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Over the last century, the government has become tremendously fragmented and overlapping. There's a lot of redundancy. I think this really came into the public awareness after Sept. 11. People said, "My goodness, agencies need to share information and work together." And there's this recognition that agencies are doing a lot of things that overlap, but they're not working as a team. We've got to simplify our business process and unify our work environments and our infrastructure. We've got to operate as a team in much more simple, more responsive and quicker ways.
How many people are working on it, and how much is government spending on it over the next 12 to 24 months? Virtually everything now is focusing on e-government or applying the e-business concepts to government management. Across the agencies, we've got 24 initiatives. That represents somewhere around $400 million to $500 million that we should be spending. But because there is so much redundancy, duplication and overlap, there is actually $2 billion to $3 billion budgeted for those initiatives. So you begin to see that by buying things as if each agency were a government, in and of itself, you end up spending a lot more money than you need to.
What is this buying you? A lot of the initiatives relate to internal efficiency and effectiveness. Some relate to intergovernmental affairs. Some relate to how government deals with business, and some relate to how government deals with individuals. For example? In the internal efficiency and effectiveness area, we have HR directors buying the same type of software as CFOs--but from different companies. In intergovernmental affairs, there are a couple of big issues that jump out at you. First is this issue of homeland security and how do we operate across local, state and federal governments as a team. There are a number of gaps in terms of communication, and the federal government has become so convoluted that it's very difficult for state governments. They actually have identified a set of initiatives via two focus-group sessions. What do those include? One is the disaster-preparedness portal. There are multiple departments and agencies involved in disaster response and preparation. It's very convoluted for state and local government to deal with them, especially in a crisis. So there is a lot of simplifying to make it easier for state and local governments to get access to the federal resources they need to deal with a crisis.
How does a portal help them do that? It deals with a number of things, ranging from "how do you put together a disaster preparation plan?" to "who should you involve in your planning?" That's different if you're out West and you may have to deal with a forest fire, or you're in the Southeast and you have to deal with hurricanes. You'd have to deal with the Department of the Interior; the Energy Department, because of national laboratories and other facilities in that region; the Forest Service at the Agriculture Department; the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA); and the Defense Department, largely because there are so many bases in that area. How you integrate with those is mind-boggling for most state and local governments. Facilitating that is something that's necessary now because of homeland security.
What has it been like getting agencies to buy in on your projects? How do you overcome resistance to change in a slow-moving bureaucracy? What I found last summer when we did our e-strategy task force is that the people who actually use the technology want to work in a more modern environment. They very much want this. They are agents of change, and I'm really just supporting what they've demanded.
Somewhere above them in the bureaucracy there's a group of people who have fought to do the right thing in their departments, and it's very difficult for them. Many have gone through several years of defending their budget. And now we've come in and said, "That was good, but it's still not going to give us the performance improvement they need."
Through the budget process, rarely does anyone get funded to do it right. Generally, people get...75 percent of what they need. I've been appealing to them that they can get all of what they need if they team up and take advantage of each other's investments. Sometimes that works and sometimes we have to do a lot of stroking.
So what have you accomplished in the last nine months? For the first time, we have an IT strategy that's been created. The IT strategy is essentially to focus on three key areas: homeland security, the war on terrorism, and revitalizing the economy. We're going to focus the rest of the IT spending on driving productivity improvement.
How do you think information technology can be used to improve the efficiency in the way the government interacts with the private sector? By using (e-business XML) and other open standards, we can allow for electronic transmission of reports. We can collect that data once, and we'll parse it out. Industry doesn't have to keep sending us the same data multiple times. The redundant reporting burden--depending on whether you use the OMB numbers or the figures from the small-business administration--is somewhere between $350 billion and $500 billion in the economy. So that's a big part of the initiative.
What kind of data? Economic, regulatory compliance, tax data and trade data. The second thing is we can start to deal with e-markets and export promotion, taking advantage of where the economy is going--which is largely e-markets and electronic supply chains. Right now, those processes are very paperwork intensive, so the government has actually become a constraint on the digital economy. In fact, that is one of the e-government initiatives: international trade streamlining. What technology will underpin the collaboration products you'll use? That work and analysis is under way. There will not be just one platform because there are a number of different work flows or processes for disaster response and disaster planning. There will be different tools for different aspects. One thing that's fairly common, though: We'll heavily use XML and middleware.
Why those technologies? We're not going to rebuild everything from the ground up. Rather than trying to replace everything, there are new open standards and tools to let you join together legacy applications, new applications and support teamwork. We...are going to heavily use those toolkits.
What other technologies are on your radar? Middleware is one. We just have to string things together in a way that makes sense. It may just be transactions or communications where we have to inform state and local government of the threat levels. There were no tools that supported those communications. We've got the policies and procedures now.
There are going to be other things that relate to how we work together and share information. There will have to be security that will be related to those transactions.
Is the Internet playing a big role in this communication? It won't just be the cosmic, open Internet, but intranets and extranets--so using the open-standards technology but at different degrees of security, depending on the scenario. A third technology we're seeing in this arena is geo-spatial, or geographic information systems (GIS). What role do they play? They've become the backbone of state and local government management systems. Government tends to be bound by geography, of course, and what's happened is that across federal, state and local governments, again these (separate) efforts on GIS have resulted in 50 percent excess spending. More than that, we've got a lot of redundant information in different standards. That makes it really hard to work as a team or to integrate or to build the accelerated response time to procedures that we need for homeland security.
Last year, the states actually came to us and said that if the federal government can get its act together on how it's using and identifying the GIS standards, that will accelerate state and local e-government efforts--and this was before Sept. 11! Since then, it has become clear that it's the backbone of homeland security.
How so? One example is bio-terrorism. Doctors in different cities may find certain things, and those will get aggregated at public health services organizations. If there is an outbreak of something, you could track that by its spread across the country geographically. We now know there are ways to accelerate the response.
Do you have an example? Probably the greatest example is figuring out where you need to position vaccines. Based on models and analysis, that can be done looking at geo-spatial information such as wind currents, mountainous areas or other patterns. The state and local government has said to the federal government, "You've got to get your act together here." That means, for us, we've got to focus our standards and deal with this redundancy issue once again.
Has the government been completely barraged by proposals from the technology industry in the last six or seven months?
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