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Ontario CIO Ron McKerlie on application lifecycle management

Ontario CIO Ron McKerlie on application lifecycle management

By:  Mari-Len De Guzman  On: 04 Dec 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Increasing service delivery while driving down per unit cost is the goal that the Ontario government wants to attain through a common infrastructure and information technology strategy. Ontario CIO Ron McKerlie outlined this vision and the role that private partners play at an ITAC-hosted forum in Toronto this week.


More effective lifecycle management of over 2,000 software applications currently used across the Ontario government will be among the priorities of the Office of the Corporate CIO under the Ontario Ministry of Government and Consumer Services.

Ensuring the continued availability of critical applications, which are vital to the operations of various government agencies in the province, is very important for efficient IT service delivery, according to Ron McKerlie, corporate CIO of Ontario.

McKerlie and other CIOs within the Ontario Public Service clusters outlined their short-term and long-term infrastructure and information technology plans at a breakfast roundtable in Toronto this week sponsored by the Ontario chapter of the Information Technology Association of Canada (ITAC).

Of the 2,000 applications running across the government of Ontario, about 200 are deemed as major applications, McKerlie said. "A significant percentage of that is operating on unsupported or outdated technology."

Of these top 200 major applications, about one in six are considered as "high-risk," which means they are running on outdated or unsupported systems, he added.

"The Ontario government will move to a more comprehensive, robust method of managing our applications," McKerlie said.

The approach for the provincial government's application lifecycle management is outlined under the Major Applications Portfolio Strategy (MAPS), which involves implementing application inventory, identifying and assessing the risks and monitoring the applications throughout their lifecycle, he said.

In addition to the application lifecycle management strategy, McKerlie outlined other initiatives in the pipeline that support the government's goal towards modernization and improvement of service delivery.

"Operating effectively as a single enterprise and improving efficiency are our key modernization priorities," McKerlie said, adding that these initiatives will also allow the province to increase service delivery while driving down per unit cost.

McKerlie cited the province's telemedicine network and the Justice Video Network as among ongoing initiatives that's enabling the Ontario government to increase service delivery while driving down cost.

The telemedicine network enables Ontario's health care providers to deliver health services and transmit health information electronically. It provides, among other things, access to health services as well as education and training for residents in remote areas, without having to travel, McKerlie said.


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Mari-Len De Guzman Mari-Len De Guzman 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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