Title: BS2912 Public Administration in Britain
1BS2912 Public Administration in Britain
- 7 ICT in the Public Sector
2BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- Patricia Hewitt is Britains first e-minister
- (Speech to World Congress on IT, Taipei, Taiwan,
June 14th, 2000) - Goal is universal internet access by 2005
- Internet access through digital TV and mobile
devices (hence auction for 3rd Generation
mobile spectrum) - All government services to be on-line by 2005
3BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- Get the market framework right (by further
liberalising telecommunication market) - Laws need modernising (e.g. Electronic
Communications Act gives legal validity to
digital signatures) - All schools and libraries to be connected to
the Internet (and all new teachers will have
to be IT competent)
4BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- Creating 700 UK on-line centres in low-income
communities - As citizens are getting 27/7 service from
banks, supermarkets, they expect the same of
government - Some 1.5 billion transactions (e.g. payment of
child benefit) take place each year - Legacy IT systems have to become joined up
(DSS operates over 100 IT systems)
5BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- New portal being built (UK online) designed
to be a one-stop shop for government - Some are being trialled (Ihavemoved.com)
- Most government depts. are connected to the
Government Secure Intranet (GSI) nut need
joining up with each other - Move from forms on line to transactions on
line - Government need to create mass customised
services
6BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- New NHS Direct A 24/7 service (2/3rds of
callers take a different course of action than
intended e.g. visit Casualty) - Foreign Office gives on-line advice to
travellers - Childcare Link brings together information on
jobs, training and local childcare - Benefits Agency and Employment Agency to be
brought together into ONE
7BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- Central governments role is to mandate the
basic technical framework (browser key
interface, adoption of XML as cornerstone of
government data integration) - 2 transformations required
- G -gtC (Governments to Customers) G-gtG
(Government to Government) - IT procurement must work better
- Start with the citizen not the service, partner
with private sector, get the process right
(not just the technology)
8BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- Government and Large Computer Systems
- The Governments record in handling large-scale
computer systems has not been good with some
spectacular failures - Systems necessarily large and complex
- Specifications subject to political change
- Cannot hide mistakes so readily, but with no
reference to the financial discipline of the
market - The correct methodology (Life Cycle or SSADM?)
9BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- Government and Large Computer Systems
- DHSS Operational Strategy in the 1980s planned
to link 40,000 micros in 1000 offices - Costs soared (700m -gt2000million)
- Accuracy levels low (e.g. 1 in 5 family credit
claims incorrect) - Shortage of key IT staff to project manage the
implementation
10BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- Government and Large Computer Systems
- Wessex Regional Health Authority launched an
ambitious Regional Systems Information
Systems Plan abandoned in 1990 (write-offs
between 20-40 million) - Contract suggested too cosy a relationship
with major IT suppliers resignations came
before an enquiry - Very large amounts of money now spent on
computer systems in the NHS (some as a
result of the internal market)
11BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- Government and Large Computer Systems
- 1992 London Ambulance Service Computer Aided
Despatch System probably resulted in excess
deaths (staff warnings unheeded) - Cheapest tender accepted software written by
staff with no experience - 1999 Passport Office (150,000 backlog)
12BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- Can we spot a disaster in the making ?
- Swanwick NATS (National Air Trafffic control
System) - High number of bugs in 1.8 million lines of
code - Needs to comply with 3,300 functional
requirements and work on 203 workstations - Software written by inexperienced staff
- Late, 120 million over budget
13BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- Information Age Government (Ch. 5 of
Modernising Government) - Government has allowed decentralised approach
(which means incompatibility of systems) - Plans to make it easier for individuals/companies
to do business with the Government - Improve communications within government
- Facilitate partnership with the private sector
- Support local communities voluntary sector
14BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- Information Age Government (Ch. 5 of
Modernising Government) - Corporate IT strategy for government
- develop electronic services for citizens and
businesses - Partnership between public, private and
voluntary sectors
15BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- By 2002 the citizen can
- Book driving and theory tests
- Look for work/be matched for jobs
- Submit self-assessment tax returns
- Get information and advice about benefits
- Get on-line health information and advice
- Use the National Grid for Learning
- Apply for training loans and support
16BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- By 2002 businesses can
- complete VAT registrations
- file returns at Companies House
- apply for regional support grants
- receive payments for supply of goods and
services
17BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- Government needs to
- Agree data standards
- Authenticate digital signatures
- standardise call centres
- develop digital TV
- Coherent approach to government web sites
- Provide portals (electronic gateways)
18BS2912 Public Administration in Britain7ICT in
the Public Sector
- Current issues
- Encryption standards to free-up e-commerce
- Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act seen as
draconian - Is Freedom of Information paradoxically made
more difficult ? - Possibility of Unique Personal Identifiers
(UPI) now closer