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Federal Enterprise Architecture: The Challenges and Changes. Michael Tiemann Enterprise Architecture Practice Manager. May 2005. Abstract & Bio.
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Federal Enterprise Architecture:The Challenges and Changes Michael Tiemann Enterprise Architecture Practice Manager May 2005
Abstract & Bio • This speech presents the summary of many seemingly disparate Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA) initiatives now on-going and explains the presenter's views both in his historical context and with respect to future directions and possibilities for the FEA. It will open the dialogue to questions like: • Will EA be able to significantly change the Federal Government or government in general if it continues to be narrowly focused on IT? • How can such an expansive program with such potential impact continue to be run by an office with only one permanent FTE and a set of rotational volunteers with a few contractors? • How will the issued resultant from GAO and the OMB both measuring agencies EAs by different means play out especially with GAO now starting a new government-wide review? • Can the LoB concept for collaborations across the government work to instantiate the FEA and what will be required to make this happen? • What are the significances of the new DRM, the various profiles (Geospacial and Records Management) and mechanisms like Core.gov and certifying Federal components like E-authentication? • What must happen for the FEA to continue as opposed to break under its own weight? • All these questions and more will be asked and discussed in an interactive presentation, with an eye towards what can and should happen for the FEA to proceed and ultimately succeed. Bio • Mike Tiemann currently is employed by AT&T as the Enterprise Architecture (EA) Practice Manager a role he accepted after 31 years distinguished service in the Federal Government. He was the Program Manager (PM) for Information Resources Management Planning headquarters-wide at the Department of Energy (DOE). In 1994, he became the PM for the DOE-wide Information Architecture, before the Clinger-Cohen Act. He served as the DOE Chief Architect until 1997. From then, almost until he left federal service in 2002, he served as the Director, Division of Architecture and Standards and during 2001, as Acting Associate CIO for Architecture, Standards and Planning. He was the DOE representative to the Federal CIO Council’s Architecture and Infrastructure Committee and was the founding Chair and later Co-chair of the Federal Architecture Working Group. Mike is an outspoken advocate for EA, writing and commenting about it in current periodicals and lecturing on it at numerous Federal and industry conferences and forums, including past E-Gov EA Conferences and as a faculty member of the Federal EA Certification Institute. Mike has received numerous performance awards and citations, including, Federal Computer Week’s Federal 100 Award, the Federal CIO Council Citation and Special Recognition and Act Awards from the Secretary and Deputy Secretary of Energy. Mike holds a Bachelors of Environmental Design (Architecture) from Texas A&M University and a Masters of Science in Systems Management from University of Southern California. He is on the Industry Advisory Council’s Enterprise Architecture Shared Interest Group leadership team, and as such, represents IAC on the Chief Architect’s Forum. He is a member of the Association of Enterprise Architects and an Associate Editor of the a/EA Journal He lives in Northern Virginia, is married and has two children. • He will be leaving AT&T and joining Booz|Allen|Hamilton as a Senior Associate later this month.
Today’s IT Governance Challenges Presidential ManDates E-Government Federal Enterprise Architecture Standards Business Reference Model BUDGET CUTS OMB Review Business Cases HR- Brain Drain Technology Changes Resizing & Redirection of Programs Leadership-Loss SECURITY GAO AUDITS & MATURITY Semantic Interoperability Access Vs. Privacy
You may have questions like these? • Will EA be able to significantly change the Federal Government or government in general if it continues to be narrowly focused on IT? • How can such an expansive program, with such potential impact, continue to be run by an office with only one permanent FTE and a set of rotational volunteers and a few contractors? • How will the issues resultant from GAO and the OMB both measuring agencies EAs, by different means, play out especially with GAO now starting a new government-wide review? • Can the LoB concept for collaborations across the government work to instantiate the FEA and what will be required to make this happen? • What are the significances of the new DRM, the various profiles (Geospacial and Records Management) and mechanisms like Core.gov and certifying Federal components like E-authentication? • What must happen for the FEA to continue, as opposed to break under its own weight?
What is the Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA) • What is the FEA Program and how is it managed • Why is EA Important in Government • What a long way we have come...early benefits • How far we still have to go……challenges ahead • The Ultimate Goal – A different kind of Government • Summary & Questions Agenda
What is the Federal Enterprise Architecture • Some definitions to start • What it is and is not • The reference models and their evolution • The parts of the FEA
Federal Enterprise Architecture - What is it?Some terms- • Enterprise architecture – A management process that uses an analytical approach to develop an enterprise-wide knowledgebase used in decision making to, among other things, ensure IT alignment in support of business/mission functions. It typically has an As-Is, To-Be and a Transition Plan. • FEA Reference Models – A set of five modeled views of the federal enterprise used to determine alignment and compliance. They are the PRM,BRM,SRM,DRM and TRM. Now also added are the growing number of profiles including Security and Privacy, Geospacial and Records Management . • FEAPMO - The Federal EA Program Management Office (Richard “Dick” Burk is the Chief Architect) in the OMB under the Deputy Administrator for E-government (Karen Evans). • Chief architect – The manager usually in the Agency’s Office of the CIO, responsible for EA program development and management. Most every agency has one.
