Title: Capacity Building in Rajasthan: Case Study of eMitra
1Capacity Building in Rajasthan Case Study of
e-Mitra
- Department of IT C
- Government of Rajasthan
2New paradigm of Governance
3LokMitra
- BACKGROUND
- Urban centric e-enabled service delivery system
- Area of coverage Jaipur, Bikaner Udaipur
- Technology Uses both Client/Server and Internet
models - Nine centers operational in Jaipur
- Provides facility for electronic payments also
- Successfully operational since March, 2002
- Served around 12 lacs citizens till date
- Rs. 261 Crores collected through LokMitra
- SERVICES OFFERED
- Payment of electricity bills
- Payment of water bills of PHED
- Online RSRTC bus ticketing of RSRTC
- Issue of of Births Death certificates
- Payment of various dues/fee of Jaipur Municipal
corporation - Payment of various dues/fee of Jaipur
Development Authority - Payment of various dues/fee of Land Building
Tax Dept - Payment of various dues/fee of Rajasthan Housing
Board - Payment of Land Line CellOne bills (BSNL)
4JanMitra
- BACKGROUND
- Rural centric e-enabled service delivery system
- A wide range of social services provides
information on relevant topics citizens under
one roof - Area of coverage Jhalawar and Jaipur
- Technology Uses web-based Intranet model
- Successful case study of Public-Private
Partnership - Successfully operational since March, 2002
- Has provided gainful employment to about 350
rural youths - Served around 4.5 lacs citizens
- SERVICES OFFERED
- Public grievance redressal
- Online submission of application forms
- Access to Land Revenue Records (ROR)
- Access to Government information
5LokMitra and JanMitra Projects
- Urban centric delivery channel
- Utility Bills - Financial transactions oriented
- Front Offices Back Office owned operated by
Government - Revenue model is participative based
- Uses broadband/high-speed communication link
- Real time transactions
- Services also available through Internet
- Implemented at Jaipur, Udaipur Bikaner
- Rural centric delivery channel
- Social services information delivery oriented
- Back Office is owned by Govt. Front Offices are
owned operated by local entrepreneurs - Revenue model is based on self sustaining
philosophy - Uses dialup facility for connectivity
- Uses batch processing mode
- Services available only on local district
Intranet - Implemented at Jhalawar Jaipur
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6- Unified e-services platform
- Combines best features of LokMitra JanMitra
models - Enhanced services basket over 60 services of
Government domain. Private sector services are
being added on continuous basis - Uniform information interchange architecture
- Public-Private Partnership model for Front
Offices - Back Office to be owned by Govt but operated by a
Technology Partner - Will provide employment to over 2000 educated
youths - Uses real time, Internet batch processing modes
- To be expanded across the State in phased manner
7Components of e-Mitra (LokMitra JanMitra)
Back Office
Front Office
Front Office
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- All participating departments being IT enabled
- Establishing a mini data center at each district.
- E-Mitra application software to be hosted at
e-Mitra data center - All the participating departments and service
counters will hook on to e-Mitra data center to
make the system work. - Financial resources for the purpose is being
provided by government
- Citizen will be able to avail of services related
to multiple departments/organizations at the same
counter. - Interface will be through web or counters, which
are managed by private partners (Local Service
Providers). - The service delivery is on charge basis so as to
make the system self-sustaining.
