Innovative programs earn e-gov awards

Five federal information sharing programs received Excellence.gov awards today from the Industry Advisory Council at a luncheon in Washington, D.C.

Rep. Tom Davis (R-Va.), the event's keynote speaker, said the federal government spends about $65 billion on information technology and may reach $90 billion by 2010. Making the government operate efficiently, he said, could save more money and eliminate problems. The government needs the people who push for innovative approaches to do that.

Five federal information sharing programs, from a searchable national sex offender registry to health information sharing between departments, received Excellence.gov awards today from the Industry Advisory Council at a luncheon in Washington, D.C.

The five programs are:

  • The Bidirectional Health Information Exchange, a collaborative program between the Defense and Veterans Affairs departments that helps with the exchange of health information on patients within the departments' health systems.

  • The Department of State Interagency Data Exchange Application, which issues visas and checks background information on immigrant and nonimmigrant visa applications.

  • The Geospatial One-Stop e-government initiative, an Interior Department program that provides thousands of federal, state and local governments with access to geospatial data services at Geodata.gov.

  • The National Sex Offender Public Registry, a Justice Department program that makes state and territory public sex offender registries available online.

  • The Radio Frequency In-Transit Visibility system, an Army program that uses radio frequency identification tags to track military cargo in transit worldwide.

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