The bill is modeled after the US Digital Service, an "elite technology unit" that formed after the Healthcare.gov debacle to fix and improve shoddy federal websites. Harris' bill would provide two-year grants ranging from $200,000 to $2.5 million per year. At least half of the funds would be earmarked for employee salaries and benefits -- an attempt to help local governments compete with the private sector for talent.

At the moment, the bill is still in its infancy, and it doesn't have any co-sponsors or partners. But the fact that the US Digital Service is still kicking even under President Trump and that the President recently signed the Modernizing Government Technology Act to help modernize other federal systems may bode well.

This isn't Harris' first tech bill. Last summer, she introduced the Quantum Computing Research Act. It's unclear if she'll use these bills in her bid for a presidential nomination, but coincidentally, the Digital Service Act of 2019 would begin distributing funds in 2020.