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City of Toronto announces capital budget

City of Toronto announces capital budget By:  Jennifer Kavur On: 06 Nov 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

CIO Dave Wallace, Councillor Shelley Carroll and Brian Zeiler-Kligman of the Toronto Board of Trade discuss spending on the IT front



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The City of Toronto released its capital budget plans on Tuesday, allocating $401.98 million to Information and Technology over the next ten years. The 10-Year Recommended Capital Plan includes an estimated $15 million for a new SAP AG Landscape project. 

Toronto’s recommended capital budget for IT in 2010 is $47.24 million, with 81 per cent towards state of good repair projects and 19 per cent to service improvement projects, plus an additional $12.01 million carried forward from 2009.

“One of the interesting things is the far majority of our budget is state of good repair … which is all about continuing to evolve and keeping our platforms current, including SAP,” said Dave Wallace, CIO of the City of Toronto.

The SAP Landscape Project, like everything else, is a service that benefits others, noted Wallace. The project is there to continue to improve the platform, which has been a strategic platform for us for a long time, he said.

“If it is approved, then it will benefit many systems that can leverage the SAP environment in terms of improved integration and better business warehousing in business intelligence capability. It also allows for strategic growth in facilitating the new financial reporting systems and also in HR systems and so on,” said Wallace.

Wallace listed key projects in the works expected to produce “real benefits and savings” for the City of Toronto.

“We are getting off the mainframe in the next year, we are de-commissioning applications there, putting them on another platform, we are moving to a high-speed network that was announced the other day that is piggy-backing on a roll-out by the school boards that bring significant savings and enhanced capability to the city, we are moving to Voice over IP capability,” he said.

The city is also “very focused on disaster recovery plans, business continuity, obviously the Web … so there is lots going on, but it is within a contained environment and we are meeting our business requirements to the best degree we can,” said Wallace.

“I think what we’ve done is work very hard at a budget that will meet the needs of our clients, but understanding that there are priorities that have been handed down by council, the major, by our senior management, that we are meeting. It is a contained environment, so we’ve had to slow certain projects down, adjust certain deliverables, but overall, we are delivering,” he said.


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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur is a senior writer for Computer World Canada.

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