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HomeMy WebLinkAboutCAO-008-17Clarftwn Report If this information is required in an alternate accessible format, please contact the Accessibility Coordinator at 905-623-3379 ext. 2131. Report To: General Governance Committee Date of Meeting: September 25, 2017 Report Number: CAO -008-17 Resolution: File Number: By-law Number: Report Subject: Information Technology Strategic Plan (2017 — 2022) Recommendations: 1. That Report CAO -008-17 be received; 2. That Council endorse the Information Technology Strategic Plan (2017 — 2022) to recognize and promote the significant role that information technology plays in relation to effective and efficient service delivery throughout the Corporation; 3. That the CAO be authorized to fill the vacant Network Support Technician position identified in the approved 2017 Municipal budget; and 4. That the CAO be authorized to proceed with the recommendation in the Plan to realign IT Division responsibilities in part by reclassifying the existing Security Specialist to a Network Administration Supervisor at an approximate 2017 impact of $2,000 (annualized cost of approximately $8,700). Municipality of Clarington Resort CAO -008-17 Report Overview Paae 2 The IT Strategic Plan was prepared following a detailed review of all of the Municipality's services that are supported by information technology applications and services. It recognizes and promotes the integral role of information technology throughout the corporation. It is intended to be used as a guide to help establish and support corporate strategic priorities respecting efficient and effective service delivery. 1.0 Background 1.1 Demand for information technology services throughout the corporation has increased significantly over the past several years. Accordingly, it was recognized as prudent and timely to assess information technology strategies and priorities which will support the continued development of strong customer service and effective service delivery. 1.2 Using funds allocated by the Director of Finance from the 2016 Durham Municipal Insurance Plan surplus funds for risk management projects, the firm of Prior & Prior was contracted to prepare an IT Strategic Plan at a cost just under $30,000. Prior & Prior widely consulted, interviewed and surveyed staff, and received direct input from Department Heads. They reviewed responsibilities, services, current and proposed future major project requirements, and considered best practices to formulate a comprehensive plan that will position Clarington to operate efficiently into the future. A complete copy of the resulting IT Strategic Plan has been circulated separately to Council. 2.0 Summary of Key Findings 2.1 After their extensive consultation and review of our existing practices, the consultants identified the following issues that they deemed to be critical: There is pent-up demand for new technology solutions. Many staff see opportunity for efficiencies, improved effectiveness and better management practices through technology. Legacy applications, work-arounds, spreadsheet and paper-based manual processes no longer meet their needs or the expectations of their customers. 2. There is no formal process for documenting and prioritizing projects. To date, solutions have been sought by individual departments, often with little awareness of similar needs in other departments. Municipality of Clarington Report CAO -008-17 Page 3 3. IT is acting as a utility provider, but not as a partner in the identification and optimization of technology. Departments want advice on new technologies, but the IT resource has little time for research and strategizing. 4. The reliance on low/no cost solutions has created complexity and risk in the technical environment. 5. There is need for more complete and formal corporate policies, processes, or procedures to address core operational activities. 2.2 The Plan recommends that the Municipality focus some of its long term investment on technology over the next five years to sustain and improve customer service, efficiencies, effectiveness and accountability. It notes that growth in service demand has several Departments needing more resources to keep up, but rather than suggesting the natural response of automatically adding staff, the Plan recommends that the Municipality should look first to process improvement. 2.3 The following were identified as key areas for solutions that will enable business improvements: Complete Upgrades in Flight — GP 2016 Financials, Active Net Recreation Management, CityWide Works 2. Planning, Engineering (LDO), Licensing and By-law System, Document Management System — workflow and mobile 3. Automations — purchasing, accounts payable, accounts receivable, staff scheduling 4. Customer Relationship Management — customer service and issues tracking 2.4 The Plan notes that the "problem for Clarington is that the demand for major business systems exceeds the current capability and capacity of the IT organization to support the research, acquisition, implementation and sustainment of big systems". It explains that it has never been more important to make technology investments that will make the most of opportunities with the following three principles to guide all future effort and investment in major business systems: Municipality of Clarington Resort CAO -008-17 Paae 4 Corporate a holistic view of all needs that will maximize opportunities to achieve corporate goals. Planned a rational roadmap that recognizes the pre -requisites such as business readiness, resource availability, and infrastructure supports. Integrated maximizes opportunity to share information across systems to eliminate duplication and improve the quality of data. 2.5 The recommendations, major projects and strategies outlined in the Plan are intended to support these principles. It suggests a 5 year roadmap to align and build IT capability while successfully implementing several major business systems. Current Situation 2.6 The consultants noted that Departments have managed until now using old technologies with limited functionality, supplemented by manual processes, spreadsheets, single purpose databases and lots of paper. All are looking to improve their programs and services with new business processes through technology that is expected to enhance efficiency and customer service. 2.7 They noted that key elements of the current IT Division's services including timeliness, quality and knowledge are well above the typical rating for most municipalities. The Plan also notes that the IT team is very lean with everyone having a focus on support issues, leaving little or no capacity for planning or strategic management, and that there is a great deal of dependency on one staff resource person. The IT Division maintains a traditional support function, providing excellent reactive service, and is now at a stage to mature in order to increase effectiveness of service delivery to the corporation and the services delivered. 2.8 The organizational assessment concludes that "the IT team of nine (9) has done an impressive job building out a stable and reliable technology infrastructure nonetheless, a number of staffing risks and challenges emerged during the assessment". A need was identified for Clarington to direct immediate attention to the infrastructure layer to strengthen and formalize core IT technologies and services. At the same time, it indicates that the IT team needs to realign itself to support the acquisition, implementation and operation of new business systems, and ultimately evolve into a key partner in all business improvement projects. Municipality of Clarington Resort CAO -008-17 Paae 5 2.9 The Gartner IT Management Maturity Model, shown on page 62 of the Plan, is a standard tool used to identify the effectiveness of service delivery organizations. The consultants place the current IT Division at a level 1-2, which classifies services as proactive in predicting problems, and responding positively, however moving to the next level 3 and 4 will require investment and realignment to allow maturing over time into the strategic "business partner" of the organization. 3.0 Key Pressures/Drivers 3.1 The Plan notes that the Municipality is under pressure to make more and better use of technology, with the key drivers identified on page 12, as follows: a) Changing Community - population growth has increased customer service demand, with new customers demanding online, public network access and social media communication. b) Drive for Service Efficiencies — Departments are eager to better use information technology, creating competing priorities for limited IT and project resources. c) Rapid IT Industry Change — proliferation and consumerisation of human interfaces i.e.: smartphones, tablets, touch screens, point of sale units, GPS location devices, security, in addition to copier and phone technology. New software and platform provisioning options adding additional decisions re public cloud vs private cloud. d) New and expanding risks — relentless external and internal threats to systems and data from hardware and network failure, software errors, hacking, theft and malice. Business continuity and disaster recovery planning are needed to detail the risks and mitigation strategies for best practice. 4.0 Infrastructure, Systems & Practices — Assessment 4.1 The overview of technology practices, infrastructure and systems in place is summarized on page 13. It is a high level snapshot of gaps and improvement areas to enable efficiency, effectiveness and good customer service. The four layers identified are: Infrastructure, Major Business Systems, Integration, and Customer Facing Systems. The four layers are categorized by colour and assessed as fitting in the categories of: Meets Needs (green), Needs Improvement (orange), Risk or Key Enabler (red), and Gap — where there is little or no technology in that area (white). It also notes where the Municipality has recognized a need and has budgeted or initiated projects to complete the needed work. The specific observations for each of these layers are set out in much detail through pages 14 to 31. Municipality of Clarington Resort CAO -008-17 5.0 Key Enablers for Effectiveness Paae 6 5.1 The overall assessment of the Business Systems Layer highlights opportunities to use or improve technology in the business functions and identifies that two key enablers for effective acquisition, implementation and integration of major business systems are missing: Architecture and Project Management. As the Municipality invests in new technology it is noted as being important to ensure that acquisition and implementation are done in a manner that will maximize the chance and degree of success. Also noted is that renewed technology is required to support increased volume and complexity of work and opportunities to achieve efficiencies through mobilisation. 5.2 In recognition of a key enabler of success being the business approach to service delivery, the Plan recommends the addition of a Business Development Supervisor position to reduce IT consulting costs and allow the proposed IT Governance Committee that will set priorities on proposed new applications to have expert advice available as it assesses needs and then it would assist in project management of new applications. This is a new position recommended by the Plan for 2017, with an estimated annual salary of $87,043 or $14,500 for the balance of this fiscal year, however it is not included in the recommendation of this Report as it was not anticipated in the budget/staffing deliberations. 5.3 The IT Strategic Plan will become a focus of the recommendations for future budgets regarding major projects, business applications and key strategies as identified on pages 85 through 111, with suggested timelines. The IT Steering Committee, which will be made up of Department Heads, will review these recommended applications/projects/strategies and timelines, ensure that they align corporate priorities, and set direction to enhance integration, communication and support of all Municipal service delivery programs. 5.4 The Service Delivery review to accommodate new demands and goals laid out in the IT Strategic Plan states that the IT service delivery should become responsive to new and emerging needs and be proactive and strategic. To achieve this, 3 key things are identified (page 63): Municipality of Clarington Resort CAO -008-17 Paae 7 Enable the IT Manager to focus on IT strategy and planning, business systems and project delivery. This is noted to be critical to the successful evolution of IT services, as noted on page 63 and 64. 2. Reorganizing the IT Division to establish dedicated teams within IT that allow for servicing excellence an specialization in 3 key areas (illustrated on page 65): a. Client Services (help desk / customer support) b. Technology Infrastructure Services (data & voice networks) c. Business Development Services (application & data analysis). This area would be facilitated with the addition of the Business Development Supervisor position recommended by the Plan. 3. Building sustainability into the IT organization by: a. Updating job responsibilities to reflect more current requirements b. Improve training opportunities for all staff c. Adopt a hybrid model to augment service delivery. 6.0 IT Strategic Plan Recommendations 6.1 The Council 2017 Budget staffing deliberations considered, conditional on the completion of the IT Strategic Plan, filling the Network Support Technician vacancy at an annual salary of $71,200. This position was noted during the budget process as being necessary to fill a vacancy created when the person who was in this role was required to vacate it in order to take on IT security tasks recommended as an urgent matter in an external review and risk assessment conducted in December 2015. The IT Plan acknowledges the resource pressures, and recommends filling the position as soon as possible to help alleviate the escalating responsibilities in the support function (page 71). 