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Making an Impact: Technology and Reform in Trinidad and Tobago Presenters: Arlene McComie Mrs Shelley-Ann Clarke-Hinds. ICT in CARICOM: A Commonwealth View. ICT Development Countries Mature : Canada, India, Singapore, United Kingdom Advanced: Barbados, Jamaica, Trinidad & Tobago
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Making an Impact: Technology and Reform in Trinidad and TobagoPresenters:Arlene McComieMrs Shelley-Ann Clarke-Hinds
ICT in CARICOM: A Commonwealth View ICT Development Countries Mature : Canada, India, Singapore, United Kingdom Advanced: Barbados, Jamaica, Trinidad & Tobago Progressive: Antigua & Barbuda, Bahamas, Grenada, Saint Lucia, St Vincent & the Grenadines Emerging: Belize, Dominica, Guyana, St. Kitts & Nevis
CARICOM ICT PRIORITIES • Connectivity is a top CARICOM priority • Infrastructure: e.g. CKLN; Regional Video- • conferencing facility • Process: Improving regional information flows; • embedding ICT in work of CARICOM • Other ICT priorities include: • Building ICT capacity in the region • Supporting the CSME • Utilizing ICTs to improve regional security and for • disaster preparedness and mitigation • Many CARICOM Member States now developing National ICT Strategies
National Development Agenda • Vision Statement: By the year 2020, Trinidad and Tobago will be a united, resilient, productive, innovative and prosperous nation with a disciplined, caring, fun-loving society, comprising healthy, happy and well-educated people and built on the enduring attributes of self-reliance, respect, equity and integrity.
Vision 2020 has five (5) Developmental Priorities: • Developing Innovative People • Nurturing a Caring Society • Enabling Competitive Business • Investing in Sound Infrastructure & the Environment • Promoting Effective Government
About fastforward • National ICT Vision • “Trinidad and Tobago is in a prominent position in the global information society through real and lasting improvements in social, economic and cultural development caused by the deployment and usage of information and communications technology” • Focus • 2003-2008: Connectivity • 2009-2013: Usage and Uptake • Closely aligned with Public Sector Transformation agenda
Assumptions: An efficient and effective Public Service is a critical success factor (CSF) for the achievement of Vision 2020 Citizen-centric approach requires transforming and integrating government processes around citizens’ needs Greater integration can be enabled by ICT Many public servants are extremely capable and dedicated Public Sector Transformation
Challenges: Demand for services is changing; citizen/client expectations are greater Considerable modernization or redeployment of public sector resources required Public sector culture is status quo focused: change often resisted Departments tend to operate in silos: limited collaboration and information sharing Public Sector Transformation
WHY TRANSFORM? EXTERNAL FACTORS • Effects of Globalization • Emergence of Technology • More demanding and knowledgeable citizenry INTERNAL FACTORS • Cross-cutting challenges requiring integrated approaches: joined-up government • Need to engage private sector and civil society as development partners • Continuous search for efficiency and cost-effectiveness
National Public Sector Transformation Agenda • Four primary elements of NPSTA • Service Delivery Improvement • HR Modernisation • Leadership Development • Cohesive and Effective Government • ICT is inevitably a key component of most significant NPSTA initiatives: • some initiatives are technology-based • ICT is a key enabler affecting critical aspects of public sector activities • ICT is a critical tool not an end in itself
Implementation Two Broad Categories of Transformation Projects: • Enterprise-wide/Horizontal (whole Public Service) • Vertical (Ministry-specific)
Case Study: GovNeTT • GovNeTTis the Government Wide Area Network (G-WAN) • Common network connecting all Ministries; serves as the preferred platform for inter / intra-Ministerial communication & collaboration • Supports enterprise-wide application deployment (e.g. human resource management, payroll, electronic document management) • Shared services include email, instant messaging and firewall/anti-virus • Ongoing: Significant upgrades and additional services e.g. video-conferencing, Internet Telephony
