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Santa Cruz County Grand Jury
Report
for 2002-2003
701 Ocean Street, Room 318-I
Santa Cruz, CA 95060
(831) 454-2099
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Operations of the Santa
Cruz County
Information Services Department
Background
The County Information
Services Department (ISD) provides centralized automation, telephone, printing
and other support services to County departments to improve productivity and
service. The department is responsible for managing the County’s wide-area
network and operates and supports a broad range of data processing
applications for County departments including public safety applications,
which require twenty-four hours a day, seven days per week reliability.
Scope
This report examines the
use of personnel and financial resources to provide county wide “information
services/data processing”, which is a major sub-function of the ISD. This
report will discuss the appropriateness of the current hardware and software
architecture to support modern county operations.
Findings
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The ISD uses mainframe computer hardware
first introduced in 1990 which is an upgrade from earlier versions.
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Current mainframe software includes
applications for the Tax Collector, Assessor, Auditor, Payroll, Personnel,
District Attorney, Welfare and Planning departments.
-
The Planning Department is in the process of
migrating away from the mainframe.
-
The amount allocated for Information
Services/Data Processing in the 2002-2003 county budget is in excess of $9
million.
-
Using the financial data provided by the ISD,
the Grand Jury estimates that $1.1 million is spent annually on outside
hardware, software and other services to support mainframe architectures.
The exact costs for Data Processing
mainframe operations versus other server operations are not delineated in
the published budget.
-
Mainframe architectures are expensive to
sustain and difficult to evolve to current industry best practices such as
web access. To support these mainframe operations, the ISD employs 32 highly
skilled programmers and technicians. Given the financial and organizational
data provided by the ISD, the Grand Jury estimates this cost to be $3
million annually. The exact Data Processing personnel costs for mainframe
operations versus other server operations are not delineated in the
published budget.
-
The County continues to use a mainframe
internal billing structure to allocate ISD expenses across county
operations. This requires administrative personnel involved in determining
and allocating costs of mainframe usage for the purpose of interdepartmental
billing. The Data Processing Department is charged $709,000 annually by ISD
for “Management Services.” Some undetermined portion of this is for figuring
the internal cross department mainframe charges and administrative overhead.
-
The published Data Processing budget does
not delineate monies spent on mainframe architectures versus other server
based services.
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The ISD understands the ultimate need to
eliminate the mainframe computer operations by migrating to less expensive
current technology, but does not have a formal plan or time line for
accomplishing this.
-
The mainframe software applications are a
combination of “in house” and commercial software adapted “in house”. These
applications have evolved over a span of four decades.
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Independent investigations by the Grand Jury
determined that “Commercial off the shelf” (COTS) software is available for
county governmental operations from many vendors for a variety of computing
platforms.
-
However, the ISD has a policy to use Windows
NT based servers for new server based applications which the limits the
available options.
-
The ISD staff has reported having difficulty
finding COTS software applications to replace the current mainframe
applications.
-
Santa Cruz County is in a severe budgetary
crisis.
Conclusions
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The County is operating a midsized mainframe
software organization.
-
As operations are moved away from the
mainframe, such as the Planning Department, the ISD mainframe costs for the
remaining departments will become more prohibitive. There will be fewer
departments sharing the fixed overhead.
-
It is difficult to manage the costs of using
mainframe architectures when the exact costs are not delineated.
-
The monies spent on maintaining the use of
the mainframe computer hardware, software and personnel could be spent more
effectively on contemporary industry standard server-based hardware with
COTS software solutions.
-
The ISD policy to only use Windows NT for
new server applications artificially restricts candidate COTS software
solutions which could replace the mainframe software.
-
The ISD must find ways to reduce Data
Processing costs.
-
The ISD needs outside help to facilitate a
migration from mainframe architectures to current vendor supplied hardware
and software technology.
-
The ISD department does not have the
expertise to simultaneously maintain and operate mainframe architectures and
at the same time migrate applications to new platforms.
Recommendations
1.
The ISD should consult with many solution vendors and hire a consulting
firm to facilitate the selection of and migration to current hardware and
software technology.
2.
The ISD should discontinue any new development for mainframe
applications and only maintain those which are required for current
operations.
3.
The ISD should delineate the costs for supporting mainframe
architectures in the published Data Processing budget.
4.
The ISD should use application requirements to drive the selection of
new platform architectures.
5.
The ISD should develop formal 18 month and 5 year plans that detail the
elimination of the current mainframe hardware and software and the complete
migration to current vendor supplied solutions that do not require in house
software development.
Responses Required
Entity |
Findings |
Recommendations |
Respond Within |
Santa Cruz County
Information Services Department |
1-14 |
1-5 |
90 Days
(Sept. 30, 2003) |
Board of Supervisors
of the County of
Santa Cruz |
1-14 |
1-5 |
60 Days
(Sept. 2, 2003) |