When residents call their local government, it’s usually for something routine like checking a permit status, paying a water bill, reporting a pothole, asking about trash pickup, or disputing a parking ticket. But their expectations have changed. They are measuring the ease of resolving a basic request against the experience of ordering on Amazon, booking an Uber, or disputing a charge with their bank. These are interactions that take under two minutes and never require talking to a person.
For city and county communications leaders, that shift creates a real operational problem. Call volumes are climbing. Front-office staff are stretched. And the tools most agencies are running on, traditional IVR phone trees built around "Press 1 for Billing," were designed for a different era.
Conversational AI is changing what is possible for public agencies. Here is what it actually looks like in practice, and how to evaluate whether your agency is ready
The 2026 NASCIO State CIO Top Ten Priorities confirmed what many government leaders already feel: artificial intelligence has overtaken cybersecurity as the top priority for state and local technology leaders. AI is no longer a long-range planning item. Agencies are deploying it now to solve immediate staffing and service delivery problems.
According to recent benchmarks from Nextiva, 40% of customers now expect a better experience specifically because an organization uses AI. For governments, that expectation is arriving faster than most legacy phone systems can accommodate.
Most people have experienced a phone bot that breaks the moment you go off-script. You say something the system does not recognize, and you end up in a loop or transferred to a queue. For a resident trying to resolve a utility bill or check a permit status, that is not just inconvenient. It is a service failure.
Conversational AI agents work differently. They use Natural Language Processing (NLP) to understand intent and context, not just keywords.
Compare the two experiences:
Legacy IVR: "Press 1 for Billing. Press 2 for Permits."
Conversational AI: "How can I help you today?" — "I need to know why my water bill is higher than usual."
A modern AI agent does not just route the call. By connecting to live billing databases, it can explain rate changes or consumption spikes in real time, without involving a staff member.
Public service needs do not stop at 5:00 PM. A resident might notice a missed trash pickup at 8:00 PM. A contractor might need permit status at 6:00 AM before a crew arrives on site.
When your phone system only provides help during business hours, every after-hours inquiry becomes a morning backlog for your team. Conversational AI extends your service window without adding headcount.
Common use cases agencies are deploying today:
Utility Billing: Automated balance checks and payment processing via voice
Permitting: Real-time status updates through a simple voice inquiry, no staff required
Public Works: Capturing pothole or maintenance reports without a live operator, automatically logged into the work order system
SMS Follow-Up: Sending a text message during or after the call with a link to a payment portal, application form, or relevant webpage so the caller can complete the next step on their own time
Deloitte's 2026 research notes that autonomous AI agents are moving into an "orchestration" phase, handling complex, multi-step tasks across different software platforms. For local government, that means the technology is catching up to the complexity of real public service workflows.
Agencies implementing intelligent AI routing are seeing measurable outcomes. Many are achieving what practitioners call the "40% Reduction Rule," where automated intent recognition handles nearly half of all routine inquiries without human involvement.
The mechanics behind that result typically involve three capabilities working together:
Intent Recognition: Identifying what the caller needs within the first ten seconds of the call
Zero-Touch Resolution: Completing routine requests like "When is my next inspection?" without any staff involvement
Contextual Handoffs: When a call does require a human, the AI transfers all gathered information so the citizen does not have to repeat themselves
The impact is shorter wait times, fewer abandoned calls, and staff freed to handle the cases that actually require human judgment.
Conversational AI delivers strong results when it is built on the right foundation. Before deploying, agencies should evaluate three areas: network bandwidth and reliability, security protocols and data access controls, and integration points with existing systems like billing platforms, permitting software, and work order management tools.
Agencies also need to confirm compliance with federal voice safety mandates. Modern AI voice systems, when configured correctly, satisfy Kari's Law and the RAY BAUM'S Act requirements, including the ability to pass dispatchable location data to emergency responders during automated interactions.
If you are unsure where your current infrastructure stands, a readiness assessment is a practical first step before committing to budget or vendor agreements.
Maverick Networks works with cities, counties, and public agencies as a supplier-neutral advisor, helping teams evaluate their current voice stack, map their highest-volume call types, and build a modernization roadmap that fits their budget and procurement requirements. Talk to an expert to get started.