Mar 7, 2008, News Report
Found in: Regionalization / Consolidation
Photo: Minnesota State CIO Gopal Khanna
The Minnesota Office of Enterprise
Technology (OET) today announced that the state has signed an agreement with
Microsoft for a single e-mail and calendaring system for the Executive Branch. The
agreement calls for a phased migration of 25 individual agency-based e-mail
systems and three different platforms to a single enterprise system that will
eventually replace all existing e-mail contracts. Upon completion in 2010,
32,000 state employees will be on the new system.
In announcing the agreement, State CIO Gopal Khanna
emphasized both its historic nature, and the benefits of an enterprisewide
system. "It has long been the goal of Governor Pawlenty," Khanna
said, "to move to a more enterprise approach to IT services and to streamline
overlapping functions. This is the first major consolidation project to reach
implementation stage and is important both as a directional milestone and as a practical
improvement to the state's IT environment. I am grateful for the hard work of many
agency personnel in bringing this historic project to this stage. I look
forward to working with our Microsoft partners in building a system that meets
our needs."
By consolidating all e-mail systems to a single system,
inter-agency communications and calendaring are improved and simplified through
the use of a statewide directory and a single, highly secure and redundant e-mail
system with 7/24/365 support, said OET in a release. Users will be able to view
and schedule meetings across agencies, and to send e-mail to anyone in the system
with simple drop-down menus.
OET says the new system represents a significant security
benefit, offering state of the art encryption technology and single sign-on
capabilities.
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