REGION VII INFORMATION RESOURCES MANAGEMENT STRATEGIC PLAN Office of Policy and Management June 6, 1991 Information Systems Information Technology Infrastructure U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Region VII Information Resources Ctr. 726 Minnesota Ave, Kansas City, KS 66101-2798 ------- Table of Contents Overview 1 Premise 2 Vision 3 IRM Plan 4 IRM Issues and Activities 5 PRIORITY ISSUES Strategic Data Planning 6 Space Expansion 7 LAN 8 Information Technology Training 9 CIS 10 GPS 11 Applications Development 12 Data Integration 13 IRM Organization (Distributed vs Centralized) 14 IRM Activity Focus 15 SEDM Program 16 Configuration Management 17 OTHER ISSUES Leading Edge vs Bleeding Edge 18 IRM Budget 19 Records Management 20 Contract Management 21 Contractor vs EPA Staffing 22 Library Strategy 23 Public Access 24 Laboratory computing Environment .... 25 Videoconferencing 26 Regional Data Communications Network . . 27 Regional Voice Network 28 Contingency Planning 29 Security 30 Image Processing 31 Distributed Graphics 32 Standards 33 Graphical User Interface 34 WordPerfect Conversion 35 PC vs Mac 36 Electronic Mail 37 Recommendations to Attain Vision 38 Planning Schedule 39 ------- REGION VII INFORMATION RESOURCES MANAGEMENT STRATEGIC PLAN PREMISE requires VISION is basis for IRM PLAN incorporates i:iRM ISSUES & ACTIVITIES ------- REGION VII INFORMATION RESOURCES MANAGEMENT STRATEGIC PLAN PREMISE Efficient use of information is critical. Region VII management should share IRM vision. PLMG responsibility to propose, explain, coordinate IRM vision and strategy. Region VII IRM Plan required to implement vision. ------- REGION VII INFORMATION RESOURCES MANAGEMENT STRATEGIC PLAN VISION JUST DO IT "An ounce of application is worth a ton of abstraction." STRATEGIC PLANNING IRM should be key partner with EPA Programs and offices in evaluating regional processes to recommend improvements or restructure the way work is performed. Activities should support the organizational goals and priorities established by management and should improve the "bottom line". All IRM activity should be a well-defined part of a cohesive whole. Cost/benefit should be a key consideration in setting priorities. ORGANIZATION/INFRASTRUCTURE IRM responsibilities should be defined clearly so that work is done efficiently. IRM infrastructure (policy, procedures, equipment, network, staff, organization) is sound. INFORMATION SYSTEMS Each employee linked electronically for easy access and sharing of information. Systems should work well, be adaptable to change and be sustainable. Systems should exist to provide all EPA employees the information they need to do their jobs. Systems should automate low-value work, freeing people to do creative problem-solving. The technology at our disposal should be fully utilized. COMMUNICATION EPA staff and management should understand clearly the purpose and value of all IRM activity. Regional IRM activity should be marketed and coordinated with other regions and HQ components both in the IRM and Program areas to provide the best return on investment in terms of funding, resource allocation and technology transfer. ------- REGION VII INFORMATION RESOURCES MANAGEMENT STRATEGIC PLAN IRMPLAN Provides detail for implementation of VISION in Region VII 5 year plan includes Scope Applicable laws, regulations, policies Organization Responsibilities Contacts Procedures Service Levels IRM Plan review and update process Goals and objectives Priorities Budget projections Inventory of systems and users inventory of hardware/software Regional standards for hardware/software/methods Business process/data definitions ------- REGION VII INFORMATION RESOURCES MANAGEMENT STRATEGIC PLAN IRM ISSUES and ACTIVITIES PRIORITY ISSUES Strategic Data Planning Space Expansion LAN Information Technology Training CIS GPS Applications Development (regional vs national) Data Integration IRM Organization (Distributed vs Centralized) IRM Activity Focus -demand vs business-driven -resource utilization (service levels) SEDM Program Configuration Management OTHER ISSUES Leading Edge vs Bleeding Edge Approach IRM Budget Records Management Contract Management Contractor vs EPA staffing Library Strategy Public Access Laboratory Computing Environment Videoconferencing Regional Data Communications Network Regional Voice Network Contingency Planning Security Image Processing Distributed Graphics Standards Graphical User Interface WordPerfect Conversion PC vs Mac Electronic Mail ------- PRIORITY ISSUES ------- Strategic Data Planning Strategic Data Planning is a formal process for defining the critical functions, information requirements and users within an organization. It is a critical first step in the development of an IRM strategy. Business processes typically involve a labyrinth of data flow which may or may not be logical, documented, officially sanctioned, or effective. There is slight chance of being successful in doing a complete strategic data planning study of Region VII or of being able to assimilate the mass of resulting information. There is considerable value in doing a "focused" study in less depth to look for high-payoff, quick-payoff