
Back in 2009, I wrote that the collapse of journalism wasn’t just a business crisis but a breakdown of civic infrastructure, and that communities themselves would need to help hold the information system together. That systems lens shaped everything that followed.I design and operate civic signal systems: real-time, two-way networks that turn what communities are seeing in real time into verified, actionable intelligence.I’ve been building and running these systems for more than 15 years -- through disasters, long recoveries, and everyday civic life -- where the stakes are clarity, trust, and timing.I founded Jersey Shore Hurricane News in 2011, a network that now serves more than 260,000 people across New Jersey. During Hurricane Sandy, when formal systems were overwhelmed, the New Jersey Office of Emergency Management used verified public reports from the network for real-time situational awareness and storm-surge rescue coordination. The same system has since supported communities through hurricanes, blizzards, wildfires, the pandemic, and long recoveries.After Hurricane Maria, I extended this into humanitarian response in Puerto Rico, designing and field-leading Información como Ayuda, a civic signal system built under collapse conditions that ultimately reached more than one million people.This led to seven years of reporting with WHYY, recognition as a White House Champion of Change, and global advisory work with Internews across disaster-affected regions and fragile contexts globally.Alongside this, I maintain an active licensed professional planning practice, operating within formal land use systems with litigation-grade accountability. That work reinforces how I approach information: not as content, but as infrastructure that must perform under real conditions.This is signal architecture: designing and operating systems that maintain shared situational awareness for communities and institutions.Today I’m formalizing this into a replicable model for newsrooms and civic institutions to operate in real time.Because the gap is no longer whether information exists.It’s whether anyone is organizing it in time for people to use it.