
Back in 2009, I wrote that the collapse of journalism wasn’t just a business crisis but a breakdown of civic infrastructure, and that ordinary people would need to step in to help hold it up. That systems lens shaped everything that followed.I design and operate civic signal systems — trust-based, two-way information networks that help communities stay oriented in both calm and crisis.For more than fifteen years, these systems have supported communities during disasters, long recoveries, and everyday civic life, while also informing journalists and public agencies.Alongside an active licensed professional planning practice, I founded Jersey Shore Hurricane News (JSHN) in 2011, a large-scale civic signal network that now serves more than 260,000 people across New Jersey.During Superstorm Sandy, when formal systems were overwhelmed, the New Jersey Office of Emergency Management coordinated with JSHN to use verified public reports for real-time situational awareness and storm-surge rescue requests.The work later expanded into humanitarian operations. After Hurricane Maria, I designed and field-led Información como Ayuda in Puerto Rico, a civic signal system built under collapse conditions that reached more than one million residents and operated for three years.This work also led to seven years of reporting with WHYY, recognition as a White House Champion of Change, and global advisory work with Internews on information ecosystem analysis.I think of this approach as Signal Architecture: treating verified, context-aware public knowledge as infrastructure that must hold under real-world conditions.Today I am formalizing this architecture —
intake → pattern detection → verification → sensemaking → public briefing —
so it can be adopted and operated by newsrooms and civic institutions.In many ways, civic signal systems function like early warning systems for communities, detecting and organizing signals about changing conditions in real time.The next essential utility isn’t just water, power, or broadband.It’s trustworthy information flow.