6.2 Within the restructuring recommendation is a reclassification of the existing Security Specialist incumbent to a classification of Network Administration Supervisor. The change is suggested as a re -positioning to allow a higher level focus for the network and infrastructure components, including disaster recovery, the increasing security/cyber risk and security programs. The existing Network Analyst would report to the Network Administration Supervisor. The change would place the incumbent one level higher on the grid, thereby matching the two existing supervisors, with a fiscal impact in the remainder of 2017 of approximately $2,000 (annualized at approximately $8,700). This reclassification will not result in any additional staff. The existing Security Specialist position will not be filled absent consideration in future budget deliberations. Municipality of Clarington Resort CAO -008-17 Paae 8 6.3 The opportunities and recommended actions of the Plan are extensive and are documented beginning on page 44, with full description of the "Opportunity" and "Action" attached to each of the following recommendations: 1.1 Formalize an IT Steering Committee 1.2 Implement Portfolio Management 1.3 Improve Project Management 2.1 Business Continuity and IT Disaster Recovery Plan 2.2 Email System Update 3.1 Formalize IT Policies and Procedures 3.2 Formalize IT Service Offerings 3.3 Replace IT Help Desk and Knowledge Base System 4.1 Mobile Device and Remote Access Strategy 5.1 Customer Relationship Management Solution 5.2 Online Services Strategy 5.3 eForms Strategy 5.4 Intranet Refresh 5.5 Collaboration Tools 6.1 Projects in Flight (Currently in Progress) 6.2 Work and Asset Management System Phase 2 6.3 Planning, Development, Licensing & By-law System 6.4 Learning Management Solution 6.5 Technology Training Tools 6.6 Staff Scheduling Solution 6.7 Purchasing Workflow Solution 6.8 Accounting Workflow Solutions. 6.4 The Investment Strategy and Cost identified with major projects that fit into each of the categories identified in the Overview and Assessment segment referenced above of: Customer Facing Systems, Integration, Major Business Systems, IT Infrastructure and IT Organization Development are set out as an Implementation Roadmap showing timelines over 2017 through 2022, beginning on page 86, and as an Investment Strategy with projections for capital and operating costs over the same timelines. These are recommendations and timelines that will be helpful as guidelines for the IT Steering Committee in determining priorities and direction for the future. 7.0 Corporate Strategic Plan Application 7.1 The Plan identifies conformity and alignment with the Corporate Strategic Plan framework. Specifically noted on page 41 — the actions from Municipality's Strategic Plan can be directly enabled by technology in the following: Municipality of Clarington Resort CAO -008-17 Paae 9 x 1.3 Streamline development approvals x 2.1 Communicate good governance and value for the tax dollar x 4.1 Refine and update the Asset Management plan x 5.1 Use technology to effectively communicate with residents x 5,6 Enhance Council and corporate communications. In addition, the plan notes that IT can be a key enabler of achievement of four high level goals implicit in the Municipality's Vision, Mission and Strategic Priorities: Efficiency, Customer Focus, Effectiveness and Accountability. 8.0 Conclusion 8.1 Technology is ever evolving and with it comes exceptional advancements and critical cyber/security risk. Technology dictates maintenance of/and ability to succeed or expand services in every department. This IT Strategic Plan will be the foundation of Clarington's technology platform and it will guide investment in future service delivery standards. The priority setting and alignment of goals to produce effective service delivery will result in a user -responsive technology infrastructure that strengthens the Municipality and its ability to deliver services to Clarington's residents. Submitted by: Andrew Allison, CAO Attachment 1 — Information Technology Strategic Plan (2017 — 2022) (separately circulated) Information Technology Strategic Plan 2017-2022 If this information is required in an alternate accessible format, please contact the Accessibility Coordinator at 905-623-3379 ext. 2131 July 2017 i Prior & Prior Associates Ltd. Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Prior & Prior Associates page 2 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Table of Contents Tableof Contents.............................................................................................................. 3 ExecutiveSummary..........................................................................................................5 Introduction................................................................................................................................................................................ 5 KeyObservations................................................................................................................................................................... 5 CurrentSituation..................................................................................................................................................................... 6 StrategicThemes................................................................................................................................................................... 7 ITOrganization........................................................................................................................................................................ 7 MajorBusiness Applications............................................................................................................................................. 8 ImplementationPlan and Budget...................................................................................................................................8 . Introduction..................................................................................................................10 1.1 Background.....................................................................................................................................................................10 1.2 Developing this Strategy...........................................................................................................................................11 !. The Current Situation.................................................................................................12 2.1 Business Context.........................................................................................................................................................12 2.2 Technology and Practices Assessment............................................................................................................13 2.2.1 Overview...........................................................................................................................................................................13 2.2.2 Infrastructure Layer....................................................................................................................................................14 2.2.3 Major Business Systems Layer..........................................................................................................................19 2.2.4 Integration Layer..........................................................................................................................................................24 2.2.5 Customer Facing Systems Layer......................................................................................................................28 2.3 Staff Survey Results...................................................................................................................................................31 2.5 Current State Summary ............................................................................................................................................35 3. Municipal Comparisons............................................................................................. 36 1. Strateqic Directions.................................................................................................... 41 4.2 Strategic Alignment.....................................................................................................................................................41 4.3 Strategic Themes and Actions...............................................................................................................................42 4.3.1 Adopt a corporate, planned and integrated approach to business systems ...........................43 4.3.2 Build nimble, user -responsive technology infrastructure....................................................................45 4.3.3 Align and mature IT service..................................................................................................................................48 4.3.4 Connect Field Staff using Technology mobile & remote.................................................................51 4.3.5 Deliver Digital Services, Anywhere, Anytime.............................................................................................52 4.4 Major Business Applications...................................................................................................................................57 ITOraanization.......................................................................................................... 61 5.1 Current IT Organization......................................................................................................................................61 5.1.1 Process Maturity Model....................................................................................................................................61 5.2 IT Service Delivery......................................................................................................................................................62 5.2.1 IT Leadership.................................................................................................................................................................63 5.2.2 Deliver IT Service Excellence..............................................................................................................................64 5.2.3 Restructure the IT Department............................................................................................................................64 5.3 Build Sustainability into the IT Department.....................................................................................................68 5.4 Update Job Responsibilities...................................................................................................................................70 Prior & Prior Associates page 3 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 5.5 Training.............................................................................................................................................................................72 5.6 Developing an Enhanced Hybrid Business Delivery Model....................................................................73 5.8 Contracting Implementation and IT assistance.............................................................................................73 5.9 Building Partnerships.................................................................................................................................................73 6. IT Decision Making: IT Governance......................................................................... 6.1 What is IT governance?............................................................................................................................................76 6.2 IT Governance Model.................................................................................................................................................77 6.2.1 The IT Steering Committee...................................................................................................................................77 6.2.2 Standing Groups..........................................................................................................................................................77 6.2.3 IT Team............................................................................................................................................................................. 77 6.2.4 Project Teams................................................................................................................................................................ 78 6.3 IT Policies and Standards........................................................................................................................................78 6.3.1 IT Policies.........................................................................................................................................................................78 6.3.2 IT Standards...................................................................................................................................................................79 6.3.3 IT Acquisition Process..............................................................................................................................................79 7. Implementation Plan and Costs................................................................................ 80 7.1 Approach..........................................................................................................................................................................80 7.2 Implementation Roadmap........................................................................................................................................81 7.3 Recommended Investments...................................................................................................................................82 8. Why invest in IT? Why invest in this Strategic Plan? ............................................ 83 8.1 Invest to Save................................................................................................................................................................83 CEEIC?IXL(MTRXGI3DA9ZCMV/XSSRIII M:O XCIFISDOJ t9wth............................................................................. 84 8.3 Managing better starts with the right information.........................................................................................84 Appendix A: Recommended Project Portfolio...................................................................... 85 ImplementationRoadmap................................................................................................................................................87 InvestmentStrategy............................................................................................................................................................88 Appendix B: Staff Survey Report........................................................................................ 