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Information Technology: OMB Leadership Critical to Making Needed Enterprise Architecture and E-government Progress

GAO-02-389T Published: Mar 21, 2002. Publicly Released: Mar 21, 2002.
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Highlights

E-government refers to operations that enhance delivery of government information and services. Enterprise architectures provides for successful delivery of e-government applications, which in turn promise improved government performance and accountability. Under the Office of Management and Budget's (OMB) leadership, the president's fiscal year 2003 budget proposes 24 e-government initiatives, most involving multiple agencies. These initiatives have laudable goals, including the elimination of redundant, nonintegrated business operations and systems which could save billions of dollars. The success of these initiatives depends in large part on whether they are pursued within the context of enterprise architectures. Approved architectures for most of these initiatives do not currently exist. OMB has been a proponent of enterprise architectures and has recently devoted increased attention to them. However, it can and should play a larger role. The maturity framework and benchmark data about 116 departments, component agencies, and independent agencies GAO reviews in this testimony provide important baseline information against which targeted improvement across the government can be defined and measured.

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AccountabilityE-governmentInformation resources managementInformation technologyStrategic planningEnterprise architectureFederal agenciesDisaster assistanceChief information officersPrivate sector