Renting may solve federal IT woes
Application service providers companies that rent out computer applications and services, and sometimes the machines themselves are an option government agencies should
There are times when renting rather than owning makes sense, and for federal
information technology, that time has arrived, says George Molaksi.
"IT is no longer a core business of government," Molaski, chief information
officer of the Transportation Department, recently told a gathering of industry
and government IT executives.
The government is having trouble finding qualified IT workers and is
"a long way" from providing the kind of IT services its "stakeholders" — the taxpayers — expect, Molaski told a gathering of business and government
IT executives Wednesday. Instead of running information technology departments
filled with government-owned equipment and government workers, federal agencies
should start renting IT services, Molaski told members of the Information
Technology Association of America.
In that vein, application service providers — companies that rent out
computer applications and services, and sometimes the machines themselves — are an option government agencies should embrace, he said.
By renting services from ASPs, agencies could dramatically reduce the
need for the workers who now run computer systems.
Agencies also could overcome the trouble they have keeping up with the
rapid rate of change in computer systems and software, Molaski said. By
switching to ASPs, agencies could negotiate contracts that require software
and hardware to be upgraded as they become available.
NEXT STORY: Cities populating World Wide Web