GovNeTT: Lessons Learnt • The project is a “PPP” between GoRTT and vendor alliance (= valuable experience with developing “PPP” business model for T&T) • Different approaches required to satisfy clients at different stages of IT development: • Some Ministries with limited IT services enjoyed immediate benefits • Other Ministries had IT services that exceeded G-WAN (e.g. email size)
Case Study: Project ihRIS • In 2001, the Integrated Human Resource Information System (IhRIS) was launched. • Uses PeopleSoft software which was intended to fit the Human Resource Management needs of Trinidad and Tobago’s public service • It is composed of 2 (separate) components: • IhRIS proper - owned by the Service Commissions Department (SCD) • Integrated Global Payroll - owned by Ministry of Finance (MoF)
Project ihRIS: Lessons Learnt IhRIS = key successes in some areas: • PeopleSoft deployed (via GovNeTT) • 50K + public servants paid via IhRIS payroll • Challenges remain: • Many functions of IhRISnot fully utilized • Limited HR collaboration between departments • Conclusion: IhRIS = limited success story • Primary focus was on technical solution • People/change management issues were not adequately addressed
CASE STUDY • ttconnect Online e-Government Portal (Internet) • ttconnectService Centre common counters (in Person) • ttconnectKiosk automated kiosks (Self-Serve) Coming Soon: • ttconnect Hotline Telephone helpdesk • ttconnect Mobile Government information and services via mobile telephones using SMS Text Messaging
Lessons Learnt • ttconnect still evolving as an initiative. Challenges: • ttconnect initially developed as two distinct processes • Public sector reform with focus on service centres • fastforward project based on portal / kiosks • Time lost in integrating these projects • Critical issues identified include: Importance of “quick wins” to build credibility • Need for effective stakeholder engagement
Enabling Environment Connectivity: T&T ranked #4 globally in mobile penetration (WEF 2008 about 1.5 phones per person) High-Speed Internet: about 88.5K broadband subscribers at Dec 2008 138% increase over 2007) T&T citizens, especially young people, embrace new technology Estimated 95K on Facebook Appropriate Legislative Framework: Two bills currently laid before Parliament: Data Protection and Privacy Bill Electronic Transaction Bill
Stakeholder Engagement • Internal: Private Sector: • CSF for success of fastforward is increased usage and adoption of ICT by business, e.g. EnterpriseNeTTand Tradenet • ICT Sector identified as discrete sector, key to achieving economic growth, providing jobs: ICT Cluster Development Strategy • (2008:Telecom Sector earned TT $4.1bn, approx 2.8% of GDP) • Government increasingly adopts outsourcing model • Consequently GoRTT adopts PPP approach to its ICT development • External: • As with other SIDS, difficult for T&T to address many ICT development challenges on its own • Therefore, assistance sought from selected partners: • Countries: e.g. Canada, Singapore, the United Kingdom • Agencies e.g. ITU, Commonwealth, ECLAC
Ongoing Initiatives In the pipeline: • - Leadership Development Programme for PS / Deputy PS • (Increase capacity in current office holders by addressing identified competency gaps & functional deficiencies) • - ttconnectGovNeTT and IhRIS upgrades • - Implementation of full e-Services suite To facilitate this T&T has established a State-owned company: • The National ICT Centre of MPA became the National ICT Company Ltd (known as “iGovTT”)on 20 July 2009 - ICT implementation arm of Government - Government Chief Information Officer
SOME LESSONS LEARNT Most public sector reform initiatives have a significant technology component ….… but technology is secondary to people Projects will not succeed without effective engagement of all stakeholders (internal and external) Support from top-level leadership is a CSF Partnerships (including PPPs) can provide a win-win outcome Identification of some quick wins builds confidence among clients Transformation requires longterm planning and continuous refinement of strategies to address the changing environment
Public Service Moving Forward • More efficient operations • Increased accessibility • Citizens delighted by our service