Thursday, May 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

The IT crowd: Federal government's IT department can't prove savings

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Feb, 2016 11:05 AM
    OTTAWA — A critical audit of the federal government's central information-technology department says Shared Services Canada can't show whether it was saving the government any money, nor whether systems and data were secure.
     
    The audit found Shared Services Canada knowingly went ahead in February 2015 with the first wave of a new, unified email system for the federal government that had two high security risks that were mitigated in July 2015.
     
    In many cases, the audit found, agencies and departments that work with Shared Services Canada had little involvement with the IT department, and didn't communicate on expectations.
     
    That kind of disconnect was at the heart of an incident in Saskatchewan in March 2014 when every first responder in the province lost radio contact for 40 minutes.
     
    Shared Services Canada rendered a critical feature of the radio network unavailable during an upgrade, leaving some 9,000 police officers, fire officials and paramedics without a vital communications link.
     
    Auditors said the outage could have been avoided had Shared Services simply checked with the RCMP and local responders about the network upgrade.
     
    Shared Services Canada spends about $1.9 billion annually to oversee services to 43 of the heaviest IT users in the federal government and was set up in 2012 by the previous Conservative government to save taxpayers millions annually by reducing costs and eliminating duplication.
     
    It was supposed to do so by creating a single email system for federal workers and consolidating 485 data centres to just seven by 2020.
     
    The email project is about one year behind schedule, auditors said, and there wasn't enough information from Shared Services Canada to determine whether decommissioned data centres were actually closed.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Jason Kenney Heckles Harjit Sajjan, Liberals Call Him A Racist For 'English' Translation Remark

    Jason Kenney Heckles Harjit Sajjan, Liberals Call Him A Racist For 'English' Translation Remark
    Conservative MP Jason Kenney sparked controversy in question period Monday with a heckle directed at Canada's defence minister that a Liberal MP later deemed "racist"

    Jason Kenney Heckles Harjit Sajjan, Liberals Call Him A Racist For 'English' Translation Remark

    B.C. Housing Studying Foreign Ownership In Real Estate Market: Premier Clark

    B.C. Housing Studying Foreign Ownership In Real Estate Market: Premier Clark
    Housing affordability is a hot topic in Vancouver, where the rental-vacancy rate is below one per cent and the average price of a home on the west side is now more than $2.5 million.

    B.C. Housing Studying Foreign Ownership In Real Estate Market: Premier Clark

    Passengers Taken Off Vancouver-To-Maui WestJet Flight After Tire Blows On Runway

    Passengers Taken Off Vancouver-To-Maui WestJet Flight After Tire Blows On Runway
    First responders got the passengers off the plane on the runway before they were taken back to the terminal by bus.

    Passengers Taken Off Vancouver-To-Maui WestJet Flight After Tire Blows On Runway

    Hundreds Of Ontario Adoptions On Hold While Commission Reviews Motherisk Cases

    Hundreds Of Ontario Adoptions On Hold While Commission Reviews Motherisk Cases
    TORONTO — Hundreds of adoptions have been put on hold in Ontario as a provincially appointed commission reviews child protection cases involving flawed drug tests.

    Hundreds Of Ontario Adoptions On Hold While Commission Reviews Motherisk Cases

    B.C. Chief Coroner Expects To Know Cause Of Deadly Avalanche That Killed Five

    B.C. Chief Coroner Expects To Know Cause Of Deadly Avalanche That Killed Five
    Coroner Barb McLintock says investigators have "nearly always" been able to determine what triggered previous slides.

    B.C. Chief Coroner Expects To Know Cause Of Deadly Avalanche That Killed Five

    Tim Hortons And Burger King Promise To Serve Cage-Free Eggs By 2025

    Tim Hortons And Burger King Promise To Serve Cage-Free Eggs By 2025
    The parent company of Tim Hortons and Burger King announced Monday it is committed to serving cage-free eggs at all locations in Canada, the United States and Mexico by 2025.

    Tim Hortons And Burger King Promise To Serve Cage-Free Eggs By 2025

    PrevNext