USDA telework apps allow farmers to be out standing in their field

One federal agency is working on apps so stakeholders can telework along side employees.

The product of telework doesn’t have to be just data generated by a federal employee. The Department of Agriculture is also working to make it mean data generated for them as well.

On Federal News Radio’s Ask the CIO, the USDA’s Natural Resources and Conservation Service’s Gary Washington says as a new generation of farmers comes up, the NRCS is trying to reach them in the field and on their smartphone.

Washington tells executive editor Jason Miller, “what we’re trying accomplish is to get conservation on the ground. and what I mean by that is we want to have farmers, our stakeholders, with the ability to be more mobile and spend more time out in the field.”

So NRCS is developing apps for mobile devices, “probably be Droids, iPhones, iPads, things of that nature,” said Washington.

“That workforce is younger now and more technology savvy and we want to make sure…. they have the opportunity to take advantage of the technology that’s available to them.”

The apps will include financial assistance and data inputs “for geospatial data that looks at and reviews people’s farms so people can do conservation planning on mobile devices” as examples.

Washington said eliminating the paper handling could mow down processing time by 60 to 70 percent.

Copyright © 2024 Federal News Network. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Stacy Bostjanick and Jennifer Henderson

    Risk and Compliance Exchange 2024: DoD’ Stacy Bostjanick, DCMA’s Jennifer Henderson on finding ‘any means possible’ to help small biz with CMMC

    Read more
    Amelia Brust/Federal News Networkcybersecurity

    How should software producers be held accountable for shoddy cybersecurity products?

    Read more