SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Government >> Case Studies and Best Practices From Canada and Internationally

CTO, City of Nanaimo, B.C.

CTO, City of Nanaimo, B.C.

By:  Lawrence Moule  On: 14 Jun 2005 For: Channelworld India 

The slow, stately march to transform government services could soon become a bit disorderly. In some eyes, the transformation parade revealed a few weaknesses as it passed the reviewing stand at this year’s Lac Carling Congress. There is no identifiable parade marshal, after all. At every fork in the road, the parade slows or halts while negotiations take place among the leading marchers. But in the ranks behind, the most recent recruits to the parade are intent on marching briskly forward, protocol be damned. The new marchers are municipalities. They have someplace they want to go. They might not be willing to march in line. And they are, by and large, an impatient and outspoken lot.

Nor is MISA/ASIM Canada represented on PSSDC, for example; municipalities are represented on the service-delivery council solely by Philip Clark, director of client service and public information for the City of Ottawa. The 32 municipal delegates at Lac Carling recognized the need either to bring more service delivery representation into MISA/ASIM Canada or to work more closely with other municipal organizations, such as FCM.

For its part, FCM intends to participate more actively in addressing national service delivery issues, Ann MacLean told delegates.

MISA/ASIM Canada, in contrast, does not see itself as working at the 30,000-foot level. It represents municipal delegates who have their feet on the ground and want to move them.

Kristensen sees the municipal role as achieving some-thing concrete that points the way forward for the other levels of government, who can then figure out all the angles.

“We deal with the user interface, the client interface, and that’s the place to start,” he said. “Let’s just identify a problem and find a solution that solves 80 per cent of it, and recognize that the other 20 per cent perhaps needs to be handled in some special way. But don’t try to consider all the factors and analyze it to death. Get on with it!”

National Contributions Municipalities can already point to two initiatives in which the cause of e-government has been advanced by municipalities who just got on with it: The Municipal Reference Model and 3-1-1.

The concept of services mapping was pioneered in the early 1990s by municipalities








Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 1300   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Lawrence Moule Lawrence Moule is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

Lac Carling X: A turning point?
Lac Carling X: A turning point?The 10th Lac Carling Congress may have been a watershed event. It marked the emergence of municipalities as the project directors who are taking citizen-centred service delivery beyond the conceptual stage - to a work in progress.
Lac Carling X: A turning point?
Lac Carling X: A turning point?The 10th Lac Carling Congress may have been a watershed event. It marked the emergence of municipalities as the project directors who are taking citizen-centred service delivery beyond the conceptual stage – to a work in progress.
New municipal organizations aim to facilitate collaboration
New municipal organizations aim to facilitate collaborationYou can’t have collaboration without a collaborator. Before Lac Carling X, there was no national organization with a mandate to serve as a municipal voice in collaboration with other levels of government to advance the cause of citizen-centred service.
Live from Lac Carling 2008
there were no updates to this blog yesterday as i was busy posting to another one. i was attending this year's lac carling congress, which was held at the beautiful queen's landing inn in niagara on-the-lake. lac carling, now in its 12th year, is a conference for government it and business professionals, and this year the focus was on exploring how
An approach to ITIL that anyone can emulate
itil implementation is usually considered a major undertaking, but peter farquharson doesn’t sound all that fazed. i was talking with the technology integration service manager for the city of saskatoon yesterday about his organization’s progress with adopting the it infrastructure library set of best practices and processes. he raised a really interesting idea that i’m surprised hasn’t
blog comments powered by Disqus