MICHIGAN
State data will become more accessible with a little help from Google.
Google Inc. now is working to put 200 online databases from Michigan's Web site on its search engine.
The makeover, which is free of charge, should make it easier for people to look up state information, such as road closings and statewide Michigan Education Assesment Program, or MEAP, scores on the search engine.
"Our mission is to make as much information available to users as possible," said Katie Watson, a Google spokeswoman.
The data is only available on the state's Web site.
People often search Google for information on new state programs or what roads aren't open, Watson said.
When people can't find it on the search engine, it reflects badly on Google, she said.
"A big incentive for us was if this information wasn't available, it was the search engine's fault," Watson said.
But when people perform a search on the state's Web site, they're sometimes bogged down with massive numbers of pages, said Kurt Weiss, spokesman for the Michigan Department of Information Technology.
For instance, MEAP scores are spread throughout 25,000 pages.
But using Google as a search option should eliminate that problem, creating more specific, user-friendly pages, Weiss said.