I had the extremely good fortune to stumble upon a document
on XML.gov that describes the cohesion between the varying areas of state
government work that I am involved in. The document, a report on the
E-Government Act of 2002, Section 212, was a revelation of previously unknown
relationships between many areas of my work. Despite the fact that the document
was written for the federal government, it appears to be very applicable to
state government as well.

The report highlights enterprise architectural elements as
well as pilot implementations underway to support presidential e-government
initiatives. I’ve touched on a couple of these examples below.
- Federal
Enterprise Architecture (FEA) – The FEA consists of five reference
models (business, performance, service, technical, and data) and a series
of policies to help link IT investments with the reference models to help
identify commonalities and IT spending priorities across the government’s
agencies.

FEA_lg.jpg (36 KB)
The FEA obviously does not apply to
state government out-of-the-box. However, the extensible structure of each of
the FEA reference models facilitates customization. The Commonwealth of Virginia
provides an exceptional example of how this can be implemented in
practice. Virginia has used the FEA as their model
and, from the top down, has begun creating the business reference model in a
manner consistent with the operation of state government. I have not seen any
other work of this quality and breadth made publicly available by other states.
I’ve included a local reference to their enterprise business model below. More
detailed mappings can be found on Virginia’s
enterprise architecture page.
VirginiaEnterpriseBusinessModel.pdf (121.5 KB)
- Grants
Management Pilot Project – I’ve been spending a bit of time
familiarizing myself with the grants management domain over the past
several months and posted on this topic more than once. With the passing
of the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act of 2006, focus
on this area is likely to get even more intense at the federal and state
levels in the next couple of years. Special thanks go out to Dave Cassidy
of TCG for pointing me to the right section of Grants.gov with some meaty design
and implementation details concerning granting system information exchanges.
- Case
Management Pilot Project – Case management has a place near and dear
to my heart. The state government pattlets all deal with case management and
it’s an area where I have some experience and even more opinions. It is
encouraging to see the federal government aspiring to move towards data
unity in this area. I have my doubts however. Case management, with its
diversity of data elements and business practices, seems to have antibodies
that preclude any form of true standardization. Normalization seems more likely
to me here.

The National Information Exchange
Model (NIEM) was mentioned as a unifying enabler. I am encouraged to see
government pursuing data standardization so rigorously with NIEM. They seem to
have made great progress in areas related to homeland security and are now
eyeing other areas. I long for the day when NIEM becomes a first class citizen
of the integration standards world and garners widespread vendor support like
its industry brethren, SWIFT, HL7, and RosettaNet.