A public memory layer for local government
Local government produces more public information than any resident can follow. Eunomia tracks resident concerns, public meetings, official responses, decisions, and unresolved follow-ups in one durable, searchable civic record — so residents, officials, and staff can all see what's been raised, what's been answered, and what still needs follow-up.
Live example: Mt. Lebanon, PA runs Eunomia as a working municipal instance.
Residents care deeply about their streets, parks, and budgets — but the record of who asked for what, and what came of it, is scattered across places no one can search later.
A pothole or a zoning worry surfaces in a Facebook thread, gets a few comments, then scrolls away. Next month, someone raises it again from scratch.
Concerns land in individual email inboxes. There's no shared memory, so follow-up depends on who happened to read it and whether they remember.
When a resident asks 'what happened with that?', no one can point to a clear, public answer — including whether an official ever responded at all.
In Eunomia, each concern becomes an accountability object with a public timeline. Anyone can see where an issue stands and how it got there — the shared memory a community can actually rely on.
Submitted
A resident raises a concern.
Verified resident
Submitter confirmed as a real local resident.
Reached N supporters
Neighbors add their support on the record.
Referred
Routed to the right department or commissioner.
Acknowledged
An official confirms they've seen it.
Discussed at a meeting
Linked to the agenda item where it was raised.
Official response
A public, on-the-record answer from the town.
Resolved
Closed with what actually changed.
Neutral by design. When no one has answered yet, Eunomia simply states it: “No official response has been recorded yet.” No spin, no blame — just the current state of the record.
Every feature exists to make the record clearer, fairer, and easier to act on.
Only confirmed residents can submit and back issues, so the record reflects the community — not bots or out-of-town noise.
Each ward and official gets a clear view of open concerns, response times, and what's awaiting an answer.
AI-generated summaries turn dense meeting minutes into readable recaps, linked back to the issues they touch.
Residents choose public, verified-anonymous, or private — participating on the record without oversharing personal details.
Similar reports merge into one issue with combined support, so the same pothole isn't tracked ten different ways.
Issues are referred to the right department or official automatically, with the hand-off recorded in the timeline.
A recurring summary of what was raised, what was answered, and what's still open — sent to officials and residents alike.
Clear, non-partisan status labels — including 'No official response has been recorded yet' — keep the focus on facts.
Every state change is timestamped and public, creating a durable civic record anyone can review later.
Eunomia is low-friction to adopt and re-deployable for any municipality — configured per town, not rebuilt per town.
Wards, departments, officials, and branding are set through configuration, so a new municipality can stand up its own instance quickly.
Built to WCAG AA — keyboard-navigable, screen-reader friendly, and readable, because civic tools have to work for everyone.
A timestamped public trail supports transparency, records requests, and honest year-over-year reporting.
Summarization and routing models are pluggable, so towns aren't locked to a single AI vendor or a black box.
From setup to a standing habit of follow-through, in four steps.
Set up wards, departments, officials, privacy tiers, and branding for your municipality.
Verified residents raise concerns and back the ones that matter, building a shared, public record.
Staff and commissioners acknowledge, route, and answer issues — every step visible in the timeline.
A Civic Pulse report recaps what was raised, answered, and left open — closing the loop with the community.
Eunomia can run as an independent civic platform — operated by a nonpartisan party outside the government (the Mt. Lebanon pilot is run this way by base2ML) — or as an official municipal tool the town operates itself. Either way, the record is public and the accountability markers stay neutral — the goal is a trustworthy shared memory, whoever holds the keys.
Talk to us about a Eunomia instance for your town, or explore a working one first.