We have been working with our partner agencies so they see the value of the gateway. But I think as they see applications come on and the money [the gateway] is saving them, the value is being demonstrated, she said. We are going back to drawing board to try to get more money from partner agencies.
Agencies requested $8.1 million for E-Authentication in the fiscal 2004 budget the administration submitted to Capitol Hill last week. That is down from the $12.1 million agencies requested in 2003.
While some E-Authentication partners are reticent, other government project leaders have been keeping her phone busy with interest in the gateway, Fish said.
Non E-Government projects see the value in the gateway, said Fish, who spoke at E-Govs Web Enabled Conference in Washington. If a credential should change, and you werent hooked to the gateway, you would have to modify your system. If you are on the gateway and there is a new credential and that credential provider is on the gateway, there is no retrofit. It is just, away you go. The prototype gateway will go live in March with the Agriculture Departments National Finance Center and other projects, Fish said. But the funding delay will push the acquisition of the complete system into fiscal 2004.
We will select a governmentwide contract to buy from, design, build and test and cut over to a production gateway, she said. Our milestone had been September and I dont think we will make it right now.
Fish said cost savings also are a factor in the interest the gateway is generating.
It cost one agency $600,000 a year to maintain their user name and passwords for one project, she said. A lot of projects want to get out of that business. It is too expensive and takes too many resources away from mission-critical roles.
Quelle: Government Computer News