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Feds seek to be service providers

Feds seek to be service providers

By:  Joaquim P. Menezes  On: 11 Nov 2004 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The Government of Canada has to radically rethink its business processes — putting citizens at the centre of its services and how they are delivered, said Helen McDonald, Acting CIO, Government of Canada.

The Government of Canada has to radically rethink its business processes — putting citizens at the centre of its services and how they are delivered, said Helen McDonald, Acting CIO, Government of Canada.

Delivering the keynote address at the recent GTEC Week 2004 public sector IT conference in Ottawa, McDonald articulated a vision for the delivery of government services that are personalized, citizen-focused, and integrated across ministries, departments and agencies. To achieve this vision, she said, the Feds would need to adopt a different manner of operating.

“We must manage our services — not as 160 departments and agencies — but as a single enterprise, the Government of Canada enterprise.”

For starters, she said, the Federal Government needs to adopt a common view of business lines and clients. “The client may be the struggling startup or small business; it may be the person with disabilities, the senior citizen, or the foreign student coming here to study. The fact is we share these clients. They are not unique to any one program. So we must take a common view of their needs and then consolidate our service offerings so as to serve them in the best way possible.”

McDonald said the federal government needs to provide personalized service to clients across diverse channels. “To do this we will need to create a technical, business and information exchange infrastructure that allows services to be put together in any way the client wants.”

McDonald described how such an infrastructure could dramatically transform how citizens, clients and taxpayers access government services. “What if Canadians could receive their benefits without the need to apply or use forms?” she asked. “What if we could use information already available with the Canadian Customs and Revenue Agency (CCRA) to deliver your pension to you? What if you could comply with tax requirements, without the need to file tax reports annually? What if we could resolve most issues on the first contact with government instead of bouncing them from place to place? What if all Canadians could receive information from one place irrespective of who owns the information or service?”

These scenarios, she suggested, are not gee-whiz fiction, nor years down the road.

The “first contact” principle and “unified information retrieval” concepts are part of what’s now referred to as Service Canada - a one-stop shop for a range of Canadian government services. She said the CCRA and other federal departments are collaborating on a “My Account” initiative that would give Canadians a single view of their accounts, programs and benefits with government.

Likewise, she said, CCRA is working to set up a single registration site for businesses, while Industry Canada had teamed up with several provinces on a venture, dubbed BizPal, that streamlines and simplifies the business licensing process.

Meanwhile, many such innovative projects were honoured with Distinction Awards during the Gala ceremony held later that evening. Gold Award winning projects included Record of Employment Web (Innovative Service Delivery to Citizens and Businesses category), High Arctic Data Communications System Mark II (Enhancing Government Operations category) and Service Availability Improvement Project (Supporting IM/IT category).


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Joaquim P. Menezes Joaquim P. Menezes 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.

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