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Presentation for Secretary of Veterans Affairs. Eileen T. Powell coreFLS Project Director Department of Veterans Affairs Washington, DC http://vaww.va.gov/coreFLS. April 11, 2001. Agenda. Why Do We Need coreFLS? What Have We Learned? How Is coreFLS Different? Major Benefits
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Presentation for Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eileen T. Powell coreFLS Project Director Department of Veterans Affairs Washington, DC http://vaww.va.gov/coreFLS April 11, 2001
Agenda • Why Do We Need coreFLS? • What Have We Learned? • How Is coreFLS Different? • Major Benefits • Some Pain, But What Is the Gain? • Does It Work? • How Big Is It? • Where Are We Now? • What Is The Secretary‘s Role?
Why Do We Need coreFLS? • Need to manage better • Need to integrate procurement practices with • FAR and JFMIP • Need to automate data reconciliation • Need to automate consolidated financial • statements • Need to preserve compliance with Federal • Financial Management Improvement Act • (FFMIA) • Need to align with e-Government initiatives
What Have We Learned From Previous Systems Implementations • Need to establish reasonable scope and avoid scope • creep • Need collaboration • Need ownership and sense of responsibility • Need flexibility in schedule to accommodate delays due • to mission related work • Need to balance costs and functionality • Need for functional and technical groups to work • together • Need good, timely training • Need change management • Need to manage expectations
How is coreFLS Different? • Includes stakeholders in all aspects • Meets VA’s core financial and logistics needs, • including engineering • Uses commercial off the shelf software with no • customization • Incorporates best practices • Uses Web-based software • Provides single source data entry • Creates a centralized database • Standardizes corporate wide inventory
Major Benefits • Allows managers to be stewards of their funds • Increases quality of data • Reduces reconciliation effort • Provides detailed and consolidated management reports • Improves business practices • Reduces reporting lag time • Increases knowledge sharing • Reduces training for and maintenance of numerous systems • Automates more processes • Reduces learning curve when staff transfer to other VA locations • Increases standardization • Reduces inventory levels and related costs
Some Pain, But What Is the Gain? • Can provide flexibility and ease of use • Can track actual costs against budgets for every project • Can identify unit costs to foster standardization and • leverage purchasing • Can change system configuration to respond to • legislative changes in policy • Can provide ad hoc management reporting of • integrated data for both internal and external reporting • Can implement over 30 opportunities for business • process reengineering • Can provide audit controls
How Big Is It? • Replaces FMS, IFCAP, AEMS/MERS and 24 • other legacy systems • Interfaces with 84 existing VA systems • Affects every VA finance, logistics and • engineering office; approximately 1000 sites • Estimated 100,000 users • Estimated 21,000 concurrent users
Where Are We Now? • Completed Conference Room Pilot • Meeting with customers nationwide to obtain • consensus on how the new system will look • (“To Be” Processes) • Putting the technical infrastructure in place for • the enterprise build • Preparing 7 Beta Sites for testing • Complying with security certification requirements
What Is The Secretary’s Role? • Endorse as a VA project • Own the data • Charge leadership to manage better with timely, • accurate data • Champion the project as part of VA’s Electronic • Government Strategic Plan