SIIA Applauds House Effort to Reform IT Procurement, Submits Comments on Cloud Brokerage

SIIA applauds House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Darrell Issa (R-CA) for his recognition that there needs to be a substantial improvement to federal IT procurement practices to keep pace with evolving technology. Today, Rep. Issa posted a discussion draft of IT procurement reform legislation. As SIIA has said previously, we share the goal of developing a cadre of specialized IT acquisition personnel and are pleased that the bill acknowledges that cloud computing is becoming mainstream in the federal government.

On a related note, SIIA submitted comments today to the General Services Administration (GSA) in response to the Cloud Brokerage RFI, an area that is addressed in the bill, and we encourage those comments to be considered by the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform as they look at that area of the legislation. We look forward to working with Chairman Issa and the Committee as they move forward to craft a final bill that serves to improve IT acquisition practices to the benefit of vendors and the federal government.


Michael Hettinger is VP for the Public Sector Innovation Group (PSIG) at SIIA. Follow his PSIG tweets at @SIIAPSIG.

SIIA & OPEXEngine: Let the Data Set You Free!

Hear how Kelly Battles, CFO of Host Analytics, works with her finance team to track key financial and operating metrics data to drive performance and keep the company on track to deliver growth in 2011. In addition, Lauren Kelley, CEO of OPEXEngine will present key software industry benchmarks from OPEXEngine’s comprehensive financial and operating benchmarking report, developed in partnership with the SIIA. Join us for this informative webinar to learn more about how the benefits of metrics-driven, fact based decision making can help you drive better performance and efficiency within your own organization.

Presenters:
Lauren Kelley, CEO & Founder, OPEXEngine
Kelly Battles, CFO, Host Analytics

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SOTU address emphasizes key IT industry priorities

With the heavy focus on job creation and innovation in the President’s SOTU address last week, it was no surprise that several priority issues for the IT industry also received a shout-out from the President as key National priorities.

Consistent with the sentiment on Capitol Hill, the President emphasized the need for tax reform. While it was reassuring to hear his call for a lowering of the corporate tax rate, he also called for this to be offset by closing “loop-holes.” The devil is always in the details of the definition of a “loop-hole,” as this term has frequently been used to refer to tax incentives that help U.S. companies compete globally.

The President also reiterated the need for a bipartisan effort to finalize the Columbia, Panama and Korea trade agreements. Keeping with the innovation theme but taking efforts to steer clear of hot-button term like the H-1B visa, the President renewed the call for immigration reform that keeps “talented, responsible young people” in the U.S. to meet our critical workforce needs. As timing would have it, the H-1B cap for FY 2011 was met on Friday, just days after the speech.

And in what might have seemed like a direct nod to SIIA and some of its members–who were in New York discussing the transition from “wired to wireless” at the Information Industry Summit (IIS)–the President called for wireless connectivity to be provided to 98 percent of the country over the next five years. Given the discussions at IIS re: the tremendous growth in the wireless market, this would provide even more demand for mobile applications and content delivery over the next five years.

With the dust now settled on the SOTU, we’ll continue to keep you posted as these and other key priorities play out in the weeks ahead.

For more SIIA policy updates, including upcoming events, news and analysis, subscribe to the Digital Policy Roundup, SIIA’s weekly policy email newsletter.

Digital Policy Roundup: Week of Jan. 10

As Congress began to settle in last week, and policymakers gathered in Las Vegas for CES, the White House generated two VERY big — albeit VERY lightly reported — victories for the digital policy world.

First, the President signed into law the America COMPETES Act of 2010, following congressional passage of this legislation as one of the last acts of the highly-productive Lame Duck session in December. The legislation authorizes significant investment in R&D and science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education. America COMPETES has been a virtually unanimous high priority for the entire U.S. IT sector, and it’s now officially law.

Second, the White House did a loud shout-out to IT interoperability in a memo issued on Friday by three top officials calling on Agencies to seek “technology neutrality” in their efforts to IT products and services. The memo, from Fed. CIO Vivek Kundra, Procurement Administrator Daniel Gordon and IP Enforcement Coordinator Victoria Espinel, calls on agencies to select “suitable IT on a case-by-case basis” to consider “factors such as performance, cost, security, interoperability, ability to share or re-use, and availability of quality support.”

For more information about policy issues SIIA monitors, subscribe to the weekly policy email update, Digital Policy Roundup.