CA Local Documents Digitization Project

Welcome to the IGS LoCAL Digitization Project(link is external)

“A publicly accessible, freely available, archived and preserved for the long-term digital collection of California local government information, intended to provide transparency to the work of local governments over time and contribute to positive policy change for California communities”

Project Description 

In the Summer of 2024, the IGS Library (IGSL) kicked off its multi-year California Local Government Documents digitization (LoCAL Dig) project.

IGSL in collaboration with the California State Library (CSL), UCLA Young Research Library (UCLA), and in partnership with the Internet Archive (IA), has launched the LoCAL Dig Project, a groundbreaking effort funded by the State of California. This multi-year effort aims to digitize over 10,000 local government publications from cities, counties, and regional agencies across California, creating an unparalleled digital resource for understanding local governance, land use, and public policy trends over time.

As one of California's three designated state depository libraries for local government documents (per CA Gov Code § 50110), IGSL has been collecting these invaluable materials for over a century. Per the local depository statute, we have an obligation to preserve and make these materials available for reference and research use. 

To meet this obligation,the LoCal Dig Project is both a large-scale print collection digitization effort as well as a digital collecting project. We will continue to collect and build a “born digital” collection of California local government documents in the coming years.   

An important aspect of the project is enhancing our collections’ metadata (MARC records) and creating original catalog records for a large portion of the materials. This is a resource intensive part of the project but integral for successful discovery, access and use of the materials through archive.org, OCLC, UC Library Search, and open web searches. 

Materials in scope for the project are local government publications from cities and counties as defined in CA Gov Code § 50001 - 50002. The three libraries were also depositories for regional governments, like the Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG), Sacramento Area Council of Governments (SACOG), and Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG); these publications are included in the digitization project. The library collections also contain many U.S. federal and state government publications that focus on California local areas, however they are not currently in scope for this part of the project.

Project Goals & Impact

  • Democratize access to California local government information via an accessible database for researchers and residents to better understand the history of local decisions, conduct and contribute their research and perspectives to local government, and improve their civic engagement, informed by historical context.

  • Provide easy access to local government information as digital content and low-barrier opportunities to use computationally-assisted tools to analyze this content across California jurisdictions and over time.

  • Improve government and governance through access to current and historical publications that will help policy makers make better informed decisions about the pressing issues impacting cities and counties in California. We hope that these materials will also aid in making changes to past policies that created systemic disadvantages to many local California communities of color and socioeconomically under-resourced communities.

Project Staff

  • Kris Kasianovitz, IGSL Library Director - Project Sponsor and Project Curator
  • Kathryn Stine, IGSL Digitization Project Planner,  Project Planner/Manager
  • Paul King, IGSL Library Supervisor,  Digitization Operations Manager
  • Robert Toyama, IGSL Cataloger, Cataloging/Metadata Lead 
  • Jordan Gerner, IGSL Collection and Circulation Specialist - Digitization Operations Lead, Metadata and Copy Cataloging
  • Elizabeth MacLeod, Internet Archive, Senior Manager of Satellite Digitization Services
  • Nick Norman, Internet Archive, Scribe Technician
  • Savannah Dewberry, Internet Archive Scribe Technician

Timeline and Milestones

Date Description (* = indicates a project milestone)
Jan. 2022* The Institute of Governmental Studies (IGS) at the University of California, Berkeley announces the receipt of major funding for the IGS Library (IGSL) through a sustaining partnership with the California State Library. The 2021-22 California State Budget includes $1.64 million to support the establishment of an online digital database of government documents and records, along with $460,000 in ongoing funding for IGSL collection and digitization efforts.
Aug. 2022 Kris Kasianovitz begins as new IGS Library Director. She is leading the new state-funded digitization initiative.
Aug. 2023 Library Digitization Coordinator Kathryn Stine begins at the IGS Library. Kathryn is responsible for and is instrumental in developing and launching the IGS Library's California local government documents digitization project plan.
October 2024 The IGSL team initiates workflows to get collection materials ready for digitization, including assessment, catalog work, physical preparation, and developing tracking reports.
June 2024* The IGS Library establishes a partnership with the Internet Archive (IA). IA will digitize and display local government documents on their web interface. IA sets up equipment and builds a digitization lab onsite at the IGS department location on the UC Berkeley campus. 
July 2024* Digitization begins! IGSL’s end-to-end digitization workflows are deployed and IA scribe technicians are fully trained to contribute to the digital collection.
Aug. 2024* California Local Government Documents Collection from the Institute of Governmental Studies Library appears live on IA website.
Oct. 2024* 1000th item digitized!
Nov. 2024 IA scribe technician Nick Norman wins the 2024 Anthem Best Use of Technology Award. The award is given in the category of “Best Use of Technology” and celebrates his work on the IGS digitization project among others. Nick’s essay submission for the award:  Scanning the Past to Empower the Future A Journey in Responsible Digital Archiving: From the Internet Archive
Nov. 2024 Local government documents from the Environmental Design library lent to IGS to be digitized and  included in the digital California Local Government Documents Collection.
Nov. 2024 5,000 items prepared for digitization, including 1,800+ digitized