opportunities for process redesign, organizational change, or automation. RECOMMENDATION: Contract out for "focused" strategic data planning effort Capture functions, process descriptions, data dictionary, using Computer Aided Software Engineering (CASE) tool. ------- Space Expansion We must provide planning and support for the move into new space and the resulting reconfiguration of existing office space and users. It is a critical task which cannot be slighted. RECOMMENDATION: Other priorities must yield to this requirement if there are conflicts. ------- LAN The Local Area Network (LAN) will be the primary mechanism for delivering information resources to the customer. It is a much more complex environment than standalone PCs. It should be installed as quickly as possible, supported with adequate resources, and managed professionally in accordance with agency standards. RECOMMENDATION: Increase LAN system administration and technical support resources. ------- Information Technology Training Ever changing technology and staff turnover requires continual training. Customers must be trained to be as self-sufficient as possible and to work efficiently with the technology at their disposal. RECOMMENDATION: Provide ongoing training on all major software, hardware. Use in-house trainers. ------- CIS Geographic Information Systems (CIS) provide one of the most appealing and useful means of integrating environmental data. It is also expensive, not well understood and not integrated well into an overall regional IRM strategy. There are many guestions to be answered. How do we identify and prioritize CIS projects? What are the critical data requirements? Will CIS capability be distributed to the divisions? What is the plan for networking CIS workstations within the region, including with the states? What are the data storage requirements and where will it be stored? Are there simple, LAN-based CIS capabilities that can be provided to less sophisticated end users? What are the dangers of making incorrect decisions based on CIS maps produced with inaccurate or missing data? RECOMMENDATION: Contract out for CIS evaluation and planning study to answer these questions and others and then implement recommendations. 10 ------- GPS Region VII has a Global Positioning System (GPS). It is a tool to provide accurate locational coordinates. ENSV has developed an implementation plan for use of the technology and storage of resulting data which should be reviewed and understood by the rest of the region. Plans for sharing locational data are vague. There are obvious implications for CIS and national systems as well which should be clearly addressed. RECOMMENDATION: The CIS evaluation and planning study should include a review of GPS plans and requirements in its recommendations. 11 ------- Applications Development It takes years for national applications to be developed by HQ OIRM or NDPD. We can be more responsive to our regional customers when we develop applications in-house. When national applications are delivered, they may not meet our requirements. We are expected to be responsible for technical support of national applications because HQ doesn't have adequate resources. Good regional applications will become national applications, bringing benefits to the region. It is easier to support applications developed in- house. RECOMMENDATION: We should increase our capability to develop applications in the region, concentrating on LAN applications. 12 ------- Data Integration Existing systems store data by media. True integration of national systems is years away. It is not at all clear that the type of data integration capability offered by efforts such as the Office of Enforcement system (IDEA) is what Region VII managers and staff require. It may be that analysis of the Region VII data integration requirement would identify simpler, more achievable data integration efforts which could be undertaken at the regional level. RECOMMENDATION: Clearly define the requirement for Data Integration by including it as one of the "focus" areas in the Strategic Data Planning contract. Implement recommendations which can be accomplished in the region and provide all findings to OIRM as part of the agencywide effort to achieve data integration. 13 ------- IRM Organization (Distributed vs Centralized) There are advantages and disadvantages to either approach. Typically, unit management feels that their own technical staff will be more responsive than a central IRM group. Proponents of the centralized approach feel that centralization results in greater efficiency, standardization, better coordination and better utilization of resources. Within Region VII, WSTM and ENSV have significant IRM resources already. RECOMMENDATION: Focus on centralizing the IRM resource in the primary IRM organization (Information Management Branch). Future IRM resources should be placed in the Information Management Branch where they can be shared as a common regional resource. The IRM function should not be dispersed any more than those of Human Resources, Facilities Management or the Comptroller. 