While overpriced, these days aren’t they virtualized Power 7s?

From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Tom Johnson
Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 4:18 PM
Subject: [FRIAM] Fwd: [1st-mile-nm] GAO report: Feds spend billions to run 
ancient technology

I guess I should stop complaining that the SFPD is still running an AS400.

TJ

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Tom Johnson
Institute for Analytic Journalism   --     Santa Fe, NM USA
505.577.6482(c)                                    505.473.9646(h)
Society of Professional Journalists<http://www.spj.org>   -   Region 
9<http://www.spj.org/region9.asp> Director
Check out It's The People's 
Data<https://www.facebook.com/pages/Its-The-Peoples-Data/1599854626919671>
http://www.jtjohnson.com<http://www.jtjohnson.com/>                   
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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Richard Lowenberg <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Wed, May 25, 2016 at 10:52 AM
Subject: [1st-mile-nm] GAO report: Feds spend billions to run ancient technology
To: 1st-mile Nm 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>


Bridging the 'digital divide' is an increasingly expensive and wide-spread 
proposition, impacting top-down as well as bottom-up.   I'd be interested in 
seeing a report on the state of government agencies' ISP contracted 
connectivity across the U.S.
RL

----------

Gov't report: Feds spend billions to run ancient technology

Ricardo Alonso-zaldivar, Associated Press
Wednesday, May 25, 2016

http://www.sfgate.com/business/technology/article/Gov-t-report-Feds-spend-billions-to-run-ancient-7943999.php

WASHINGTON (AP) — The government is spending about three-fourths of its 
technology budget maintaining aging computer systems, including platforms more 
than 50 years old in vital areas from nuclear weapons to Social Security. One 
still uses floppy disks.

In a report to be released Wednesday, nonpartisan congressional investigators 
say the increasing cost of maintaining museum-ready equipment devours money 
better spent on modernization.
Despite a White House push to replace aging workhorse systems, the budget for 
modernization has fallen, and will be $7 billion less in 2017 than in 2010, 
said the Government Accountability Office. The report was provided to The 
Associated Press ahead of a House oversight committee hearing.

GAO said it found problems across the government, not just in a few agencies. 
Among those highlighted in the report:

— The Defense Department's Strategic Automated Command and Control System, 
which is used to send and receive emergency action messages to U.S. nuclear 
forces. The system is running on a 1970s IBM computing platform, and still uses 
8-inch floppy disks to store data. "Replacement parts for the system are 
difficult to find because they are now obsolete," GAO said. The Pentagon is 
initiating a full replacement and says the floppy disks should be gone by the 
end of next year. The entire upgrade will take longer.

— Treasury's individual and business master files, the authoritative data 
sources for taxpayer information. The systems are about 56 years old, and use 
an outdated computer language that is difficult to write and maintain. Treasury 
plans to replace the systems, but has no firm dates.

— Social Security systems that are used to determine eligibility and estimate 
benefits, about 31 years old. Some use a programming language called COBOL, 
dating to the late 1950s and early 1960s. "Most of the employees who developed 
these systems are ready to retire and the agency will lose their collective 
knowledge," the report said. "Training new employees to maintain the older 
systems takes a lot of time." Social Security has no plans to replace the 
entire system, but is eliminating and upgrading older and costlier components. 
It is also rehiring retirees who know the technology.

— Medicare's Appeals System, which is only 11 years old, but facing challenges 
keeping up with a growing number of appeals, as well as questions from 
congressional offices following up on constituent concerns. The report says the 
agency has general plans to keep updating the system, depending on the 
availability of funds.

— The Transportation Department's Hazardous Materials Information System, used 
to track incidents and keep information relied on by regulators. The system is 
about 41 years old, and some of its software is no longer supported by vendors, 
which can create security risks. The department plans to complete its 
modernization program in 2018.

GAO estimates that the government spent at least $80 billion on information 
technology, or IT, in 2015. However, the total could be significantly higher. 
Not counted in the report are certain Pentagon systems, as well as those run by 
independent agencies, among them the CIA. Major systems are known as "IT 
investments" in government jargon.

"Legacy federal IT investments are becoming obsolete," GAO concluded. "The 
federal government runs the risk of continuing to maintain investments that 
have outlived their effectiveness and are consuming resources that outweigh 
their benefits."

The report also profiled aging systems operated by the departments of 
Agriculture, Commerce, Energy, Homeland Security, Justice, State, and Veterans 
Affairs.

The White House has been nudging agencies to identify obsolete systems and 
start replacing them, but GAO said that clearer, more specific goals and 
timetables are needed. A starting point could be recent legislation supported 
by the White House to create a revolving fund of $3 billion for replacing or 
upgrading older technology. It seems certain that President Barack Obama's 
successor will have to grapple with the issue.

"The federal government is years and in some cases decades behind the private 
sector," Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, chairman of the House Oversight and 
Government Reform Committee, said in a statement. "Taxpayers deserve a 
government that leverages technology to serve them, rather than one that 
deploys insecure, decades-old technology that places their sensitive and 
personal information at risk."

Here’s the link to today’s GAO report:
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-16-696T


---------------------------------------------------------------
Richard Lowenberg, Executive Director
1st-Mile Institute     505-603-5200<tel:505-603-5200>
Box 8001, Santa Fe, NM 87504,
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>     
www.1st-mile.org<http://www.1st-mile.org>
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