112 Prior & Prior Associates page 4 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Executive Summary Introduction The development of an IT Strategic Plan provides the opportunity to review how IT services are delivered and how technology is perceived at the municipality. It provides the opportunity to assess what changes are required to re -position both the IT department and prioritize among business enabling technology solutions. The consultants used several techniques to understand the current state of IT at Clarington and identify needs and opportunities for improvement from the IT perspective. Interviews were conducted with groups and individuals in the IT team, and a technology walkthrough and document review provided information for IT infrastructure and organization assessments. Stakeholder interviews were conducted with the Interim CAO and 9 department heads and their teams. An online survey was made available to all staff which yielded 195 responses from a broad spectrum of departments and roles. Four comparable municipalities completed surveys on their IT staff and resource levels, organization and major business applications benchmarking analysis. The Discovery Phase yielded key high level observations of the current state, high level and detailed documentation of need for IT capabilities and major business solutions, and strategic themes which inform the criteria later used to assess the strategic value of potential business transformation and technology projects. Key Observations Throughout this phase of the project a number of key issues were identified including the following deemed to be critical to the organization: 1. There is pent-up demand for new technology solutions. Many business leaders see opportunity for efficiencies, improved effectiveness and better management practices through technology. Legacy applications, work- arounds, spreadsheet and paper-based manual processes no longer meet their needs or the expectations of their customers 2. There is no formal process for documenting and prioritizing these projects. To date, solutions have been sought by individual departments, often with little awareness of similar needs in other departments 3. IT is acting as a utility provider, but not as a partner in the identification and optimization of technology. Departments want advice on new technologies, but the IT resource has little time for research and strategizing 4. The reliance on low/no cost solutions has created complexity and risk in the technical environment Prior & Prior Associates page 5 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 5. There is need for more complete and formal corporate policies, processes, or procedures to address core operational activities Current Situation Figure 1 summarizes our assessment of technology practices, infrastructure and systems currently in place at Clarington. It gives a high level snapshot of where work needs to be done to enable efficiency, effectiveness and good customer service in municipal service delivery. Web Site Social Media Open Gov Open Oata eRegister' eBoaking" ePermit ePets eForms eRe uest ePa ePa Tickets electronic o w V Customer Relationship Management ECRM IntegrationMobile Business Intranet Document & c g Colla boratlon Record GIS and Business Intelligence/ Management Interfaces Apps Analytics .. EMS Planning, Development, Licensing Asset & Work Management* Recreation a` and bylaw Management &Facility Booking` e E F0000Do Payroll alirg audgeting Purchasing' Sale and billing Capi[al Mgmt' > > m �+ IL HR Finance and Accounting Corporate Infrastructure Services Mobility, Remote Access, Cloud Essential Infrastructure Infrastructure Core Facilities Applications Email, Directory, Telecom Compute, Network, storage, security Figure 1: Technology Assessment Summary Power, Cooling, Racks Legend I Meets Needs J l Needs Improvement Gap work in progress The diagram shows key foundational capabilities and technologies commonly found in municipal government. As it considers significant investment in technology to enable business improvement, the Municipality needs to strengthen its ability to manage that investment and ensure that projects are successful in bringing maximum value for the taxpayer dollar. Specifically it needs to strengthen IT Governance, Project Management, Policies and Procedures and Disaster Recovery Plans. Prior & Prior Associates page 6 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan In other areas including Major Business Systems, Integration and Customer Facing Systems, the Municipality has some systems that are in good shape and will meet the business needs for the next five years. In other cases the existing technology is outdated or outclassed to deliver customer engaging, mobile, and integrated business enablement. Strategic Themes The IT Strategic Plan exercise identified several opportunities for improvement in the use of IT in business and in the IT infrastructure and organization needed to support it. These opportunities, goals and actions are summarized in the following five strategic themes: 1. Adopt a corporate, planned and integrated approach to business systems 2. Build nimble, user -responsive technology infrastructure 3. Align and mature IT service 4. Connect Field Staff using Technology mobile & remote 5. Deliver Digital Services, Anywhere, Anytime These themes reflect what we heard from leaders and stakeholders. They reflect the business customer perspective ❑the need for a partner in the acquisition and operation of technology. They also reflect the direction of the strategic plan and implementation roadmap. They are the things the IT unit needs to work on to become an effective service provider. They strengthen IT capability to enable important business capabilities. IT Organization The current IT team of nine (9), has done an impressive job building out a stable and reliable technology infrastructure. Nonetheless, a number of staffing risks and challenges emerged during the assessment, including: 1. The IT team is very lean with everyone having a focus on support and help desk issues, leaving little to no capacity for planning or strategic management. 2. The horizontal structure leaves little opportunity for effective succession planning 3. There is a great deal of dependency on one staff resource 4. There is very little communications from IT to the rest of staff 5. IT has maintained a traditional approach to IT support, providing excellent reactive service rather than being able to provide strategic services to help the business move forward. To accommodate the new demands and achieve the goals laid out in this Strategic Plan, IT service delivery must become more: ❑ Agile and responsive to new and emerging needs ❑ Proactive and strategic Prior & Prior Associates Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan To achieve this, we recommend three key things: 1. Enable the Manager of IT to focus on IT strategy and planning, business systems and project delivery. 2. Reorganize the department to establish dedicated teams within IT, that allow for service excellence and specialization in 3 key areas 3. Build sustainability into the IT organization by updating job responsibilities, improve training, and adopting a hybrid model to augment service delivery Major Business Applications The Current Situation Assessment confirmed a large number of needs and opportunities for technology to enable business improvement. Need for technology was heard clearly through the interviews and staff survey. Municipal comparisons also showed that Clarington needs to invest in new and better major business applications. The municipality has opportunity for renewal or enhancement of most of its major business applications, many of which can deliver new capabilities that will enhance the customer experience, and provide demonstrable gains in efficiency and effectiveness. We recommend the Municipality focus some of its long term investment on technology over the next five years to sustain and improve customer service, efficiencies, effectiveness and accountability. Growth in service demand has several of the departments needing more resources to keep up. A natural response is to seek more staff, but a lean municipality should look first to process improvement then to technology when these challenges arise. Key Areas of focus for solutions that will enable business improvements include: 1. Complete Upgrades in Flight GP 2016 Financials, Active Net Recreation Management, CityWide Works 2. Planning, Engineering (LDO), Licensing and By-law System, Document Management System [I workflow and mobile 3. Automations ❑ purchasing, accounts payable, accounts receivable, staff scheduling 4. Customer Relationship Management ❑ customer service and issues tracking Implementation Plan and Budget The strategy sets out a 5 year roadmap to align and build IT capability while successfully implementing several major business systems. The plan assumes successful implementation of the ActiveNet Recreation Management and Facility Booking system, CityWide Works as a Work Management System for Operations, and update of the Great Plains financial system as its baseline. The work is spread out over the 5 year horizon with an initial set of projects selected based on needs and gaps in technology found in Discovery and their alignment to Prior & Prior Associates page 8 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan corporate business goals of efficiency, effectiveness, customer service and accountability. Prioritization and scheduling also take corporate strategic actions, mandate and regulatory changes, and inter -project dependencies or pre -requisites into account. For example, the Corporate Strategy recommended improving processes that streamline development approvals, as identified in Report, CAO -007-17. To achieve the goals of the Corporate Strategy, Clarington needs to make progress on this action by the end of 2018. This makes it one of the key initial priorities, and is thus scheduled early. There are two projects that will have starts and pauses, illustrated in the roadmap with dotted lines between chunks of effort. In these cases, it is recommended gathering the enterprise business requirements for both the Customer Relationship Management system and the Document Management System, as this information will be useful in analysis of the fit of existing systems. ak Name CUSTOMER FACING SYSTEMS Online Services Strategy 3 eForms Strategy 4 El INTEGRATION 5 Customer Relationship Management Solution 6 Mobile Device and Remote Access Strategy 7 Electronic Document and Record Management Solution a Intranet Refresh 9 Collaboration Tools 10 El MAJOR BUSINESS SYTEMS 11 Development, Licensing and By-law System 12 Work and Asset Management Solution Phase 2 13 Purchasing Workflow Solution 14 Learning Management Solution 15 Technology Training Tools 16 Staff Scheduling System 17 Accounting Worl Solutions 1a ElIT INFRASTRUCTURE 19 Adopt ff Govemance 20 Formal izeITSenAceOlferings 21 IT Help Desk System Replacement 22 IT Policy and Procedure Development 23 Email System Update 24 Business Continuity & T Disaster Recovery Plan 25 El IT ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT 26 IT Resource Alignment Portfolio 7KHWDCFFDSWDMWM V9HTT -F DlJSLRJ lmP WG-Nl-iM[&CUIDJWQV[;7RMDELMVDQGLI business technology so that it can enable efficient customer service, workflows, processes, mobility, communications and reporting is approximately $1.47 million for capital budget. This amount is in line with the current commitment to capital through the normal budget allocation however it does not include the annual IT asset replacement (hardware and software) capital program. Prior & Prior Associates page 9 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 1. Introduction 1.1 Background The Municipality of Clarington is a rural and urban mix community with a population approaching 100,000 in 2017. It is one of eight municipalities in Regional Municipality of Durham. Population, building permits and demand for services continue to grow, sometimes in waves. The demographics are changing, with an influx of younger generations expecting big city services with modern and mobile customer experiences offered on their favourite devices. The Municipality recognizes the value of technology in enabling efficient and effective service delivery. Operating departments are keen on acquiring new technology to support modernization and streamlining of their processes, some developing interim applications to improve key parts of processes. Technology is core to enabling municipal governments to keep up with growth in demand and rising customer expectations. Traditional technologies such as telephones, email, and networked file folders remain important. But as municipalities grow, spreadsheets and single purpose databases that have worked for improving parts of processes in the past offer little opportunity for additional value. The next level of efficiencies and effectiveness come from comprehensive business solutions that support complete, interdepartmental workflows, eliminate data duplication, improve customer service, and deliver powerful and integrated information for the next level of sophistication in business management. The Municipality of Clarington is at this V1EJHEIL71<4-I1�7-CC CFDSDE AM implementation, and sustain new solutions need to match. This Information Technology Strategic Plan assessed the current state of technology, needs and opportunities as well as the capabilities and capacities of the IT organization. It answers fundamental strategic questions: Are we doing the right things with technology? Are we making the right technology investments? Is our Information Technology environment properly managed, maintained, secured, and able to support the clients? Is it cost effective? What are our future business needs? Is our technology environment equipped to meet current and future business needs? The plan proposes a vision where the 0 XC [RSDQURI C&CUIDJV9DV T will become a trusted partner in enabling and sustaining business improvements through technology. Prior & Prior Associates page 10 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 1.2 Developing this Strategy The Municipality engaged Prior & Prior Associates to develop this strategy beginning in November 2016. Consultants worked with the IT team and representatives from all departments and the Senior Management Team (SMT) to conduct a current state assessment of the MunicipalityVuse and management of technology, and to identify future corporate and departmental technology needs. The project was comprised of two phases: Phase 1: Discovery consisted of a high level review and assessment of the current status of infrastructure, use and management of IT at the Municipality. This was completed through a review of existing documentation such as budgets, policies and procedures as well as interviews and discussions with management and staff from the IT department, SMT, and representatives from every department. An online survey was offered to all staff to gather input and feedback about the current service delivery of the IT Department, future