14 ------- IRM Activity Focus Successful IRM organizations must attain a balance between demand- driven and business-driven activity. Demand-driven is the day-to- day operational support required to keep the technological infrastructure up and running. Business-driven activity includes consultation, analysis and applications development to maximize customer productivity and technology utilization. RECOMMENDATION: The Information Management Branch should introduce defined service levels which allows approximately 50% of staff time to be spent on business-driven activity. Explain resource and service-level limitations to customers. Implement a help desk to track service calls and manage customer interface. 15 ------- SEDM Given the primacy of the states in implementing environmental legislation and collecting environmental data, it is imperative that we establish and maintain automated methods to collect and share data. National direction for the SEDM program seems overreaching and unfocused. Regional efforts should focus on defining and improving data sharing and integration and providing automated access to desired and required data. RECOMMENDATION: Include a review of SEDM data sharing capability and performance as part of the Strategic Data Planning contract. Continue quarterly meetings, information distribution and coordination. Projects funded by SEDM grants should have complete project plans and be tracked by a project officer who has time to ensure that the project is completed in a timely, professional manner. 16 ------- Configuration Management Region VII has made a tremendous investment in information technology. We must have accurate records of all hardware and software in order to provide proper internal controls, plan for future purchases, make decisions for distribution of equipment, ensure compatibility among systems, plan for upgrades and provide proper technical support of our customers. RECOMMENDATION: Take all steps necessary to keep a proper and useful automated inventory of all Region VII hardware and software. This includes creating an inventory system, performing a periodic physical inventory and ensuring procedures exist and are followed for updating the inventory. 17 ------- OTHER ISSUES ------- Leading Edge vs Bleeding Edge This is a question of how aggressive we are in being "out front" on the technological frontier in terms of testing, experimenting and piloting new hardware and software. The "bleeding edge" approach is more expensive in terms of dollars, time and bottom-line productivity. Its value is high morale of technical staff, advanced knowledge, early access to technological breakthroughs, and the "status" associated with being in the vanguard. RECOMMENDATION: Be content with leading edge activity, but be prepared to try higher risk activities in the future if resources permit. 18 ------- IRM Budget We spend substantial sums of money on regional IRM. There is not a lot of coordination and planning to identify items with high priority or long-term investment implications. RECOMMENDATION: Coordinate the preparation of the IRM budget based on regional priorities identified in the IRM Plan. Coordinate program area funding requests from HQ through the IRM Advisory Council. 19 ------- Records Management We are in the beginning stages of building a regional records management program. Plans include creation of a common records center which will be managed by the Information Management Branch. Records management requires a distinct set of knowledge and experience about how to manage information which has specific rules, regulations and procedures associated with its use. RECOMMENDATION: Use summer rotational position to do planning and preparation for expanded Region VII records management program. Provide regional training to increase understanding of records management objectives and requirements. Investigate opportunities to automate records storage and retrieval through use of imaging, microfilm and indexing systems. 20 ------- Contract Management There are numerous national and regional delivery orders for CSC services under the TOSS contract. There are advantages to be gained in terms of contract administration efficiency and flexibility in the use of contractors by consolidation of delivery orders where possible. Consolidation of technical resources under one Information Management Branch delivery order also promotes the philosophy of centralization of IRM. RECOMMENDATION: Order CSC services under the Information Management Branch delivery order. Continue careful monitoring of all contracting activity to ensure practices are consistent with all applicable contracting guidance. 21 ------- Contractor vs EPA Staffing We depend heavily on contractors for technical support. We are fortunate in having good working relationships with our contractors and we enjoy low turnover of personnel. There is a considerable overhead burden for contract administration. There are restrictions on contractor staff training, travel and participation in some work activities which sometimes cause problems. RECOMMENDATION: Make every attempt to increase the EPA : Contractor ratio. 