The Homeland Security Department and NASA moving to the cloud to support mission needs and reduce the cost and effort to support back-office systems. Federal Ch...
wfedstaff | June 4, 2015 1:31 pm
Richard Spires wants the Homeland Security Department to follow the minimalist approach when it comes to its back-office technology.
Spires, the DHS chief information officer, said the set up now — mostly a client-server approach — leads to too much clutter.
Instead, Spires said DHS wants to make services, such as storage, computing power, email and collaboration — that take up servers, personnel time and resources — more like a utility in the cloud. “Cloud will continue to start to take on business processes in the near term, probably four or five years, before we start to really see it take off,” Spires said Wednesday during a panel presentation at the National Institute of Standards and Technology’s Cloud Computing Forum in Gaithersburg, Md. “For now, it’s buying that utility through the middleware layer because I want all of my people focused on that customer, working with that customer, better understanding their objectives, their capability needs and how we will build IT systems on top of that stack in order to meet those needs. That’s the value of an IT organization, particularly in the kind of department I’m in. We don’t do nearly enough of that. I think we are clearing away a lot of this clutter and that is why I think it will change so rapidly.”
The idea of using IT to meet mission needs is far from new. Every time the government has moved into emerging technology, the call came for using IT to meet the mission.
But Spires and other say this is different because of the impending budget cuts every agency is facing in 2012 and beyond.
For example, the Office of Management and Budget wants agencies to find ways to spend less on acquisition and on back-office systems. Federal CIO Steven VanRoekel detailed his new “share-first” policy, where agencies must look to see what technology already is available before buying new.
VanRoekel, who also spoke at NIST Wednesday, said cloud technology is at an inflection point to answer a call, in this case for agencies to do more with less.
VanRoekel defined four key areas of cloud to get to that end state of reduced IT clutter.
“We also are very much focused on people,” he said. “What we’ve noticed in looking at cloud deployments in agencies — it’s very much a multi-disciplinary consideration. It’s not just the CIO or technical people involved. The job of the CIO is to bridge or be that universal translator between the business and technology needs and implementation.”
Even as OMB and the CIO Council continue to work through several of these issues, agencies are moving quickly into the cloud.
Public and private clouds
DHS, for instance, already is using a private cloud for its sensitive data and a public cloud for non-sensitive data.
Keith Trippie, the DHS executive director of enterprise system development, said there are about 10 to 12 areas the agency is moving or wants to move to the cloud.
Trippie said DHS wants to make it easy for employees to access data and applications anywhere, anytime.
“Most of the department is out there and is mobile,” he said. “They are not necessarily inside the Beltway so we have to provide better services to them.”
DHS awarded two task orders to HP and CSC to provide
Want to stay up to date with the latest federal news and information from all your devices? Download the revamped Federal News Network app
NASA moving beyond Nebula
Along with DHS, NASA also is jumping feet first into the cloud.
NASA in 2010 launched an infrastructure-as-a-service offering, called Nebula. Adrian Gardner, CIO at NASA’s Goddard Space Center, said the space agency also offers storage-as-a-service and soon will move into data- and platform-as-a-service.
“We are virtualizing our desktop infrastructure because we are looking at mobility and we know laptops are going to decrease in the marketplace and in our environment,” he said. “So we are looking at, now, how we can virtualize the desktop in such as way you can gain access to your desktop and your resources from any device, any place and anywhere.”
Gardner added NASA eventually plans on creating a marketplace or apps store to improve access to software to help solve common challenges.
“Once the storefront is set up, we will pilot with a specific number of users,” he said. “Then we will begin to tailor and refine those attributes in such a way it’s really slick and folks can get real-time access to ‘the compute’ in a way that meets their requirements and needs. This is really about the business and the mission of NASA, it’s not really about the technology. It’s really about making sure our scientists and engineers have the compute they need to accomplish the mission of NASA and the U.S. government.”
RELATED STORIES:
Federal CIO VanRoekel details his ‘first’ priorities
FedRAMP cloud policy in final review
Agencies overcoming cloud security fears
DHS adds new ‘service’ to reduce IT costs
NASA’s Nebula rolls out in the cloud
Copyright © 2024 Federal News Network. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
Jason Miller is executive editor of Federal News Network and directs news coverage on the people, policy and programs of the federal government.
Follow @jmillerWFED