requirements, and suggestions for improvements. Detailed technical assessments of the network and storage environments were conducted, alongside an over -arching risk assessment. The findings were consolidated into an interim report which was reviewed by the project team. Key outputs were: Summary of findings (technical and business) Comparison of the Municipality to other organizations Results of the Customer Satisfaction Survey Emerging opportunities for improvement Phase 2: Analysis, Opportunities, Recommendations and Implementation Roadmap included more detailed discussions with the IT Department, research on the future of the Microsoft Great Plains financial system, and formulating strategic themes from the many inputs received. The goals and objectives were clearly defined and Strategic Actions or projects were conceived to achieve one or more of the objectives. The alignment is illustrated in a strategy map, and linkages are carried through to project descriptions. Key outputs were: Organization Design and Positioning Strategic Themes, Goals and Actions Portfolio of Recommended Projects including descriptions and costs Implementation Roadmap with Timelines Prior & Prior Associates page 11 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 2. The Current Situation 2.1 Business Context The Municipality is under pressure to make more and better use of technology. The IT organization is under pressure to make it happen. Key drivers are: Pressure/Business Driver I -M, &OEM Changing Community Recent and future population growth F1 increased customer service demand New customers with big city demands - online services, public network access, social media Drive for Service Efficiencies Departments are eager to get on with making more and Effectiveness and better use of information technology This has created competing priorities for limited IT and project resources Rapid change in the IT Proliferation and consumerization of human industry OPoIIDDFHV D(G- ;IQhW-ffl 17 KLQJ VTA/P a -IV tablets, AVL, meters, counters, security) New software and platform provisioning options public cloud, private cloud New and expanding risks Relentless external and internal threats to systems and data from hardware and network failure, software errors, hacking, theft and malice. Business continuity and disaster recovery planning are needed to detail the risks and mitigation strategies a best practice Prior & Prior Associates page 12 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 2.2 Technology and Practices Assessment 2.2.1 Overview Figure 2 summarizes our assessment of technology practices, infrastructure and systems currently in place at Clarington. It gives a high level snapshot of where work needs to be done to enable efficiency, effectiveness and good customer service in municipal service delivery. Web Site Social Media Open Gov Open Data eRegister' eBoaking" ePermit Pets eForms eRe uest ePa ePa Trekets o w V Customer Relationship Management (CRM [a] Inte rations Mobile Business IntranetgCollaboration GIS andBusinessIntelligence/ Interfaces Apps Analytics Planning, Development, Licensing Asset & Work Management* Recreation a` and bylaw Management & Facility EMS Booking' e 'a E F Payroll rheulirg audgeting Purchazing' Sale and billing CapRal Mgmt' > > m �+ HR Finance and Accounting Corporate Infrastructure Services Mobility, Remote Access, Claud Essential Infrastructure Infrastructure Core Facilities Applications Email, Directory, Telecom Compute, Network, storage, security Figure 2: Technology Assessment Summary Power, Cooling, Racks Legend I Meets Needs J lNeeds Improvement Gap work in progress The diagram shows key foundational capabilities and technologies commonly found in municipal government. The elements are organized into four layers. Each layer represents distinct areas of technology that are managed in different ways, and which require different technology and human skill sets to manage effectively. The layers are: 0 The Infrastructure layer is the foundation. It must be robust and reliable as it forms the base on which all other layers are built. If the infrastructure is not robust, the layers built on top of it are at risk 0 The Major Business Systems layer which forces focus on a small number of l I-G-FRISRLDkdEXVtG-/VV- MhP V L HI R1FK WDVAPQ -SMY-1 LQ bLP SQQF— systems management, and eliminate process and information silos. These business systems provide the foundations for automated business processes and will enable online services. Prior & Prior Associates page 13 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 0 The Integration layer coordinates information managed within the business solutions, reducing duplicate data entry and eliminating errors, while also providing insights into the underlying data. 0 At the top of the stack are the Customer Facing Systems that enable customer interaction with the municipality[] the website, online services and social media. The colours indicate the consultantV-high level assessment of the current state of these systems, processes and services at the Municipality of Clarington. Details and rationales follow. 2.2.2 Infrastructure Layer Starting at the base of the architecture the assessment indicates that IT has taken many good steps toward building and sustaining the infrastructure and its services. Most of the focus areas such as service management, security, infrastructure applications and core hardware and services are meeting basic needs. The IT unit has made effective use of free and low cost tools and components, however limited functionality and robustness of these solutions creates opportunity for improvemeQ/EV NHL -RU DC4 D RQV-GHSHQ2-ICFH❑ on technology increases. Two areas within the infrastructure layer are significant risks to the entire technology architecture at Clarington. IT Governance is ad hoc, with technology acquisitions reviewed and approved only through the budget process. Projects are often developed with little engagement of IT for advice, impact assessment or architectural fit. Disaster Recovery and Service Continuity are also emerging risks. As customer expectations for timely services increases, the municipality needs to Prior & Prior Associates page 14 The systems and processes meet the current and near - Meets Needs term needs of the stakeholders Key elements are missing or outdated, and as foundational Needs Improvement infrastructure components, create risk for the entire technology capability. There are systems and processes in place but they do not Risk ' Enabler meet the level of business enablement needed for efficient, effective and quality service There is little or no technology capability in this area. Gap These represent opportunities to implement new core technologies to improve service The municipality has recognized a need and has budgeted Work Planned or initiated projects to complete needed work. 2.2.2 Infrastructure Layer Starting at the base of the architecture the assessment indicates that IT has taken many good steps toward building and sustaining the infrastructure and its services. Most of the focus areas such as service management, security, infrastructure applications and core hardware and services are meeting basic needs. The IT unit has made effective use of free and low cost tools and components, however limited functionality and robustness of these solutions creates opportunity for improvemeQ/EV NHL -RU DC4 D RQV-GHSHQ2-ICFH❑ on technology increases. Two areas within the infrastructure layer are significant risks to the entire technology architecture at Clarington. IT Governance is ad hoc, with technology acquisitions reviewed and approved only through the budget process. Projects are often developed with little engagement of IT for advice, impact assessment or architectural fit. Disaster Recovery and Service Continuity are also emerging risks. As customer expectations for timely services increases, the municipality needs to Prior & Prior Associates page 14 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan understand its business resumption requirements and tailor its infrastructure capabilities to match. Another important element of the infrastructure layer are the policies, standards and procedures for using and acquiring technology within the municipality. ❑ IT Policies and Procedures are key enablers to evolution of IT into a trusted supplier and partner. The IT team needs to establish clarity in several areas where clients are found wondering what they can do, what they should do or how to do it right. A comprehensive set of standards, policies and procedures developed should be developed and approved under the guidance of an inter -departmental steering committee to give them legitimacy and force. Key observations about the infrastructure layer are summarized in the following table: IT Governance Technology acquisition process ❑ ad hoc, roles and decision rationales unclear, no prioritization, no policy, procedures. Rogue solutions popping up, IT sometimes the last to know. Frustrated stakeholders looking to get around IT Decision -Making ❑ there is no multi -departmental body to manage the portfolio of IT projects and provide authority and oversight to IT policies and procedures IT Service -1 Helpdesk ❑ custom ticketing system with limited Management tracking and reporting functionality - Tried Kaseya but found it was too LFO(G1U❑ needs a full project and change plan Service Level Agreements -No formally defined support SLA in place ❑ after hours support needs increasing Incident Tracking complex issues fall off the radar and remain unresolved Knowledgebase ❑ there is a knowledge base but users see analyses repeated for similar issues IT Asset Management ❑ nothing in place Prior & Prior Associates page 15 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan IT Security ❑ Security Standards ❑ undocumented, communicated to department heads during the 2015 Security Assessment. Note that all critical recommendations from that assessment have been implemented. Threat and Risk- no recent analysis of threats to the corporation or operations and plans to mitigate or respond to associated risks Vulnerability Assessment ❑ all public facing applications should have documented record of testing and remediation of vulnerabilities to hacking Access Control ❑ adequate procedure for removing terminated employees IT Disaster Backup and Recovery Recovery & o Veeam (virtual backup servers) Service o Backup Exec Continuity o Need to standardize on one platform o Need to test actual recovery capabilities o QNAP used for backup storage Disaster Recovery Strategy o There are no formal DR procedures in place o RTO and RPO requirements have never been defined � /�c� ■ ��,.��� , �e m /�ni�■ a �u applications o Inactive data has not been identified and removed from current replication process Service Continuity o There is no formal BCM program in place o There has never been a formal Risk Analysis performed for the business o There has never been a formal Business Impact Analysis (BIA) performed for the business IT Policies and I Very limited in IT policy and procedural documentation Procedures Appear to have standard naming conventions There are no Data Lifecycle Management policies in place Cloud Readiness is a requirement but there is no formal policy outlining precautions and procedures Prior & Prior Associates page 16 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan o There is a major push to the cloud (ActiveNet, Microsoft, etc.) and projects are proceeding as application changes are made and as deemed appropriate. Vendor/Contract Management nothing is place and the move to the cloud is making this a priority The corporation needs authoritative policies and procedures to maximize opportunity to work together La Infrastructure :J Corporate AV (Kaspersky) running on all desktops and servers Infrastructure seems ok Applications There is no formal mobile computing policy OWA is open to everyone Lino security in place Mobility Management - Running BES10 but there is C RPOU ARLP DC aQS®FH C Blackberry , Android and iPhone ❑ Remote Access a They are not exactly sure who needs this service ❑ MS Remote Desktop in place for a few users ❑ They do not have any proper security in place for RA (e.g. 2 -factor authentication) They are budgeting for this in 2017 Essential ❑ Active Directory 2008 R2 Infrastructure ❑ Limited Group Policies (starting to use more) Services ❑ Email 2010 Standard (500 mailboxes) o No clustering o Single VM w/ 4 DBs o This is not maxed out due to running Exchange Std o Want to move to cloud based 365 SPAM filtering (ok) o FWC Watchguard o Linux SPAM Assassin VOIP is used in most areas Prior & Prior Associates page 17 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Infrastructure ❑ Network design is too flat (no VLANs) Core ❑ Limited security (expertise in-house developing) ❑ Servers are not segmented Bandwidth appears to be ok Wireless P2P works ok but they use an unlicensed spectrum which can cause issues ❑ Adequate storage capacity and technology Facilities ❑ Power - OK ❑ Cooling - Good ❑ Racks - Good ❑ Room - Security ❑ swipe cards w/ pin code o Shared with the library Prior & Prior Associates page 18 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 2.2.3 Major Business Systems Layer The next layer of the IT model summarizes the current situation and highlights opportunities to use or improve technology in the business functions most important to municipal government. The municipality has made recent investment in the core administrative systems including HR, Payroll and Capital Management. These appear to be delivering efficiency and effectiveness in administrative processes and demonstrating good management of the tax payer dollar. Two key enablers for the effective acquisition, implementation and integration of major business systems are missing: Architecture and Project Management. More will be said about architecture in the next section, as this capability becomes even more important for integration. For Major Business System enablement, Clarington needs to focus on the technology aspect of architecture: being ready with standards and diagrams to inform analysis, recommendations and requirements for new acquisitions. The other key enabler to successful business system implementation is project management. The IT unit does not have any resources who are knowledgeable and experienced in managing large technology projects. There are no standard tools, templates or minimum requirements for planning, documenting and executing projects. As the municipality looks to make significant investment in new technology, it is important to ensure that acquisition and implementation are done in a manner that will maximize the chance and degree of success. For a municipality the size of Clarington, the IT team should provide leadership in this