FEA – What is it…more terms. • Exhibit 300 – Information OMB requires to be filed for each major IT investment with the budget, every year. Also it is referred to as the investment business case. Every major agency was required to submit a consolidated EA Program Exhibit 300 (identifies funding department-wide) last year. • Lines-of-Business – Crosscutting business areas or support functions where the government is beginning to consolidate functions, systems or technology or all three. Current LOBs are: • National Health Architecture • Financial Systems • Grants • Human Resources • Case Tracking • Two new LOBs – Security and Information Sharing
Terms…cont. • E-Gov Initiatives – 25 E-Gov or IT systems initiatives, also referred to as the presidential or quicksilver initiatives, covering collaborative services or capabilities and public access. Agencies are compelled to participate or use these systems. They include: E-Grants, Recreation One Stop, E-Travel, E-Authentication, E-Pay and others. • CPIC – Capital Planning and Investment Control – The process that compliments EA and is focused on management of the agency IT Portfolio and ensuring appropriate project management and performance controls and reviews. Theoretically, projects perpetually 10% behind schedule or over costs should be terminated. This past year 342 of 11087 IT investments were put on OMB’s watch list (total worth $15B).
Framework and Methods Evolution Zachman and Spewak To DoDAF(C4SI) and FEAF…To…
Federal EA Reference Models The FEA was established by OMB, with support from the Federal CIO Council. Source: FEAPMO - OMB
A Concept for Integrating the FEA Reference Models The E-Gov Initiatives and LoBs with the modified FEAF Agency Mission/Business Strategic Plan E-Gov Initiatives • Lines-of-Business • Health Architecture • Grants Administration • Human Resources • Financial Services • Case management • Security Services • Budget Agency IT Strategic Plan Note that this also fits in the Agency Mission and IT Strategic Plans
The FEA Reference Models Performance Reference Model V 1.0 (PRM) Business Reference Model V 2.0 (BRM) Service Component Reference Model V 1.0 (SRM) Security & Privacy Profile Records Mgmt Profile Data Reference Model V1.0 (DRM) Technical Reference Model V 1.1 (TRM) Relationships, Use, Understanding …agencies need it. Geospacial Profile
A view of the FEA Program Parts Source: FEAPMO - OMB
SBA Treasury Defense Agencies EPA Interior Justice DHS Energy HHS Education Community and Social Services Financial Management Human Resources Economic Development Natural Resources Homeland Security Health Mapping / Geospatial / Elevation / GPS Reusable Service Components Security Management Records Management Management of Government Resources Services to Citizens One view of the FEA The FEA provides a set of common, reusable components Source: FEAPMO - OMB
Which Enterprise…Architecture? Federal Enterprise Architecture Agency Z Site Agency X Region Site Bureau Administration Bureau Lab Office STATE Office Agency Y Region Site Region Site Program Program Board or Commission Site Office Site
OMB Karen Evans Assoc. Director for E-Gov Architecture and Infrastructure Committee Chairs – Ren Cahoon & Kim Nelson Governance, Components and Emerging Tech. Sub-committees OMB and CIO Council FEA Support Structure Vacant Chief Technology Officer What do you think would be required to develop and implement a well orchestrated Federal EA? FEA PMO Richard “Dick” Burk Support Contractor Chief Enterprise Architect Detailee Detailee Detailee Detailee Detailee Supporting Partners Lines of Business OMB Portfolio Managers Governmentwide Groups Chief Architect’s Forum State and Local (NASCIO) NASCIO Industry Working Groups (i.e., OMG, ,Open Group w3.org), others Industry – ACT/IAC EA -SIG
Principles of the FEA PMO Principles • EA is Business-driven • Collaborative across the Federal government • Architecture improves the effectiveness and efficiency of government information resources Source: FEAPMO - OMB
FEA Roadmap to Government Transformation Source: FEAPMO - OMB
So what about EA in the Federal Government? • Last year over $500 million dollars programmed in the budget for EA work (not including CPIC support) just on the Civilian side. • More than that on the Defense side (Army, Navy, AF & DoD). • Beside EA work, much related work in areas touching EA – SDLC, Security, Privacy, Accessibility – CPIC Investments Management. • Congress decreed that DoD’s failure to align major investments to its EA is anti-deficiency (miss appropriation of funds) potentially punishable by jail time!!! Comptroller’s seek out the EAs in DoD. • The FEAPMO Plans will further ramp up the requirements to show EA Alignment of Investments with EAAF 2.0.
