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Q and A with Bill Drost

Q and A with Bill Drost

By:  Lisa Williams  On: 06 Mar 2006 For: IT World Canada Creator

Bill Drost is the former CIO of the Government of Prince Edward Island. Although his background wasn’t in IT, he took the job on to become the Province’s first CIO – an assignment he says he regarded as a two- to three-year challenge to lay the groundwork for someone else, who would take it to the next level. He spoke recently with Lisa Williams, senior writer with InterGovWorld.com, about how he got his start in the industry – and about the reorganization of the CIO office in Prince Edward Island. Excerpts from their conversation follow.

Bill Drost is the former CIO of the Government of Prince Edward Island. Although his background wasn’t in IT, he took the job on to become the Province’s first CIO – an assignment he says he regarded as a two- to three-year challenge to lay the groundwork for someone else, who would take it to the next level. He spoke recently with Lisa Williams, senior writer with InterGovWorld.com, about how he got his start in the industry – and about the reorganization of the CIO office in Prince Edward Island. Excerpts from their conversation follow.

Q: Let’s start with your educational background. Did you study in the IT field?

A: Actually no. I studied engineering, mechanical engineering more specifically, and never really thought that I’d end up in IT. But things evolve like that I suppose.

Q: How did you end up getting involved in the IT sector?

A: Well, engineering’s a closely related field and I had some experience in that area through my employment over the years dealing with technology, and my background was in manufacturing … and I was heavily involved in a lot of automation projects for the manufacturing world, so they were really close first cousins to one another … I remember a while back, in ‘97, the current premier approached me with a vision of doing something different and new in relation to IT, and asked me if I’d come on with the provincial government and take on the challenge of taking this to the next level, in relation to not only how we used IT in government, but also to IT being an integral part of our economy in Prince Edward Island.

Q: Could you talk about the reorganization effort and the new strategic direction that the CIO office is taking?

A: We have just about 200 IT workers in the province, and right now these workers are scattered among virtually every IT department in government … We have a lot of departments with small IT shops that don’t have a critical mass that you’d like to see in relation to building a core skill set, and also it’s not the most efficient way of delivering our IT services. At a high level we’re going to be moving the corporate IT services into a central organization to be headquartered in the provincial treasury … By centralizing a lot of the core corporate functions, we think we’re going to gain significant efficiency in relation to delivering better services.

So that’s our main vision, and stemming from that we have some core projects that we see as fundamental to achieving that vision. We really have five areas that we’re going to be focusing on in the next two years of getting those areas realigned, so we can deliver better services internally to government departments, and by extension better services to island businesses and citizens...

The five key priority areas that we have are pretty much common themes to what you’re hearing in the industry these days. We recognize that we have to deal with our infrastructure issues first. And we currently have four wide area networks within the provincial government context and will be reducing the number of networks, and we haven’t included what that network infrastructure is going to look like yet. We’ll be launching a major network review early next year, with the intent being to have less than four wide area networks. And it’ll be a better, more robust, faster network infrastructure that we’ll be using to build upon for some of the other projects that we have, that are also priorities.


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Lisa Williams Lisa Williams 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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