area ❑ establish good practice, provide basic tools and training, be a resource for project issues, and ensure project owners are accountable for following the methodology through reporting to project and enterprise governing bodies. Assuming the implementation of the CityWide Works program is successful in Operations, the only other major system that most municipalities the size of Clarington use is a Development, Licensing and By -Law Administration solution. It will streamline and marshal automated workflows for customer facing processes such as service requests and building permits, and provide integrated views of customer and case data to all who need it. The existing system does not have the functional capabilities the Engineering and Planning departments are asking for. The need renewed technology to support increased volume and complexity of work and opportunities to achieve efficiencies through mobilization. Improving the development approval process is explicitly called for action in the corporate strategy. This system should be considered high priority investment opportunity. The municipality has already recognized that it should be achieving efficiencies in its purchasing and requisition processes. A project to investigate options for a purchasing add-on to the Microsoft Dynamics Great Plains is underway. Similarly the municipality has a project underway to replace the Class Recreation Management System. This replacement has been necessitated by the discontinuance of the product and support at the end of 2017. Recreation and Fire services can also gain efficiencies with an integrated staff scheduling system. These are key to simplifying selection of shifts for Prior & Prior Associates page 19 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan part-time workers and volunteer fire fighters and will help ensure that scheduled work follows entitlement and maximum business rules. Architecture ❑ No documented blueprint of key architectures including: o Business Architecture ❑ vision, roles and mandates for enterprise services such as customer service o Information Architecture no plan for sharing data across departments (eg. master data such as assets, locations) ❑ asset data is copied from LIDO to CityWide o Technology Architecture ❑ system integration opportunities Currently working with vendor to map out all infrastructure architecture Project No project management practice established to improve Management success of technology projects Ltools, templates, standards Limited project management knowledge and experience in IT or departments Limited business case documentation, project objectives and measures Training Technology training room needs renovation More technology training is needed F at roll out and refresher training to ensure changes stick eg. Finance Need online training system tracking and delivery (Learning Management System) Human HRIS generally OK Ligood employee info repository Resources (cloud) ADP Workforce additional functionality needed - staff scheduling, HRIS recruitment management Prior & Prior Associates page 20 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Spreadsheets (health and safety incidents, WSIB claims, insurance claims) Payroll recent improvements to timesheet entry, vacations ADP Workforce request and approvals through new Workforce system not rolled out to Operations yet, no integration with Work Orders Scheduling nothing at this time to schedule part time work ❑ needs identified in fire, recreation, clerks duplication of schedule data into ADP Workforce timesheets Finance and GP meets accounting needs but not used to full potential Accounting more training and process implementation needed; MS Dynamics need update to GP 2016 GP Finance GP has limited reporting capability; FRX dead -ended GP/FRX GP database issues reporting Use LDO for Permit and Development Charge revenue, LDO Letters of Credit ❑ Diamond Toolkit - need more training F- Need GP -Class Revenue interface Need Shelter Buddy Interface Budgeting � FMW Capital limited functionality RAC Financial ❑ FMW operating budgets Management Workbench o used well by departments for reporting from GP (FMW) (monthly) eSolutions Budget entry portal is not user friendly refresher training Budget Builder needed Budget Builder for public engagement Prior & Prior Associates page 21 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Purchasing ❑ Bidsandtenders.ca ❑ OK Need to implement/improve Contract management RFI in play for purchasing module for GP Sale and L AR accounting works OK Billing ❑ no AR/AP workflows MS Dynamics no integration with electronic document repository GP Vailtech Tax future of Vailtech uncertain and Billing Gtechna reconciliation issues GTechna Parking Tickets Capital ❑ New systems shared by Finance and Engineering Management ❑ Capital Planning module rolling out now CityWide E Systems meeting needs Tangible Interface required between asset inventory and capital Capital Assets plan ❑ wait for new asset inventory system (TCA) Implementation of replacement CityWide Works in CityWide progress Capital Expected completion of rollout to Operations is YE2107 Planning & Some further rollout and assessment of fit as an Analysis (CPA) enterprise CRM is needed Asset and Service Request/Work Order/ Maintenance Work Management - WorkTech system underutilized due to Management performance and functionality issues. Interdepartmental WorkTech 65 VCR=SSRI2%lGSRXE(HtUk_CRID ork Orders by Front Line staff required ❑ Service Implementation of replacement CityWide Works in Manager progress (CSR) Expected completion of rollout to Operations is YE2107 ❑ Work Some further rollout and assessment of fit as an Manager enterprise CRM is needed F Asset Need mobile functionality to be rolled out for roads, Inventory bridges, playgrounds and buildings Petrovend Fuel Asset management ❑ contracted annual sign inspection data uploads to LDO are onerous; no processes for asset Prior & Prior Associates page 22 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan LDO Sign data maintenance. Finance & Engineering successfully Viewer using CityWide TCA; CPA progressing CityWide Tangible Capital Assets (TCA) CityWide Capital Planning & Analysis (CPA) CityWide Works Development, ❑ Development Applications ❑ LDO is obsolete; GIS Box cloud ❑ Building Permits 11 basic functionality OK, limited based File workflow, no ePermitsapplication and approval Sharing ❑ Business Licensing WorkTech processes manual, no eForms Asset Inventory By -Law -Enforcement ❑ basic functionality OK, need mobile enablement, need better links to electronic documents Licensing and integration good; new functionality unlikely, limited By -Law workflow across stakeholders, field -size limitations, need Land a complete process review Development El Planning ❑limited functionality, workflow, reporting, Office (LDO) notification, publishing in LDO. Reverted to old processes and tools; recently acquired encode on their own encode cloud � Engineering El custom Recreation ❑ Programming and registration for recreation and leisure and Facility opportunities, facility booking, point of sale; online Booking registration (eReg), no online facility availability or Class booking (eBooking) Recreation -1 End of support of legacy system at end of 2017 Management -1 Replacement in progress System Prior & Prior Associates page 23 links in LDO to documents in based Planning Laserfiche provides basic document linkage functionality, Document generally not meeting needs for workflow and process Publishing improvement; master asset data copied to CityWide by System Finance Recreation ❑ Programming and registration for recreation and leisure and Facility opportunities, facility booking, point of sale; online Booking registration (eReg), no online facility availability or Class booking (eBooking) Recreation -1 End of support of legacy system at end of 2017 Management -1 Replacement in progress System Prior & Prior Associates page 23 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Fire Services Existing Crisys system meets needs for incident CriSys Fire- L] management, reporting, prevention and inspection, Rescue System training Spreadsheets Computer Aided dispatch system needs improvement Volunteer hours and points are complex and paper reporting and spreadsheet tracking is inefficient and creates risk Manual entry of schedules in WorkForce is inefficient L Need more online training capacity ❑ Possible major organizational review in near future Large Fire Equipment maintenance management out - tasked ❑ OK Fleet Work Orders and Scheduled maintenance L OK except Management rest of WorkTech may be replaced WorkTech Automated Vehicle Location ❑ OK ❑ except Emergency Fleet and Fire Services wants AVL in more vehicles Management 2.2.4 Integration Layer As the municipality and the collection of technology grows, it becomes more important to plan and document how business units, information and systems should work together. For example, customer service can be delivered separately by each department, sometimes fronted by a single customer services unit, or operated as a shared service. In any of these models, the services need to be well defined, mandates formalized and roles and responsibilities agreed. This is the business architecture. In some customer service models, information needs to flow from system to system. &X\AW HUM-U1FH-LFiSW-M1QDHl-UP D �EHIDEUIR XGPM operational systems, or the standard information they seek should be aggregated in one system. Security and privacy policies may need to be adjusted to allow access. In some cases, accuracy and efficiencies can be gained by creating interfaces for data to be shared between systems. The municipality has some interfaces, but replacement of major business systems is a good time to look at all opportunities for data sharing, establish a vision, and define integration requirements for inclusion in RFPs. This is the information architecture. And finally, specifying how this information will flow - the technical platforms, tools and data standards -- are the technology architecture. Again this is critical for Clarington Prior & Prior Associates page 24 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan to understand and document as it embarks on several large technology acquisitions, some of which are hosted off-site. Cloud -based solutions are especially risky as access to and even ownership of data are not top of mind for solution providers. There is an existing intranet platform for staff information. The platform is old and requires considerable effort to maintain. A vision and requirements should be defined and a new platform selected. A related technology that is absent is collaboration tools. These provide virtual workspaces for staff to share knowledge and work on projects and ongoing subjects, and include working document repositories, task lists and calendars. Collaboration tools can also be the platform for a modern intranet site and should be considered for scope in the intranet update project. Electronic Document and Record Management is a vital link between people, processes and systems. Within the municipality, staff need to find documents to do their work, groups need to share documents, and other information needs to be routinely published to the public or be at the ready for freedom of information requests. Policies, procedures need to be readily available, and major business systems need to have interfaces to present archived electronic records. The existing image repository and record management solutions have been working well, but they do need to be reviewed for suitability for new types of records and upgraded or replaced. Geographic Information is another vital link between systems in municipal government. The municipality has a comprehensive asset inventory in the GIS database which gives a great head start to implementation of fully functional asset and work management systems. The maintenance of these data needs to become formalized as a baseline and a requirement, as people or systems who build or maintain these assets will expect seamless updates. Almost every department sees opportunity to achieve efficiencies and improved customer service through mobile access to information and processes by field staff. Policies, standards, and possibly bargaining unit engagement protocol are key enablers. IT should be leading the readiness for acquiring and implementing business applications with mobile interfaces. And finally, as Clarington moves to achieving its strategic goal of communicating value for money through performance measurement, key technologies are needed to links costs to processes and outputs and ultimately to customer satisfaction. Business Intelligence, Analytics and Scorecards are currently out of reach for Clarington because the underlying systems and processes are not collecting the necessary data. In the short term, new business systems should be required to support good operational reporting and should be able to export data for future integration in an enterprise business intelligence solution. ' F LLU RI Ail FFRQ/X IEM 1 1[Dd-UDLIHA XP P DLR HG- LCA M following table. Prior & Prior Associates page 25 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Data Standards ❑ No framework formally adopted for data standards o What data, format, storage, maintenance, retention ❑ No documented data model ❑ should establish before major investment or collection ❑ Limited data collected for analysis and comparison ❑ No metadata describing what data are available for integration Intranet ❑ Could benefit from being used as a channel for corporate culture sharing ❑ departmental focus ❑ Current system built on Drupal open -source software which is reaching end of support ❑ Need a robust content management system to support more dynamic content through distributed authorship - ideally integrated with collaboration tools. Content of an intranet is not typically a responsibility of the IT Division. IT should make sure the tool is working properly and that other staff are able to easily provide and update content. Collaboration Tools -1 Emerging needs to share files, tasks and updates on projects both within workgroups and projects Ll among staff, as well as with community agencies and contributors Aligns with corporate goals of community engagement and may enable access to the natural environment Electronic Document ❑ Laserfiche is meeting need for storage of some & Records classes of electronic documents Management o Finding docs is challenging for the Laserfiche infrequent user Need for more classes of data to be imported, Versatile integrated and managed (eg. Community Services) Prior & Prior Associates page 26 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan ❑ Paper archives are full ❑ time to transform to electronic documents where possible ❑ Versatile audit and space management functionality limited ❑ Need a Record Management capability for both paper and electronic documents GIS ❑ Technology up-to-date ❑ Well-received products and services ❑ Current enterprise needs met Integrations and ❑ Several custom built and maintained interfaces Interfaces between business applications ❑ images, finance docs, gis ❑ Need to identify enterprise -wide integration needs to inform replacements of major business systems Mobile Business ❑ Mobile devices have been deployed to key Enablement management and front line staff Li mostly Prior & Prior Associates page 27 used for email and photos ❑ Links to useful content on the intranet would add quick win value ❑ Need field worker applications to achieve major efficiencies (eg. Building inspections, playgrounds, roads, work orders) ❑ Need standards and plans for common business requirements Business ❑ Clarington has limited operational information from Intelligence/Analytics which to produce integrated data views and performance measures ❑ A performance measurement and business intelligence strategy will yield information requirements for the major business systems Prior & Prior Associates page 27 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 2.2.5 Customer Facing Systems Layer The municipality needs a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) System. This will EHAM-FFQAUCiDQGDXVQRRl11,U&1-i-LFFRLG-I B&AP FiLVSFORCDWRLP DA7U 1CWA_IHWN_DQG_ interaction history. The Recreation Management system and each of the two major business systems will have built-in or modular CRM capabilities. For Recreation and Booking, customer information will include basic identity as well as additional personal information about age, gender, family relationships, photos, and record of achievement in the case of swimming lessons. There is a loose tie to property for mail and sometimes qualification for Municipality -rate fees. Some of these same customers and others will also be requesting a variety of municipal services. They want to track progress, and may want to complain about it. These interactions are conducted through an Asset and Work Management system, which will have its own set of customer information. TheVHFX\AW HIJOequests may or may not be related to their property, but often to municipal assets. Some of the same customers and others will be interacting with the Municipality through a Development, Licensing and By -Law system. These systems have the usual personal information but feature stronger organization information and accounting capabilities for developer transactions. There is a strong link to property for notifications, by-law complaints and inspections. To get started creating a unified customer experience, Clarington should translate its customer service vision into system requirements and Request for Information on CRM functionality in the three major business systems and see if any of them can meet the requirements for pro -active and integrated customer relationships. Some key functionality is highlighted in the table below. Another customer facing group of systems are the eServices, or web and mobile electronic services. The municipality is already enjoying the success of its DocuPet service, which provides online licensing and payment. It also has online registration with its Class recreation system and should be expected to keep or improve it in the system replacement. There are several other municipal services citizens are expecting online or on their phone. These include requests, permits, facility bookings and water bill inquiry and payment. These are customer facing functionalities the municipality should be looking for in each of the associated major business systems. At the top of the technology stack are those customer facing systems that portray the M u n i c i p a I i ty VIP DJ HLFUA n FE AKUZ C KS1 ZAM RQ_RI -U RLP I.1AUQvSDJ-KSI_-DQG accountability, engagement, and routine disclosure of data that people and organizations want. Social Media is an opportunity to engage more interactively with residents and customers. It enables effective pushing of information to the interested, and is a channel where there are conversations about the Municipality. The Municipality should be listening and engaging in these conversations, including Prior & Prior Associates page 28 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan investing in social media management tools that enable planned messages and campaigns, approval workflows, and sentiment monitoring. Customer ❑ No platform, policies or procedures to support a Relationship F HIJH[ SHLEffHZF ?W P XCLFLSDWVT- Management Ll services System Customer information changes not shared across business systems and services ❑ how many times do I have to tell you I moved? Multi -departmental service requests, complaints and issues are being lost, not fulfilled status unknown, customers not informed No systems to support active engagement or marketing Critical to moving to an effective organization and address sharing and communicating information eRegister Online registration for recreation and leisure opportunities Class currently supported by Class Technology obsolete; Replacement in progress eBooking Online lookup of facilities for rent, availability, Class reservations and issuance of permits not implemented These are supported by the current technology business not ready Class replacement in progress ePermits Currently no online request service for permits such as building, special events, parking, burn, fireworks, curb cuts, road occupancy, signs and licenses such as lottery and peddlars These should be requirements in new major business systems Prior & Prior Associates page 29 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan ePets Current registration and licensing system good Docupet eForms Online application forms for various services such as pool eSolutions enclosures, building permit inspections are enabled by current eSolutions web platform good customer service These feed into manual processes for entry into business systems a opportunity for efficiencies with integrations or direct enablement by business systems eRequest Online request for services and by-law enforcement use online forms No link to status reports Inefficient process to enter into Service Request management systems ePay eRegistration and ePets support online payment for service ❑ other services require mail -in or in-person payment ❑ opportunity to improve customer service by including payment at end of request processes ePayTickets current online system provides good customer service gtechna Website Solid municipal web platform - well used eSolutions Excellent content coverage Distributed content management capability not well used as all content is vetted F1 need style guides and standards opportunity for improved timeliness Planning application information is not completed for all applications Social Media Good presence on Facebook, Twitter and a starter Facebook presence on Youtube a strategy and policy to limit departmental channels has focussed interest and growth Twitter Youtube Need video editing software and better desktops and Sprout Social configurations Social Listening is emerging as a valuable source of customer satisfaction Need ipads for Tourism field work and sales Prior & Prior Associates page 30 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Open Accountability and transparency principles and policies Government established Laserfiche Laserfiche platform serves up agendas and documents eAgenda o User interface is very formal, structured matching the data not the user needs .I eg. Record W ebl i n k FDM RUkiVVXFK1D/❑) LP J HQJUAX1M I UDlW❑ Calendar probably meaningless to most users o Search capability is slow and result lists are long Open Data Some online access to basic municipal datasets of interest to application developers, information aggregators, researchers, independent constituent analysis (for example, online access to agendas and minutes) There is an awareness of the need for more online openness and data will be published as is assessed and deemed appropriate. The Region of Durham has an Open Data program which meets many of the requirements of land developers Can be an extension of the accountability and transparency principles 2.3 Staff Survey Results Prior & Prior conducted an online survey of all staff between February 6 and February 24. A total of 195 responses were received and reflect a broad representation across departments, jobs and locations. Detailed findings are reported in Appendix B. The staff survey found high levels of satisfaction with IT client services. The 80 percent Satisfaction Target is a threshold derived from use of the survey for dozens of municipalities. Key elements of client service, including timeliness, quality and knowledge are well above the typical rating for most municipalities. Prior & Prior Associates page 31 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 1aa� 9a% 80% 70% so% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% The timeliness of responses to The timeliness of resolution of The quality of the response to The knowledge of ITsupport staff your needs yourneeds your questions and concerns Figure 3: Staff Satisfaction with IT Support Services Sof ISf4 Cf 14i} Target ■Very Dissatisfied ■Dissatisfied Neutral ■ Sati sfi e d ■Very Satisfied The staff survey also indicated that the IT team is meeting expectations managing several key IT infrastructure services. As illustrated in Figure 3, satisfaction is high for internet access, network drives, email and calendaring. Virus protection, spam filtering and the intranet platform are also approaching a high satisfaction level. However other services including remote access, network speed, printers, mobile device management, PCs and laptops and telephony are not meeting expectations. Many of these were raised in the interviews as well. Most could benefit from formalization of policies and procedures, and upgrade to enterprise -class tools. Prior & Prior Associates page 32 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan o'°c othe nc t—rk [mail /calendar twork P ers/co ers/ demote pccex Ne ex/ —kPh—, on/ Noblle cevkes Pcand/or wtoa Intranet Internet Drives Per/ormance( Scanners — Pa rFlt-- -need Figure 4: Staff Satisfaction with IT Services Satisfaction Target .vervolxanztled ■Uiszatistied ■Neural .saPSfed .VerySaNsfed Satisfaction with the current set of business applications is low or neutral. Generally staff are more neutral about technologies that they seldom use. Two systems stand out as blockers to business improvement with significant indications of dissatisfaction: Land Development Office, the development, permitting and licensing system, and WorkTech, the work order system. These findings confirm what was discovered in interviews that these systems are not meeting needs. 90% ea% 5atlsfactfon Target 70% 60% 50% ■very Dissat"fiet ao% ■ �isatisfied ■Neutral 30% ■Sati ftd ■very SAMied 20% 10% 0% r ,a z 0 p4 re 5 a �q'e � �Ja�z a c�co "A n Fs a¢�d� ¢�\Jao a`1`SS �v o4� aa� r rcv0��� o y�r9 i�c aha yam` F a� Figure 5: Staff Satisfaction with Business Systems Prior & Prior Associates page 33 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan The following chart shows the level of satisfaction reported on three key IT service areas. Clients are generally happy with the core infrastructure services. They are less happy with support for the implementation and operation of GIS and major business systems. Comments and interviews indicated high levels of satisfaction with the responsiveness and knowledge of the GIS Staff, but performance issues with the GIS desktop and web platforms are creating challenges. Digging deeper into the business systems rating we found that 50 percent of directors G3 U 11 G -F I]WAKHVB P HCAI Rau KDM VIQfGFDU LIH VOAN I�7 VCP - FDC DGffBDAII1 WAWKC R(RJ WAC-Fi[SU DF1&1- W NXSSRL)VV X'1N-IV[DQOFI comments on the survey confirm that IT needs to improve in this area to become a trusted supplier and partner. One illustrative comment was L,V4DD[TEH1AF0PA9-MR)UHV/ are preventing IT from being a visionary force that positions the Municipality to be able to compete in a highly (and becoming more so) technologically advanced business and FXV HUM -I- FH+QURCP HCMUnderstanding of the challenges of maturation was widespread but agreement on resource level as the cause of the issue was not. 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% P rovides and supports tore IT infrastructure Providesservicesto support the implementation P rovides map p i ng and GIS services. Inetwork, telecoms, storage], IT assets (eg. PC's, and operation of the Municipality's business laptops, tablets smartphones), and provides systems and solutions. general user support [help desk] service. Figure 6: Staff Satisfaction with IT Service Areas Satlsfactlon Target ■ Ve ry Qi ssati sfi ed ■ Dissatisfied ■Neutral ■Satisfied ■ Ve ry Sati sfi e d Prior & Prior Associates page 34 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 2.5 Current State Summary In summary, the technology environment assessment indicates a need for Clarington to direct immediate attention to the infrastructure layer to strengthen and formalize core IT technologies and services. IT governance, IT policies and procedures and IT business continuity and disaster recovery programs need to be developed before major investment is made in new business systems. It can do these things better and more efficiently with upgrades to a fully functional help desk system, mobile device management system, and IT asset management system. Develop requirements soon so they can be considered in the acquisition and configuration of the asset management solution needed by Operations. At the same time, the IT team needs to realign itself to support the acquisition, implementation and operation of new business systems. It needs more time and resources dedicated to leadership, visioning, architecture and planning. It needs to be a sought-after partner in all business improvement projects. In the following sections we make recommendations for changes to the IT organization and a set of projects to enable the municipality to make more progress in using technology to improve efficiency and effectiveness of services and help departments achieve a strong customer focus. Prior & Prior Associates page 35 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 3. Municipal Comparisons Four communities were compared to Clarington on IT systems and services and major business applications. Clarington is second lowest in population among these comparators. It is similar to Caledon in population density, both very low compared to the others. The following chart plots the number of IT staff and GIS staff and the general linear relationship to the size of the