Interview: Mayor of Surabaya
Tri Rismaharini’s priority has been to improve services using data.

Better collaboration This year, her priority has been to improve data sharing across agencies. Last month, she launched a new system that allows citizens to report emergencies through a single number - 112. “The system will record and directly inform the officials to handle the situation,” Rismaharini says. It “integrates several stakeholders which are responsible for handling disasters”, including the police, fire, health, sanitation, roads and IT departments. Surabaya also plans to use data to track services for the poor. The system will integrate population, poverty, healthcare and employment data. Sub-district officials will then be able to use it to monitor progress in poverty eradication, Rismaharini says. The former head of Surabaya’s parks department also keeps close tabs on the city’s cleanliness. She monitors the officials in charge and tracks the refuse trucks, she says. The story of her first term has been one of gadgets, data, and cross-cutting initiatives. All with a spot of greenery thrown in for good measure.