Budget request for classified IT climbs 14 percent
Difference between budget request and IT Dashboard data suggests $6.15 billion for fiscal 2015.
The federal government does not release a budget number for classified IT spending, but the president's annual request releases one figure for overall defense related IT, while another figure confined to non-classified projects is reported in the federal IT Dashboard.
The distinction is explained in a note in the Information Technology section of the Analytical Perspectives budget document released March 10, which reads, "Defense IT spending includes estimates for IT investments for which details are classified, and not reflected on the IT Dashboard."
By that measure, President Barack Obama is requesting about $6.15 billion in classified IT spending for fiscal 2015, based on the $35.37 billion request for defense IT and the $29.22 billion in projects set to be reported on the federal IT Dashboard, when the Defense Department releases its Exhibit 53 document, toting up non-classified IT spending, expected in early April. (Currently, the Exhibit 53 document is available for the combined civilian agencies.)
The $6.15 billion request is up about 14 percent from the $5.4 billion revealed in the fiscal 2014 budget. Details on planned IT spending are thin. The request "expands the use of common, secure, shared IT capabilities and services through the integrated clooud hosting environment, continues support for the protection of the critical networks that faciliate information sharing and operational requirements, and accelerates various information protection and access control mechanisms," according to the unclassified version of the National Intelligence Program budget for 2015. Overall the adminstration is seeking $45.6 billion for intelligence agencies.
The "unofficial official" number does not fully describe the classified IT spend, for a few reasons. The $79 billion the administration identifies as federal IT in its 2015 budget request may not include research and development, space exploration and computer componets of weapons systems -- classified or unclassified. Additionally, highly detailed fiscal 2013 budget documents leaked by former intelligence community contractor Edward Snowden revealed that budgets for classified IT systems hovered around $8 billion -- far higher than the figure that could be deduced from comparing the budget request and the IT dashboard.
The Snowden documents indicated enterprise IT spending at intelligence agencies was $4.7 billion in fiscal 2013 -- more than the overall IT spends the reported by the Department of Veterans Affairs, NASA, and the Justice Department.