municipality. Clarington appears to be proportionately resourced, except that its geography includes significant rural areas and sparse population, and thus multiple, small offices and field locations for network and system support. Caledon with a smaller population than Clarington, has significantly more IT resourcing. Number of IT and GIS Staff Oshawa (159k) Whitby (128k) Ajax (120k) Clarington (92k) ■ IT Staff ■ GIS Staff Caledon (67k) 10 15 20 25 Figure 7: Number of IT and GIS Staff Prior & Prior Associates page 36 - • • Caledon 66,502 96.6 Clarington 92,013 150 Ajax 119,677 1,786 Whitby 128,377 875 Oshawa 159,458 1,095 The following chart plots the number of IT staff and GIS staff and the general linear relationship to the size of the municipality. Clarington appears to be proportionately resourced, except that its geography includes significant rural areas and sparse population, and thus multiple, small offices and field locations for network and system support. Caledon with a smaller population than Clarington, has significantly more IT resourcing. Number of IT and GIS Staff Oshawa (159k) Whitby (128k) Ajax (120k) Clarington (92k) ■ IT Staff ■ GIS Staff Caledon (67k) 10 15 20 25 Figure 7: Number of IT and GIS Staff Prior & Prior Associates page 36 Municinality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan When expressed as number of IT staff relative to population, Clarington ranks second lowest with a ratio of 0.1 IT staff per 1,000 population. Ajax is the lowest with 0.09. Both are below the average of 0.14 and Whitby, Oshawa and Caledon with .12, .14, and .24 IT staff per 1,000 respectively. IT staff at Clarington support more workstations and user accounts per staff than other municipalities. The number of workstations supported per IT staff is 50, a number higher than all other comparators and nearly twice as high as Whitby. The same is true of network and user accounts, again with Clarington staff supporting the most users and their network files and accounts compared to all others. Another observation from Figure 9 is that Clarington has largely moved away from simple cell phones to more extensive use of smart phones. Even though the current business applications do not directly support mobile access, staff are creating their own semi -automated processes using basic mobile capabilities such as email and camera. Clarington appears to have completed a relatively early transition to smart phones and relatively widespread deployment to a large percentage of staff. These are are helpful preparatory steps for reducing resistance to a larger mobile and paperless business transformation. Figure 8: Relative IT Resourcing Prior & Prior Associates page 37 IT Leader Manager Manager Manager Director Manager IT Staff excluding GIS 14 7 9 15 21 GIS Staff []Corporate Role 2 2 2 1 2 Number of Employees FTE 353 454 612 606 1,100 Number of IT users / 500 508 900 800 accounts Number of workstations 350 385 415 850 Number of smart phones 145 57 175 160 Number of cell phones 25 163 40 30 IT Staff as % of total 4.53 1.98 1.80 2.64 2.09 employees PC's per IT Staff 50 43 28 40 Number of login accounts 71 56 60 38 per IT Staff Number of IT staff per 1,000 0.24 0.10 0.09 0.12 0.14 POP Figure 8: Relative IT Resourcing Prior & Prior Associates page 37 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan The comparison also yielded valuable insights into the use of major business systems. Prior & Prior Associates page 38 40rmnt�sjrf E_ M I Finance MS MS — JD mPower PeopleSoft Dynamics Dynamics Edwards (OP) (OP) GP (OP) GP (OP) (OP) Budget FMW (OP) FMW (OP) FMW FMW (OP) FMW (OP) (OP) Purchasing JD PeopleSoft Edwards (OP) (OP) Human Info:HR ADP Info:HR ADP PeopleSoft Resources Dynamics WorkForce (OP) Workforce (OP) GP (OP) (C) and (C) and with HRIS (OP) Halogen Diamond (OP) Payroll (C) Scheduling Schedule 24 (OP) used in a few areas Learning Experi- Management menting with Moodie Recreation Class (OP) ActiveNet Class ActiveNet Class (OP) Management replacement (OP) (C) with ActiveNet (C) in progress Asset Cityworks CityWide CityWide VFA (C) Management (OP) Capital (C) replacement Planning, in progress Tangible Assets(C) Work Cartegraph CityWide CityWork CityWorks PeopleSoft Management IssueTraq Works(C) s (OP) (OP) add on (OP) (OP) ❑ Prior & Prior Associates page 38 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Figure 9: Major Business Systems Notes: (C) Cloud or Hosted solution, (OP) On -Premise hosting As the table illustrates, cloud -hosted systems are making an appearance in municipal IT, with strong adoption in the Recreation Management and Payroll business functions. More and more major business software is transitioning to this model. For example, 0 LFU?\/ V'% current focus for its product development is the cloud, and Microsoft ' I_COP LFV� 3 _WHP XC[FLSDWVLFRLH11MCFH_DMDFFRXC= A-1vAP , has begun receiving less development of new features compared to its cloud based counterpart, Dynamics 365 Finance. All of the municipalities surveyed are sticking with their existing finance systems for the near to medium term. The table also highlights some important similarities and differences in specific business software. For example, Asset Management, is enabled by software to widely varying degrees, from nothing to an old application to be replaced, to VFA which is largely for buildings, to I X01 HCUd iGI VL\AW V-Q\HIF& CLOD J 1 [LWHQW& LW 0+2 SOP HCWA&RQ/T 1 None of the comparators have Work Management systems that are tightly integrated with Asset Management. The consultants believe a strong link is crucial to production of valuable information and sustainment of quality data. Clarington will benefit from the integration achieved through its recent implementation of CityWide Works. Almost all municipalities use Amanda for their Planning, Development Tracking and Permitting business. Oshawa is in progress of replacing its custom built application. Similarly, almost all municipalities use Laserfiche as an electronic document repository. Oshawa is in process of developing a strategy for ERDMS; Caledon is in process of acquiring an integrated solution for paper and electronic records. Prior & Prior Associates page 39 replacement in progress Development, Amanda Land Amanda Amanda OLI- custom - License and (OP) Develop- (OP) (OP) built app (OP) Bylaw ment -being Office replaced (OP) Document Tab/ Versatile/ Versatile/ HRPM Versatile Management Laserfiche Laserfiche Laserfich (OP) L (OP) (OP) e (OP) strategy in progress Customer Amanda CityWorks Lagan (OP) Relationship (OP) (OP) Management Figure 9: Major Business Systems Notes: (C) Cloud or Hosted solution, (OP) On -Premise hosting As the table illustrates, cloud -hosted systems are making an appearance in municipal IT, with strong adoption in the Recreation Management and Payroll business functions. More and more major business software is transitioning to this model. For example, 0 LFU?\/ V'% current focus for its product development is the cloud, and Microsoft ' I_COP LFV� 3 _WHP XC[FLSDWVLFRLH11MCFH_DMDFFRXC= A-1vAP , has begun receiving less development of new features compared to its cloud based counterpart, Dynamics 365 Finance. All of the municipalities surveyed are sticking with their existing finance systems for the near to medium term. The table also highlights some important similarities and differences in specific business software. For example, Asset Management, is enabled by software to widely varying degrees, from nothing to an old application to be replaced, to VFA which is largely for buildings, to I X01 HCUd iGI VL\AW V-Q\HIF& CLOD J 1 [LWHQW& LW 0+2 SOP HCWA&RQ/T 1 None of the comparators have Work Management systems that are tightly integrated with Asset Management. The consultants believe a strong link is crucial to production of valuable information and sustainment of quality data. Clarington will benefit from the integration achieved through its recent implementation of CityWide Works. Almost all municipalities use Amanda for their Planning, Development Tracking and Permitting business. Oshawa is in progress of replacing its custom built application. Similarly, almost all municipalities use Laserfiche as an electronic document repository. Oshawa is in process of developing a strategy for ERDMS; Caledon is in process of acquiring an integrated solution for paper and electronic records. Prior & Prior Associates page 39 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan And finally, for Customer Relationship Management municipalities use either the capability of one of their workflow systems or have a dedicated system such as Lagan that integrates with the workflow systems to provide a common or centralized customer engagement interface. The solution depends on the desired business model for customer service in Clarington. Prior & Prior Associates page 40 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 4. Strategic Directions 4.2 Strategic Alignment Clarington needs a framework to plan its architecture and prioritize its investments. We recommend rooting the framework in WHIP XC LRSD 6 WXI LFL3 00-L❑❑a 2018. The following strategic actions from the Plan can be directly enabled by technology 3 Streamline development approvals 2.1 Communicate good governance and value for the tax dollar 4.1 Refine and update the Asset Management plan 5.1 Use technology to effectively communicate with residents 5.6 Enhance Council and corporate communications In addition to contributing directly to these specific strategic actions, IT can be a key enabler of achievement of four high level J RMI P S(FMN* I[O XCLFLSDUM MRQIII Mission and Strategic Priorities: strateg 2075 VISION Building a sustainable, creative, caring community MISSION Committed to leadership, to respect and to the delivery of quality services STRATEGIC PRIORITIES 1. Facilitate the creation of jobs, attraction of new businesses and expansion of existing businesses Ensure and demonstrate good govemance and value for the tax dollar 3. Manage growth to maintain our"small town"feel 4. Enable safe, efficient traffic flow and active Efficiency ❑ several elements of the plan 11 transportation reflect an efficiency theme including 6 LFr3 L R UAU1❑F11 C,/XLH 5. Promote residents engagement in our community demonstrate good governance and value I RJM eneralit implies the fi. Enhance access to out unique natural environment �ltll ,V�?J Y � p principle should be applied to any service or process whose value or performance can be improved, and there are many opportunities to modernize and automate. One of the specific actions mentioned in the 6 MUlr I IF -3 OQIE D,/ ---HI I LFHWP DMJ HI DC G -SIJ :1K H[P DLC HLR - CXIyP&U illustrating the value customers and stakeholders place on efficiency. Customer Focus there are several strategic actions to improve the communication DQG_HQJ DJ FP HOM 1C F( XGU _& RP P XCLFD& widely, frequently and through various channels good governance and value for the Clarington \Q I_ M 'llL$ QXSM,Po A VW-iL& QD QI WQ_6 %VM LFL3 ®Q_I_II1( C CEQ1E;1J L6 XFFWARW & ®UID J URQ-1I SF %FZa A X\AAP HU6 HLX'LFHI Q V D[ E+CDE ❑ need to track and resolve issues, design work with the customer in mind, and engage Prior & Prior Associates page 41 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan with customers to understand their expectations. IT can be a key contributor and enabler of many of these customer facing capabilities. Effectiveness ❑ 714VJ FUCU1LLP O_U4;N IG11Q1P P L&ffUVI,mYP HCMFP P UAC- � ❑ HA -LUR V4i[ l JRLW CSP HCPJ D@R[1GF®(C�I RL&L FRQCRM 1-I I I -FW -ICI =714NH11CF(X Fi HC XLIH_ J RRQ_J RYFLCDCFH DP Ql-l❑ development approvals pU;FHO DQGUVHXS-RQJRLQJ AH31FHTND3Dh1RCF9KlYOWbU direction was also a topic revisited in the Update to the Strategic Plan, in its scoping of service reviews to consider many aspects of effectiveness including understanding customer expectations, measuring performance, and assessing the logic of program design. The original Strategic Plan also called for technology to help the municipality effectively communicate to residents. Accountability ❑ The strategic plan proposed several actions that imply a goal of increased accountability. These include promoting resident engagement, demonstrating good governance, and demonstrating value. In summary, these four goals are what business units need to strive for to execute the Strategic Plan with positive impact, and DFKHYH&®LJlQJVRC 9MRQRIM/XVDUDEEOFF creative, caring community Increase Impr°ve Increase Inge Effciency Customer Effectiveness Acoountahility 5ervire In practice, all major IT project proposals should be assessed based on their contribution to the achievement of these corporate business goals. Together they define dimensions on which to identify, document and measure success of each business improvement initiative. Appendix A sets out a basic project prioritization methodology that requires proposals to articulate credible benefit statements aligned with the four goals. These statements become the basis for an overall assessment of project impact. 4.3 Strategic Themes and Actions The IT Strategic Plan exercise identified many opportunities for improvement in the use of IT in business and in the IT infrastructure and organization needed to support it. These opportunities, goals and actions are summarized in the following five strategic themes: 1. Adopt a corporate, planned and integrated approach to business systems 2. Build nimble, user -responsive technology infrastructure 3. Align and mature IT service Prior & Prior Associates page 42 Municipality of Clarinqton Information Technology Strategic Plan 4. Connect Field Staff using Technology mobile & remote 5. Deliver Digital Services, Anywhere, Anytime These themes reflect what we heard from leaders and stakeholders. They reflect the business customer perspective ❑the need for a partner in the acquisition and operation of technology. They also reflect the direction of the strategic plan and implementation roadmap. They are the things the IT unit needs to work on to become an effective service provider. They strengthen IT capability to enable important business capabilities. The business capabilities identified in this project as most important are online services, automated workflows, connected field staff, better communication and engagement, and reporting and analytics. Each of the strategic themes is translated into a goal for IT. As illustrated below, IT needs to focus on 5 key capability enhancements to enable new business capabilities for its client departments. Enhance OnlineImPfO1e Strengthen Automate Connect Feld Cam mu nication Reporting and Services & C. alla6orativn knalytics workflows Staff Strengthen Strengthen R Strengthen IT Align & Mature Strengthen&T Mobile Infrastructure Governance rr Service Integration &Remove 1laess Explanations and specific, measurable actions are outlined in the next sub -sections. A set of Business Enablement Initiatives are also set out in the final section of this chapter. These will acquire and implement major business applications to enable new and stronger business capabilities in online services, communication and collaboration, reporting and analytics, automation and mobilized field staff. 