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HRSDC: We spent $70M on mainframes last year

HRSDC: We spent $70M on mainframes last year

By:  Shane Schick  On: 27 Jul 2009 For: CIO Canada Creator

Federal IT executives are trying to set up an enterprise architecture that will make the public sector more responsive and accountable to citizens, but there’s a lot of legacy work to do first

TORONTO – The Canadian government spent $70 million on mainframes last year, despite plans to scrap big iron machines 10 years ago, an executive with Human Resources and Skills Development Canada admitted Wednesday.

The mainframes, which in some cases date back to the 1960s, are still using Cobol and other older languages, and the Government of Canada still employs some 600 programmers who keep things up and running. This is on top of the 1,600 applications and more than 650 databases that create massive complexity within the federal public sector, said Andrew Bystrzycki, HRSDC’s director of data management services.

Bystrzycki used these examples as part of a presentation he delivered at the Open Group’s 23rd annual Enterprise Architecture Practitioner’s Conference. Like TD Bank and many of the other organizations which attended the three-day event, Bystrzycki said the Canadian government is struggling to contend with consistent views of citizen data, efficient delivery of services and compliance with privacy legislation. Dealing with technological changes is a big part of the puzzle, he said.

“During Y2K, in the event our insurance systems failed, directors were prepared to stand there and hand out cash,” said Bystrzycki, referring to the so-called Millenium Bug which threatened to bring down older systems on Jan. 1, 2001. “Only the government would come up with a plan like that.”

The government employs more than 20,000 employees and has a budget of around $300 million to manage IT. “But we aren’t agile,” he said, stressing that his opinions were his own and not that of the government itself. “We may say we are, but we’re not.”

Enterprise architecture is seen by many executives as an important blend of IT and business objectives. The Open Group Architecture Framework (TOGAF), now in its 9th version, is designed to help organizations adopt a standard approach to getting its data and systems under control. Mike Lambert, CTO of the U.K.-based Architecting the Enterprise Ltd. And an early contributor to TOGAF, said what began as a prescriptive methodology has evolved into a more flexible blueprint.

“One of the hurdles you see is that people view this as something they just have to get over so you can get on with your job,” he said, warning attendees against adopting a religious-like mindset around enterprise architecture. “Have you ever seen people standing on a street corner taking a verse out of a very big book out of context?” he asked. “That’s not what you want to do.”


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Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada. Follow him at Twitter.com/shaneschick, Facebook.com/Shane.Schick.Media or myi.tw/ShaneSchickGoogle.

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