Early Benefits of EA to the Government • Identification of vast array of IT resources and opportunities for consolidated purchasing and management of infrastructures • Ability to question whether consolidation or coordination in Lines-of-Business or e-Gov services makes sense • In the Case of Homeland Security - EA has postured them to more quickly move forward with restructuring and realignment of major systems and to let key procurements (UICDS,IWINS) • DoD has made significant strides in modernization and transformation of warfighting supported by their DoDAF based EAs
High Level Business Proposition • Government Requirement – ALL AGENCIES MUST HAVE EA’s and their Major Investments (IT Projects) must be aligned to the EA • Infrastructure and Large Systems Projects not aligned may be turned down • Increasingly Government Agencies will be asked to develop common solutions within Federal Lines of business (Justice, healthcare, case tracking..etc) • Projected Savings, Lowered Costs, Higher Performance are critical factors for Agency EAs…so EA will be tightly coupled to the PART management Scores by OMB-ongoing.
So what are the FEA-PMO’s Objectives and what do they believe are the challenges? • Need to focus on Outcomes of Government Business/Mission • Need to emphasize and measure use of the EAs in decisionmaking and holding agencies accountable • Looking for more Lines of Business • Have to find ways to help agencies transform and perform • Must see (make visible) the benefits of EA…
FEA PMO 2005 E-Gov Strategic Initiatives • Articulate FEA value and build trust with EA partners • Evolve the FEA to drive results • Develop and evolve the LoBs and other collaborative opportunities • Measure EA value with the EA Assessment Program
FEA PMO 2005 Strategic Initiatives 1. Articulate FEA value and build trust with EA Partners • Refine the FEA value proposition • Develop and implement a communications strategy • Gather and share EA case studies Source: FEAPMO - OMB
FEA PMO 2005 Strategic Initiatives 2. Evolve the FEA to drive results • Establish and implement a governance framework • Link the PRM to the PART • Evolve the BRM to align EA to strategic planning • Complete the development of the DRM -ONGOING • Engineer the FEA to standardize linkages between Reference Models • Update the Security and Privacy Profile ONGOING (Version 2) • Launch a Records Management Profile –ONGOING • Create a Geospatial Profile - ONGOING Source: FEAPMO - OMB
3. Develop and evolve the LoBs and other collaborative opportunities • Support the identification of new LoBs • Support the IT Security LoB ONGOING • Guide agency transition planning towards common solutions • Support the integration of the E-Gov and LoB initiative architectures ONGOING • Enhance the value and business benefits of collaboration tools (Core.gov) ONGOING FEA PMO 2005 Strategic Initiatives Source: FEAPMO - OMB
4. Measure EA value with the EA Assessment Program • Provide assistance to agencies to mature their EAs ONGOING • Evolve EA assessment framework tool ONGOING FEA PMO 2005 Strategic Initiatives Source: FEAPMO - OMB
Collaborative involvement sought by FEAPMO Source: FEAPMO - OMB
Plan: Revised DRM Structure Context Service Context Security Context Subject Context Subject Area Security Class Service Class Subject Class Input/Output Association Association Association Who When What Why Where Sharing Information Exchange Information Access Exchange Class Unique Identifiers Exchange Payload Query Class Association Association Description Data Element Description Resource Description Structured Data Class Semi-Structured Resource Class Data Property Unstructured Association Association Source: M. Daconta, DRM WG
Business and Performance Architectures Line of Sight - FEA Process Linkage to EA Data and Information Architectures Service Components (Applications) Architecture Technology Architecture
Chief Information Officer Executive Review Boards
Vision - An INTEGRATED CITIZEN-Centric GOVERNMENT True Horizontal and Vertical Information Integration Sharing and Reuse XML and other STANDARDs AND INTERFACES County and Tribal Facilitated by Standards, Components, and Practices – EA and consistent CPIC and security integration.
OMB EAAF Results 24 of 25 Major agencies scored 3.0 or higher… • GAO just started a review using its EAMMF which will show different results than OMB…because the two frameworks are different and scored differently. • OMB is changing the EAAF to version 2.0 in the fall reframing focus on the results that EA is or is not achieving rather than on the Completion of the EA. • This will cause confusion…again. • In the next few months there will be a number of new issuances- DRM, Records Management Profile, Geospacial Profile, EA Glossary – lots of changes
For More Information: Michael “Mike” Tiemann EA Practice Manager tiemann@att.com 703-506-5133 (Office) 202-255-5887 (mobile) EAPTM is our Core Methodology