Voting at the Lac Carling Congress suggested that participants are in a mood to move from theoretical framework to practical solutions.
In a plenary on service transformation, a proposal for a repository of best practices emerged on top, followed closely by development of a knowledge management package focused on identity, authentication and authorization (IA&A).
Further reflecting a practical frame of mind, next came a suggestion for a sustainable funding model for interjurisdictional service transformation projects. Other choices before participants called for:
An interjurisdictional body supported by a secretariat to champion and provide leadership to service transformation projects;
A committee to work on IM/IT standards and act as a cross-jurisdictional standards repository;
An interjurisdictional national citizen service standards body;
A framework and priority setting mechanism to guide the IM/IT committee and national standards body, and
Interjurisdictional project teams to carry out service transformation projects.
A round of voting on shared services identified a permitting/registration system as top choice of participants, followed closely by co-located front services and GIS across federal, provincial and municipal jurisdictions.
Other shared services proposals blessed IT infrastructure as it relates to broadband and wi-fi, local and regional approaches to solutions and opportunities to broaden partnerships to NGOs.
Participants also voted by a 3-2 margin for an inter-jurisdictional organization to address barriers to shared services and assist in moving the agenda forward.
As with service transformation, voting on shared services reflected a strong desire to move ahead quickly with practical, technically feasible citizen-facing services.
Voting results at Lac Carling are forwarded to the Public Sector CIO Council and the Public Sector Service Delivery Council for action. 068539
Richard Bray (rbray@itworldcanada.com) is an Ottawa-based freelance journalist and a veteran of the Lac Carling Congress.