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Thanks for posting this Karen.
Apart from my immediate scepticism about this latest bonfire of cash, I do have a specific question. Does this new spend feature Open Source software, by any chance, or is it another costly licensing deal?
Before another penny is spent on "IT" at the council, has there been a proper assessment, preferably an independent assessment, into the long-term savings likely by deploying Open Source software?
Within the council, there is likely to be deeply entrenched vested interests in this matter. DOS-Windows machines (AKA Poxy-DOS-Boxes) require a lot of maintenance and that provides a lot of employment at high rates of pay. Which is isn't necessarily good for the public in the long run.
A few years ago, Haringey's infamous "Tech Refresh" project, led by the disgraced Councillor Charles Adje, resulted in an overspend of, I believe, more than £10,000,000. But then, its only tax-payers' money.
This latest project has got "disaster" written all over it.
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I note there was only one valid bid for a contact worth in the region of £3,300,000. In these straightened times, this is surely surprising of itself. Among the questions that occur to me are:
Did the disastrous Tech Refresh project affect relations with suppliers such that few potential suppliers in this area are keen to do IT business with Haringey?
Was the bidding "engineered" in any way to favour a particular supplier who for whatever reason, enjoys a cosy relationship with one or more individuals at the council? (NB, I have no knowledge of impropriety in this case: but this does not look right.)
In a similar case of council procurement, it has been suggested (How to flog a Palace for Peanuts A quick guide) that the Developer-of-Last-Resort was helped to get the inside running for the title of "Preferred Bidder" for Ally Pally. The smallest research would have revealed the company's reputation.
This was in a council bidding process that was claimed to be fair, open, rigourous and transparent. And pigs fly.
I have no knowledge of how Haringey runs these procurements, but as the value is over €100,000 it should mean that it goes for European wide tender using the OJEC route - www.ojec.com. I’d be very surprised if they only received one tender from all possible EU suppliers. The Office of Government Commerce (OGC) has a dedicated IT team who may be able to provide additional support in this area if appropriate: http://www.ogc.gov.uk/IThardware_6728.asp.
In regards to use of open source software; in principle this is a good idea, but it may not be feasible to switch from a proprietary solution to service each of the main IT functions due to the differing maturity levels in each area.
I’d be interested to know if there are any current total cost of ownership comparisons (including any switching costs, support staff and user training, etc) available for the move to OSS?
Perhaps only one contractor in Europe wishes to deal with Haringey? If there were a desire to engineer a sweetheart deal, there could be ways to work around the €100,000 threshold if it could lead to genuine competition. I'm surprised that the council is able to conjure up such a lot of money for any purpose when we are led to believe that money is so tight, the old and young must suffer closures of their facilities.
I would like to know if Haringey has looked at Open Source in a way that is objective and disinterested. Other local authorities have either adopted Open Source or are considering the best ways to introduce it or to integrate it with their old proprietary legacy software.
It would not surprise me if this avenue has been ignored or disregarded by vested interests, mainly because it promises to lower costs in the long run.
Even an outsider can discern some bad practices in Haringey IT. For example, some documents (though not all) are still printed out onto paper and then scanned as an image by a machine and converted into a PDF. This is hopelessly and highly inefficient.
It begs the question: are these documents being made un-searchable deliberately? The waste is also in file space, and the time taken by staff in scanning pieces of paper and of course, the lower quality.
In my opinion, these documents should be produced as PDFs in the first place.
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