City staff outlined two complementary communication and cultural projects at the Feb. 7 strategic session: a companion mobile app to expand resident notifications and a long‑range history‑digitization initiative.
City app and website: Staff described a CivicPlus companion app for the city website that would offer opt‑in push and text notifications, topic preferences (emergency alerts, events, parks), embedded calendar/YouTube meeting access, and targeted messaging to subscribers. Staff cautioned that full geofence push capability (sending alerts to all devices in a geographic polygon) is available but costly and can overshoot municipal boundaries; the planned approach emphasizes opt‑in subscriptions and better landing‑page signups to grow the audience.
History of Newport project: Historic‑preservation staff described scanning donated materials, newspapers and oral histories into a centralized SharePoint repository and feeding those documents into a constrained AI model to create an indexed, searchable archive and interactive learning tools. Staff said NKU has offered volunteer and graduate assistance and that a public portal, QR‑code wayfinding and classroom interactions are possible once source material and permissions are organized.
Why it matters: The app aims to reduce misinformation and provide direct city communication; the history project is intended to preserve local records and make them accessible for residents, researchers and schools.
Next steps: Staff will add clearer sign‑up prompts on the website, pilot the companion app signups and continue scanning archives into SharePoint with plans to make selected materials public over time.