22 ------- Library Strategy During the next year, the Library will move into expanded, improved space and will be offering more services to the region through more emphasis on special collections, public access and automated access to information through the LAN. RECOMMENDATION: Continue focus on outreach and improved automation. 23 ------- Public Access The agency has committed to the principle of providing public access to environmental information, but few resources have been devoted to doing that and little hard planning has been done on the implications in terms of issues such as security. RECOMMENDATION: Use the library to focus on improved opportunities for public access. Make public access one component of the analysis and design process when developing new information systems. 24 ------- Laboratory Computing Environment Because of their physical location and scientific applications, EPA's laboratories nationwide generally have unique computing environments. They also maintain a distinct technical support capability from the rest of the regional office. RECOMMENDATION: The region should maintain as much similarity as possible between the laboratory and other office computing environments. The IRM Advisory Council should review and understand the reasons and implications of differing computers, languages, applications, and methodologies which may exist at the lab. 25 ------- Videoconferencing Beginning in July, Region VII will have new capabilities in full- motion, color videoconferencing which will allow us to have face- to-face meetings with HQ, NDPD and several other regions. Eventually all regions will be linked for 2-way and broadcast-type conferences. This opens up a whole new avenue of improved communication for project tracking, training, workgroups and briefings. This capability also provides a potential tool for increasing Region VII visibility nationally on national environmental and policy initiatives. Conference time is expensive but can result in considerable travel cost savings and allow more flexibility in scheduling meetings. The imposed rigor of set time limitations reportedly often results in more productive meetings. RECOMMENDATION: Facilitators should be trained in each Division and Office to ensure adequate support for meetings. We should consider training key Region VII people in effective presentation techniques for this new medium. Scheduling of the facility should be through FAMS. Information Management personnel will provide technical support and coordination of required maintenance. 26 ------- Regional Data Communications Network The complexity of our regional data communications network continues to grow with extensive LAN networking (including connections to remote sites), backbone connections to RTF and Cincinnati, connections to our states, contractors and other agencies, and special networking requirements such as those for image processing, GPS and CIS. Different knowledge is required for management of each type of network. We depend heavily on NDPD expertise and support in this area. RECOMMENDATION: We would be more effective in reacting quickly to network problems and planning and implementing regional networks if we had in-house data communications expertise. We will continue to develop existing resources and look for opportunities to obtain resources in this area. 27 ------- Regional Voice Network With our own PBX and Voice Processing System, we have more control and better service with our telephone system than most regions. We also are managing to accomodate continuing growth at multiple locations with few technical resources. We depend heavily on contractor expertise in this area, but their support has been responsive. RECOMMENDATION: Continue to keep Region VII "state-of-the-art" in voice systems. Monitor traffic to anticipate upgrades and reconfigurations well in advance of actual requirement. 28 ------- Contingency Planning Ideally, we should have contingency plans in place for continued operation in the face of all sorts of natural and man-made catastrophes such as fire, flood, electrical outage, civil disturbance and war. The contingency plan identifies critical systems, information, and personnel and describes procedures for functioning in their absence or degradation. We do have procedures for maintaining off-site backups of our systems. Contingency plans frequently go undone due to lack of resources and they require constant revision. RECOMMENDATION: We should look for opportunities to contract for preparation of a contingency plan which addresses the most critical, high risk situations. 29 ------- Security We have not ignored system security in any of our computing environments, but we do not have the resources to do the level of review or training which is ideally required. Areas of concern are passwords, user-ids, dial-in access, physical security of equipment, protection from software viruses, proper backups and software licensing concerns. RECOMMENDATION: Focus effort on complying with high risk situations. 30 ------- Image Processing We have recently installed an IBM AS/400 minicomputer and four specially equipped PCs used for image workstations for a Superfund Cost Recovery Image Processing System (SCRIPS) pilot project. We can expect to see continued involvement in national and regional image processing projects as we gain experience with the technology. RECOMMENDATION: Support SCRIPS and other national pilots effectively. .Find a good, small regional application for a regional pilot as soon as possible. 