Local governments have never lacked data. What they have lacked, for much of their history, is the ability to interpret that data in ways that meaningfully shape action. Administrative systems have long captured information about housing applications, service complaints, inspection outcomes, benefit claims, and community needs, but these records were primarily designed for compliance and reporting rather than insight generation. As a result, many councils found themselves responding to crises they could see only after those crises had fully formed. In recent years, artificial intelligence and advanced analytics have begun to alter this dynamic. Rather than treating data as a static record of past activity, local governments are increasingly using predictive and machine learning techniques to anticipate future conditions, identify emerging risks, and support earlier intervention. This shift matters not only for efficiency, but for human outcomes. When services reach residents earlier, problems are often less severe, trust is easier to maintain, and solutions can be more supportive rather than corrective.
Adeola Yusuf (Thu,) studied this question.