8- Role of Capacity Building to Conceptualize,
Develop, Manage and Monitor the e-Mitra project
9e-Mitra Conceptual Framework
Managed by LSP
District Administration
Kiosks
Integrated Citizens Service Center1
Kiosks
User Department
Kiosks
District Window
User Department
Kiosks
Integrated Citizens Service Center2
User Department
Kiosks
Kiosks
Divisional Data/Control Center
WAN
Kiosks
Kiosks
Kiosks
State Data Center
Secretariat LAN
10Role players in e-Mitra
- Citizens Prime stakeholders
- Demand side of e-Governance eco-system has to
become at par with the supply side - State Government
- Key driver of the e-Mitra model
- District Administration
- Routing of e-Mitra services through G-2-C
interfaces - Line Departments
- IT enablement of backend systems
- Local Service Providers kiosks owners
- Private Partners- will add entrepreneurial,
technological marketing values - Department of ITC
- Technology enabler facilitator
Stakeholders in capacity building
11Dynamics of e-Mitra Interplay of components
Network
Software
TECHNOLOGY
Hardware
Security
LOGISTICS LEGAL ISSUES
BUSINESS
Business Model of LSP/Kiosk
GoR Role
Business Model of Technology Partner
Citizens willingness
12Challenges of Capacity Building in e-Mitra
- Change management
- Business Process Re-engineering
- Strengthening Demand Side of e-Governance
services - Economics Logistics of Supply Chain
involvement of Private Partners - Benchmarking of strategic plans through 3rd
Parties - Technology Last mile connectivity
13Change management
- Initial inertia among State Government employees
- Involvement from project conceptualization stage
- Departmental level CIOs as domain level champions
- Skill upgradation
- IT e-Governance as key subjects in Induction
level training - Change in mandate roles of officials mind set
- Involvement of Private Sector in service delivery
- Successful implementation of e-enabled service
delivery channels of Stamps Registration
Department through PPP Model across 210 offices
across the State - Seeing is believing is the motto
- Workshops for State Government officials
- Vertical hierarchies ( e.g., CMHOs,
Sub-Registrars of Stamps Registration
Department, etc.) - Horizontal hierarchies at District Level (DLOs at
District Collectors level)
14Business Process Re-engineering
- Administrative provisions
- Enabling Government orders/circulars for e-Mitra
mechanism issued - Citizen charters
- Vigilance mechanisms
- Legal changes
- Facilitation of privately owned contact points
- MoUs signed among all stakeholders including
private partners - Authentication mechanisms
- Teachers authorized to issue Learners Licenses
- LokMitra staff authorized to issue Birth Death
certificates - Reduction in verification requirements
- Cross verifications across databases Election
Database, LRC Database, BPL Lists, etc. - Formation of 32 District e-Governance Societies
to facilitate ownership of e-Mitra across
districts
15Strengthening Demand Side of e-Gov equation
- E-Mitra is perceived as a product
- Marketing is the key 4 Ps (product, pricing,
promotion place) - Citizens are increasingly willing to pay service
charges for availing e-Gov services, e.g., A
service charge of Rs. 200 is charged from
citizens for rendering services through IT
enabled systems of Sarathi (Registration Stamps
Department) - Involving community
- Members of communities co-opted in District
e-Mitra Societies - Structured unstructured feedback of citizens
Government employees obtained on LokMitra
JanMitra through surveys workshops - Draft documents published on Internet for
comments of stakeholders including private sector - Awareness generation
- E-Mitra Stalls in fairs in rural semi-urban
areas - Road shows
- Publicity campaigns
- Proactive marketing of e-Mitra by LSPs Kiosk
owners
16Benchmarking of e-Mitra strategic plan
- A professional consultant has been engaged to
study review the project development and help
rollout the project. - Consultant is carrying out holistic study audit
of - Concept of e-Mitra
- Methodology
- Service Basket (services to be included in the
package) - Technical Design and Application Software
- Service Delivery Model
- Enterprise Model
- Implementation Plan including PPP relations
- Is designing will assist in monitoring of SLAs
of private partners - Continuous learning from e-Governance projects of
other States - Inputs are taken from guidelines issued by MCIT,
GoI from time to time
17ICT Infrastructure
- IT enablement of backend systems of participating
Departments on priority (Back office) - A provision of Rs. 10.00 Crores in 2004-2005.
300 increase in 2005-2006 - State Secretariat, State Data Center, RSWAN,
Registration Stamps, District Collectorates,
e-Procurement System, Police, Tourism,
Agriculture, UITs, Revenue Earning Departments,
etc. are at various stages of execution - E-Mitra Data Centers being setup in all 32
districts in 2005-2006 - Increased involvement of private technology
partners in managing ICT infrastructures - Project planning, managing monitoring
mechanisms are in place
18E-Mitra ICT Infrastructure
19Champions of e-Mitra
- E-Mitra has the mandate at the highest level and
is being rolled out in mission mode - Honble CM holds the charge of IT Minister
- Secretary to CM is also Secretary, IT
- Director, IT C controls a cadre of IT
Professionals. Capacity Size - Technology Managers 30
- Technical Staff/Programmers70
- Outsourcing of application software development
is done wherever necessary - Capacity built at
- State Level (For Strategic Policy Direction)
- Department Level (for conceptualizing managing
Departmental level projects) - NICs support is also available
20Capacity Build The Cutting Edge
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