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National Infrastructure for Community Statistics (NICS)

Explore the alignment of NICS and state agendas, focusing on economic development and government services. Topics include IT practices, future technologies, and the role of states in innovation and collaboration.

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National Infrastructure for Community Statistics (NICS)

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  1. State of Michigan • Department of Information Technology National Infrastructure for Community Statistics (NICS) Learning Phase Workshop 1 State Organizations November 17, 2004

  2. Agenda • State Information and Technology Environmental Outlook • NICS and State Agendas Must Be Aligned • NICS and NASCIO’s Agenda Alignment • Existing State Information Practices and Applications • Future Practices • Economic Development Goals, Strategies, Practices and Applications • E-Government and Web (Role and Benefits) • Issues with Sharing Information • States Have the Natural Role, Capacity, and Experience

  3. State Information and Technology Environmental Outlook • Revenue and funding challenges/crisis • Reorganization of government—consolidation of programs/agencies • Demand for more efficient/effective government services • Emerging CIO role – impact of economic development, health care, etc. • Broadband and its economic impact • Growth of legislative scrutiny/oversight

  4. State Information and Technology Environmental Outlook (continued) • IT staffing succession/transition • Demand for enterprise performance metrics • Influence of federal funding priorities • Inter-governmental sharing of resources • Pent-up demand for IT deployment • Citizen expectations (seamless) based on marketplace experience • Emergence of wireless technology and services • Emphasis on privacy, security and health care • IT/telecom convergence

  5. NICS and State Agendas Must Be Aligned • Governor Granholm’s agenda: • Create more business investment and jobs • Improve student achievement • Make people healthier and families stronger • Enhance the quality of Michigan’s natural environment • Make Michigan’s communities safer and protect our citizens • Make government in Michigan more effective and less expensive

  6. NICS and NASCIO’s Agenda Alignment • Facilitate the exchange of inter-governmental solutions and standards • Leverage the experience of others • Use CIOs as advisors on IT policy, investment and implementation • Promote business process improvements and integration • Preeminent source for state information technology policy and best practices for government leaders • Develop relationships and partnerships with strategic associations and policy advocates

  7. Existing State Information Practices and Applications • From technology to information • Channel management • Information centers • Decision support systems • Collaboration • Connectivity

  8. Future Practices • Advanced analytics • Artificial intelligence • Automated text categorization • Database management systems • Online analytic processing • Simulation • Real-time infrastructure and collaboration • Intermediary software enabling collaboration as contrasted to integration of databases • Natural language search

  9. Economic Development Goals, Strategies, Practices & Applications • Access to statewide high speed broadband to facilitate and enhance G2B, B2C, B2B, C2C services • Provide interactive G2B online services • Develop and strengthen applications where the state can provide unique leverage (GIS) • Improve selected economic development services on a priority basis (licenses, permits, etc) • Provide “Digital Coattails” to local governments • Improve the state brand

  10. E-Government and Web (Role and Benefits) • Strategic supporter and enabler of government policies • Improve transparency and accountability • Treat citizens as customers • Ease regulatory and reporting compliance • Human capital development • Build communities of interest • Offers capabilities for homeland and cyber security • Cut costs • Improve service • Manage government better

  11. Issues with Sharing Information • Security • Governance • Ownership • Privacy • Architecture • Costs • IT personnel resources • Technology sophistication • Win/win for everyone

  12. States Have the Natural Role, Capacity, and Experience • Networks/partnered relationships are supplementing traditional government hierarchies (governing by networks) • Concepts that states bring to the table include information, technology, management and governance experience in addressing and resolving related issues • States are intermediaries, natural brokers between local and federal governments • States have a history and capacity for innovation and collaboration

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