How to royally foul-up an IT outsourcing project

15.10.2009

• In June the Department of Motor Vehicles in Bland lost the network for 31 hours, affecting customer service.

• One state correctional facility lost incoming phone service at 4 a.m. and was assigned a priority level that gave Northrop Grumman 18 hours to fix it. The priority was assigned based on the number of employees at the facility – 30 to 40 – not on the need dictated by the fact that the facility houses 1,000 inmates.

The state has tried extending deadlines, withholding payments and levying penalties in order to resolve the problems, but they persist, according to the JLARC report. As things stand now, the state could get out of the contract, which runs through 2015, but it could cost as much as $399 million to do so, and the state would still have to pay for someone else to run the network or develop state resources to do so.

The report cites benefits of the contract with Northrop Grumman. These include replacement of networking equipment – 45,200 of 57,500 PCs - to standardize the infrastructure across the state that was scheduled to be completed in last July. Replacing aging PCs actually enabled applications that older PCs couldn’t support, one large agency says.

Internet traffic is funneled through a gateway rather than hundreds of individual agency connections. A program to monitor for outages and performance and to alert the help desk to the most severe problems is underway.