31 ------- Distributed Graphics We probably have the most sophisticated and extensive graphics support capability in the agency. Our mission dictates that we effectively convey complex information with the ease that graphics allow. We have chosen to distribute graphics equipment and expertise so that end users have the capability of producing many graphics presentations totally on their own to meet their own requirements and schedules. RECOMMENDATION: Maintain Region VII lead in graphics through training and leading-edge hardware and software. Begin to investigate where new capabilities of multi-media .(video, audio, graphics) fit into Region VII requirements. Maintain consistency of standard graphics configuration, but constantly evaluate new software for possible inclusion as a supported standard. 32 ------- Standards Standards for hardware, software, and system development methodologies are conducive to sound, well-organized, cost- efficient IRM environments. Standards promote portability of applications, equipment and user experience from one location to another. We do not intend to be overly restrictive nor have a laissez-faire policy. RECOMMENDATION: Promote national and regional standards through procurement policies and oversight. 33 ------- Graphical User Interface The agency and most of private industry is taking a conservative, measured approach to providing a graphical user interface (such as Windows) for PCs. There are many factors such as cost of software upgrades, support, complexity and performance which make it advisable to go slow with this evolving environment. Advantages include a common user interface so all programs which have been designed for this environment function in the same way. RECOMMENDATION: Continue to experiment with Windows for selected customers. Monitor their experience and share our evaluations with NDPD. 34 ------- WordPerfect Conversion The de facto agency and industry standard for word processing is WordPerfect. It is expensive in terms of software and training to convert, but it will pay off in the long run. Our approach has been to provide access to WordPerfect as people are connected to the LAN. Classroom and self-paced instruction is available. RECOMMENDATION: Convert to WordPerfect as people come up on the LAN. 35 ------- PC vs Mac The Apple Macintosh and the IBM compatible PC are two distinct computer architectures. Files and applications are not generally transportable between the two machines. The IBM compatible PC is the agency standard platform. NDPD will not provide or support any national application on the Macintosh. NDPD will not support networking of Macs within a PC LAN or within a Mac network. It requires a different body of knowledge to provide technical support for a Mac than for a PC. We have very few people with Mac knowledge. RECOMMENDATION: Minimize the requirement for Mac support by using them only for desktop publishing and by replacing them with IBM compatible PCs whenever possible. 36 ------- Electronic Mail The agency will convert to an in-house electronic mail system in August. It will be the DEC All-in-One electronic mail system which will run on a DEC system at RTF. The learning curve on the new system should be minimal. People who have used the new system seem to prefer it to the current system. The editor used within All-in- One is WordPerfect, so we will benefit from our conversion to WordPerfect. RECOMMENDATION: Provide training and support and monitor carefully to ensure Region VII users are satisfied with the service. 37 ------- RECOMMENDATIONS ------- REGION VII INFORMATION RESOURCES MANAGEMENT STRATEGIC PLAN RECOMMENDATIONS VISION COMPONENT ISSUE Strategic Plan Strat Data Plan Space Expansion LAN Training CIS GPS Applcns Develpmnt Data Integration Dist vs Central IRM Activ Focus SEDM Config Management RECOMMENDATION Develop 5 yr IRM Plan Focused analysis. Use CASE. Critical to support Increased resources Add in-house CSC trainer Evaluation & planning study Evaluation & planning study Increase in-house ability Include in focused analysis Centralize infrastructure More business-driven work Include in focused analysis Inventory system/procedures DO IT X X X X X X X PLAN X X X X X X X OR^/INF X X X X X X X X X X SYSTEMS X X X X X X X COMMUN;: X X X i/c c c I I I c c I c I I c I I = IN HOUSE STAFF C = ONE-TIME CONTRACT 38 ------- REGION VII INFORMATION RESOURCES MANAGEMENT STRATEGIC PLAN PLANNING SCHEDULE ITEM PLMG Approval IRM Advisory Council Approval Contract Cost Estimates Prepare statement of work Strategic Data Planning (Overall, Integration, SEDM) GIS/GPS Study Review, incorporate strategic data planning, study results Prepare draft IRM Plan Regional review of IRM Plan Publish IRM Plan PLANNING DATE June July July July - September October - January '92 September '92 (ASAP) February '92 October - March '92 April '92 June '92 ISSUES availability of funds availability of funds could begin earlier if funds 39 ------- |