Twitter and Facebook are hardly the places most suburbanites turn for news about their garbage collection.
But in the past few months, Falcon Heights, Minnetonka and Edina have become suburban government pioneers, tapping Twitter to send instant alerts on everything from snow emergencies to spring sewer back-ups.
The Falcon Heights parks department also is posting all notices to summer staff on Facebook because it's "more efficient." And Eden Prairie regularly uploads videos on YouTube, including a city promotional video in 13 languages.
Suburbs across the metro are rushing to embrace social networking sites to reach younger residents, reduce publishing costs and spread the news instantly about city issues big and small.
The technology still attracts relatively few users, in part because it's new and in part because much of the "news" is not exactly urgent. ("Today is NOT recycling day," reports one posting.) But suburban leaders have high hopes for the future.
"Everybody's trying to figure out how to best do this, similar to when websites first became prevalent," said Justin Miller, Falcon Heights city manager. "Who can post? Who can publish? What's appropriate to put out there? These are the types of questions we think about."
Suburban governments are new to the social networking world, said Steve Lunceford, creator of govtwit.com, a new national website that tracks government organizations using Twitter. Twin Cities suburbs are ahead of the curve, he said.
"They're certainly at the forefront of local government reaching out to their citizens in new and different ways," said Lunceford, based in Washington, D.C.