4.3.1 Adopt a corporate, planned and integrated approach to business systems The Municipality needs to invest in new and updated business systems to enable improvements in its planning and delivery of programs and services. As the municipality grows, so too Governance do the number of applications, requests, inspections, Prior & Prior Associates page 43 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan registrations, permits and licenses. There is simply more work to do. At the same time resident, business, and visitor expectations have risen to include modern, accessible user experiences made available 24/7 on the channel of their choice for services that are fulfilled by efficient and effective staff and processes. Departments have managed until now using old technologies with limited functionality, supplemented by manual processes, spreadsheets, single purpose databases and lots of paper. All are looking to improve their organizations with new business processes and want to acquire new technology to enable them to deliver their programs and services more efficiently and with more customer focus. Most are ready to use more and better management information to plan and operate more effectively. The problem for Clarington is that the demand for major business systems exceeds the current capability and capacity of the IT organization to support the research, acquisition, implementation and sustainment of big systems. At the same time, it has never been more important to make technology investments that will make the most out of every opportunity. We pose three principles to guide all future effort and investment in major business systems: Corporate C a holistic view of all needs that will maximize opportunities to achieve corporate goals Planned C a rational roadmap that recognizes the pre -requisites such as business readiness, resource availability, and infrastructure supports Integrated C maximizes opportunity to sharing information across systems to eliminate duplication and improve the quality of data The opportunities and recommended actions of the IT strategy under this theme are as follows: Opportunity: The organization needs a governing body that will execute the strategy by planning and monitoring the portfolio of projects, ensuring that policy enablers are in place, approving and supporting standards, and ensuring a corporate -wide view of technology is cultivated. The strategy and implementation priorities need to be reviewed annually to accommodate new needs, halt or re -cast failing projects, and take advantage of new opportunities. Action: Strike a formal IT Steering Committee of senior managers and a representative set of department heads with the IT Manager acting in a support and subject matter expert role. Assign a workgroup to develop Terms of Reference and meeting schedule in Q3 and meet quarterly thereafter. Prior & Prior Associates page 44 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Opportunity: Clarington does not have systems, processes or data to show a high level view of its technology investments and report on the impact of their links to corporate goals. Clarington needs a process for documenting, prioritizing, integrating and managing projects and their alignment and impact on corporate goals. Action: Establish IT leadership and departmental capability, best practices and tools for documenting project proposals, especially emphasising meaningful benefit statements and alignment to strategic goals. Mature the capability in year 3 by adding measurable cost reductions and revenue increases and calculating Return on Investment for prioritization and performance measurement. Opportunity: Clarington has limited capability in defining, prioritizing and executing business improvement and technology implementation projects. It needs policies, procedures, templates, technology and methodologies to define and execute projects. Action: Establish best practices and tools then take small, incremental steps toward developing capability and capacity throughout the organization through training and mentorship from consulting project managers on this portfolio of projects. Appendix A, the Recommended Project Portfolio, includes high level proposals for these and all strategic projects. 4.3.2 Build nimble, user -responsive technology infrastructure The municipality needs to modernize and strengthen its technology infrastructure. The investigation showed that the Strength:IT technology facilities such as the server room, its power supply Infrastructure — and environmental controls are satisfactory to meet needs for the foreseeable future, but other elements of a sound infrastructure such as email, network, mobility management and remote access need modernization and enhancement to improve support for cloud -based, mobile, integrated business systems. There is a strong corporate direction to improve communications ❑ with residents, stakeholders, partners and Council as well as among staff. The needs of IT include ever-increasing bandwidth, more WiFi capacity, more social media channels open and managed. Prior & Prior Associates page 45 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan One illustrative shortcoming identified has been difficulty in setting up and using web conferencing from within the network. Currently if a plug-in must be installed on the GA i i iD],q-I(3C AV_F I LFH3W HDM❑ HG1RlAF H❑ ❑ and installation. However, sometimes these events are spontaneous and access is needed immediately or after hours. This issue will grow as the use of this technology becomes common so if the help desk call volumes agree, then the policy, standards, desktop image and permissions should be reviewed. Improvements like this can demonstrate pro -activeness on the part of the IT team, increase customer satisfaction with the IT service and also create efficiencies for themselves by eliminating service requests before they happen. The municipality \4<RXGDmR_BH_SLIHSDIIJDJ ARMSSRIW RL1H_RIAKHAnternet of thingsu with departments wanting all kinds of devices connected to the network from pixel boards to traffic counters. Most of the businesses would like to consider cloud based solutions, which have their own bandwidth and network requirements. A network assessment should be one of the first projects for Clarington once there is agreement on the plans for the future technology architecture. The assessment will recommend enhancements to the network design and components that will deliver more security and more flexibility. Another important new role for IT in the world of a federation of things and business systems is to provide leadership for the corporation in identifying business risks, their impacts and in planning mitigation tactics. With that in hand they can then assess the technology risks and conduct and Security Assessment. The Municipality has already recognized the importance of security in recently creating a security specialist position. The other piece of the risk management framework is the identification and documentation of business resumption needs and development and rehearsal of a disaster recovery plan. These are best led by third parties, but there is a fair amount of engagement of business stakeholders. The recommended actions of the IT strategy under this theme are: Opportunity: The IT team is currently implementing recommendations from its 2015 Network Assessment building the foundations for a comprehensive Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery Plan. The municipality can significantly increase its preparedness by documenting the impacts of catastrophes on every service, prioritizing their return, and planning for recovery and return to full service. Action: The Business Continuity plan involves stakeholder engagement exercises to identify and define services, identify impacts of disruption, help departments prioritize Prior & Prior Associates page 46 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan service return, identify interim or fallback processes, then recommend a plan and any enabling actions to prepare. There is a fairly specialized body of knowledge required which may best be acquired through out -tasking. Consider also out -tasking the Disaster Recovery service. Opportunity: Clarington's current email system, Microsoft Exchange 2010, will reach end of life in 2020, and takes a lot of staff time and effort to maintain. Increasing sophistication of security threats make failure to keep up with maintenance patches, server currency, spam and virus prevention creates significant risks to business continuity. The municipality needs to investigate the costs and benefits of a cloud solution alternative and replace this solution when most of the value from its current investments has been realized. Action: Most municipalities the size of Clarington are moving to a cloud -based solution for email to reduce effort and complexity of managing email servers, doing backups, archives, and restoring content for users. Determine requirements and constraints and determine if a cloud solution is preferred. Prior & Prior Associates page 47 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 4.3.3 Align and mature IT service The municipality needs to take advantage of modern business technology to enable service improvements. The IT team hastu :Ma re,,) developed incrementally with a focus on sound infrastructure management and responsive client services. In our maturity model, the team and services can be best characterized as a solid utility, providing reliable core services such as network, database and servers, or the equivalent of keeping the lights on. IT is integral to haw we do business: IT organization is expected to closely partner with the business to help identify, plan and deliver significant business transformation initiatives - plus be a trusted supplier. IT delivers critical functionality and services: IT organization is expected to deliver application projects on time and on Trusted budget, based upon the operating units supplier requirements and priorities - plus be a solid utility. Keep the lights on: The IT organization is Soli expected to provide cost effective -dial tone utility p reliability with transparent costs. Increasing costs, new resources, new skills required to progress The next level of maturity has IT taking on more roles as a trusted supplier and custodian of technology solutions. This means leadership in helping business units acquire and sustain business applications. There are several examples of IT taking on this role, with platform support for the Microsoft Dynamics GP financial system and recently with business analysis support for the Recreation Management system replacement. However as the demand for this kind of service exceeds the current capacity, investing in this area could produce a stronger corporate structure. 7 KHA XFFHW-R IANHDMCW1XQ CDQGVO-I1 I I HFWFiC NSI Ai[P XQF1SD 7 investments requires that the IT organization take on more of the supplier roles yet still maintain high quality customer services and core infrastructure services. This transformation requires two things: People change ❑ refocussing some staff on the emerging business solution needs and developing the necessary knowledge and skills to provide supplier] partner services Prior & Prior Associates page 48 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 2. Policy, Process and System enhancement []strengthen old and new capabilities with service elements that build trust Details about the recommended people change are discussed in a later section. The remainder of this section points out some key steps to building trust by strengthening and expanding the IT service methodology and tools. As the staff survey indicated, there are a few areas where improvement is needed to achieve a higher satisfaction level. Some of the issues arise as a result of a lack of clarity or a lack of communication. Some examples from the discovery interviews include: o Roles ❑ should IT help the departments pick their technologies? Do I need permission? o Rules ❑ ,7 A/W MJF HVADEVIA R❑❑ are the reasons communicated? understood? o Service Definition ❑ is there after-hours support? How do I access it? An effective approach to resolving these issues is to adopt some of the key elements of IT governance and service management best practice. COBIT5 is an IT governance framework and supporting toolset that provides support for a maturing IT service. With new support for business analysis, project management, and portfolio management, the technology services team will be able to focus on system and service management, strengthening its capabilities in the COBIT5 areas as follows: i A0 y ALAA AUDIT & RISK INFORMATION REGULATORY GOVERNANCE OF ASSURANCE MANAGEMENT SECURITY COMPLIANCE ENTERPRISE IT Manage Evaluate and Oversee and Keep ahead of Align IT goals vulnerabilities optimize manage rapidly changing and strategic and ensure enterrise risk. information reulations. business pg compliance. security. objectives. Additional service improvements can be sought in the Information Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL v3), a globally recognized collection of best practices for managing IT. These include key capabilities in IT service operation areas: o Lifecycle planning and management o Operations and Support o Change management o Service Offerings and Agreements The two frameworks should provide continuous improvement ideas for the IT service for years. For the next 1-3 years, we recommend focussing on the following opportunities for improvement: Prior & Prior Associates page 49 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Opportunity: There are currently limited formal policy/process/procedure documents at the municipality. There are several critical documents that need to be developed immediately to support this plan. Development of additional policies should be developed through related projects and governed as needed (e.g. remote access). 1. Hosted / Cloud solutions 2. Mobile Device Standards and Acquisition 3. Acceptable use 4. IT Security (passwords, 3rd party access, physical access) 5. Backup, recovery, BC and DR 6. Asset lifecycle management 7. Data management (lifecycle, privacy) 8. IT procurement processes 9. Email & voicemail standards (including archiving) Action: These should be developed as IT Governance projects led by the IT Manager and documented, published, approved and maintained in accordance with a quality documentation standard adopted by the committee. