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Public Works and Government Services Canada
CGI Brings Looking Glass to Canada's Public Works and
Government Services' Compensation Systems
Faced with aging Pension and Payroll Systems, Public Works and Government
Services Canada (PWGSC) turned to CGI for direction in meeting the goal
of providing better services to some 600,000 public service employees
and pensioners. The result is a new technology plan, providing a looking
glass into the future...
The Challenge In September 2000, PWGSC called upon CGI to conduct
a Compensation Technology Modernization Study (CTMS) to examine the options
available to bring the department's Compensation Systems up to date and
secure a direction for the future. PWGSC recognized that services to government
employees and pensioners were not at optimal performance and that the
interface with them could be more effective. Outdated technology meant
that maintenance costs were increasing and, given the department's aging
workforce, employees with knowledge of the systems would be retiring in
five years. Also, given the federal government's mandate (Throne Speech)
to have all departments on line by 2004, the modernization imperative
to incorporate web-based applications and technology intensified. To arrive
at with a recommendation for the future, CGI would conduct various stages
of analysis and evaluation: an Options Analysis Report to evaluate and
select the technology platform, and a Compensation Technology Migration
Plan to chart the course for the move to the new technology platform.
The Strategy Throughout the scope of the project, CGI worked
closely with PWGSC, including representatives from both operations and
business, to define options for modernization and provide a client-driven
solution. CGI reviewed the existing technical environment for Pay and
Pension systems and identified options for modernization by categoriesprincipally
where it concerned the presentation layer and database layer of the future
system. Modernization criteria included alignment with vision and strategy,
compliance with government adopted technology and standards, migration
from hierarchical to relational technology and web enablement in an IBM
mainframe environment. CGI organized joint application development workshops,
ranked the options, presented timelines, costs, risks, and assessed the
impact of modernization on the department. Final recommendations were
made in concert with senior management, providing a looking glass for
where the department wanted to be in five years.
Throughout it all, CGI provided the leadership, technical expertise and
project management skills required and brought to bear its experience
in architecture and database migration. "CGI put in a professional
team. They have the knowledge in business and technology architecture
particularly, to recommend how we should develop our systems. They understand
legacy systems and pay architecture," said Brian Lillico, Director
of Compensation Modernization at PWGSC..
The Technology
- Planning Study of PWGSC Compensation Systems. Current technical environment:
IBM mainframe, Cobol, IDMS, ADS/O. Lotus Smart Suite, MS Project 98.
- The recommendation of the study was for PWGSC to migrate to the Web
as a presentation tool and DB2 as the relational database to provide
more flexibility, move away from obsolete technology and provide a solid
foundation for future development.
The Results In January 2001, CGI provided PWGSC with an Options
Analysis Report presenting all findings and recommendations, including
a Gap Analysis on organizational impact. The Options Analysis Report became
the blueprint for a future Migration Plan, delivered in February and containing
74 projects to move the Compensation Systems to the new technology platform.
As a result of the investigation conducted in the CTMS, PWGSC realized
that in addition to the need to change technology, its business processes
needed to be overhauled to provide more client-focused service and a higher
degree of automation. In March, CGI began Phase II of the study, examining
the future vision of the Compensation Systems and undertaking a detailed
investigation into the data and application architecture, as requested
by PWGSC. The results of Phase II will include recommendations for the
future Pension Systems, Insurance Administration and a new Architecture
for the Pay Systems. This is scheduled to be completed in November. "CGI
provided some valuable direction as to where we should go in the future
and was innovative in defining future architecture. They worked well with
us to ensure we were happy with the final report. The deliverable was
excellent both in terms of content and meeting deadlines. We met our targets,"
confirmed Lillico.
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