ITPRO

Printed from www.itpro.co.uk

Register to receive our regular email newsletter at http://www.itpro.co.uk/registration.

The newsletter contains links to our latest IT news, product reviews, features and how-to guides, plus special offers and competitions.

Skip to navigation

    Government's £30 million Connect project gathers pace

Cable and Wireless will provide a secure managed network to enable hundreds of local authorities to better share data

By Maggie Holland, 29 Sep 2006 at 16:00

By the end of next year, 200 local authorities in the UK will be able to securely exchange cross-departmental data as part of a £30 million government-backed online programme.

The Government Connect initiative is designed to create a platform that will eventually connect more than one million employees across 388 local authorities.

For some time, core government departments have been able to make use of the Government Secure Intranet (GSI) to securely exchange data and documents.

However, local authorities didn't have sufficient security clearance to exchange certain information electronically, resulting in a problematic bottleneck that has been highlighted by recent cases such as the death of Victoria Climbie.

The aim of putting the new platform in place is to avoid such tragedies caused by data inefficiencies in addition to sharing services and enhancing customer satisfaction.

Government Connect is backed by the Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG), which has called on communications giant Cable & Wireless to create the underlying secure managed network to enable the transformation.

"This really is the last part of the jigsaw in building up a secure, collaborative infrastructure for government and is part of the government's transformation agenda," said Martin Goodman, managing director of public sector and systems integrators at Cable & Wireless.

And this new initiative will act as a catalyst for a wider change in thinking, according to Goodman.

"Until you've got [Government Connect] in place you can't build on top of it. Once people see the new applications and ways of providing services, I'm sure there will be a number of parallel activities," he said.

"When local authorities see that they can become a virtual front office for the whole of government, it opens up a very different model. You could, for example, phone me in the Inland Revenue and say that you'd just had a baby boy and I could send secure messages to the relevant department to ask them to deal with it."

Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council will be responsible for managing the Government Connect programme, which also includes a directory and authentication tool staff can use to identify one another more easily, to ensure that everything goes according to plan.

Email to a friend

Print this page

Social Bookmark this article: What is this?

Be the first to comment on this article

You need to Login or Register to comment.

advertisement

    Latest Internet Features

Netbooks vs. Smartphones: Making business mobile

What we traditionally think of as a smartphone is changing, as data is overtaking voice in terms of use. However, netbooks are beginning to become more and more pocketable – but which is better for someone who wants an office on the move?

Read more

 
advertisement

    Latest News Videos in Internet

Video: Q&A with Easynet Connect's Chris Stening

Play Video: Q&A with Easynet Connect's Chris Stening   Play

IT PRO spoke to Chris Stening, managing director of Easynet’s SME division, about whether ISPs are giving businesses the service they deserve.

 

    White papers

Want more background on today's hottest IT trends?

Visit IT PRO's white paper library for more on virtualisation, encryption and other topics.

    Register for IT PRO

You'll get exclusive member benefits including free white papers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.

Advertisement