of mapped coordinates and electronic records for bids and winter-material tracking.

Council members raised systems-integration questions about the city's existing finance software, Cassell. Staff said OpenGov would operate alongside Cassell in the near term and that a later, deeper integration or a "single source of truth" could be considered after implementation.

The city manager said the cost estimate for implementation is significant but potentially affordable from already-allocated TIF funds. He described the implementation as roughly $170,000 in the first year for professional services and onboarding, and about $65,000 per year after that for licensing and support, procured through the Sourcewell contract vehicle. The manager also cited recent missed reporting that nearly jeopardized large grants, and called improved grants management a priority.

No formal vote or contract award was taken during the presentation. Staff said they will circulate a memo with financing details and hold a follow-up session midweek; the city will continue evaluating whether to proceed and how to integrate the tools with existing systems.

Reporting note: quotes and attributions are taken from the meeting transcript and the speakers listed by name during the session.

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