E-gov initiatives look locally
Federal e-gov plans include efforts to improve relationships with state and local governments
E-government initiatives developed by a federal task force during the past
three months include a group aimed entirely at improving service, relationships
and performance with state and local governments. E-government is one of
the five key government reform items outlined in the President's Management
Agenda. The federal e-government task force is preparing its final report
on 23 cross-agency, high-impact initiatives, and the Bush administration
is beginning to release details about them. One of the four areas of improvement
targeted by the administration concerns programs jointly administered by
the states and federal agencies, including those related to the Internal
Revenue Service and the Social Security Administration.
To do this, the federal government will rely more on the Internet and
tools such as Extensible Markup Language to "lift the burden the federal
government has become on state and local governments," said Mark Forman,
the Office of Management and Budget's associate director for information
technology and e-government. He was speaking Oct. 23 at a breakfast hosted
by the Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association's Bethesda,
Md., chapter.
Forman and other officials have discussed using Web portals to enable
states to make their reports on federal requirements just once. Then the
information could be shared by other relevant agencies.
The e-government task force is also looking at the broad use of geospatial
information in state and local applications, and how the federal government
can help eliminate redundant efforts to collect and provide that information,
said Tony Trenkle, chairman of the Government to Government Team and associate
deputy commissioner for the SSA Office of Electronic Services. That would
save agencies at all levels millions of dollars, he said.
Federal officials must look beyond their own agencies and the federal
government in general to see what is going on in the 50 states and how the
different levels of government relate, Trenkle said. This is especially
important following the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, when
all levels of government had to work together to respond and recover, he
said.
"The events of last month have really underscored the need for federal,
state and local to work together on areas of national interest," Trenkle
said.
NEXT STORY: Sharing key to combating threats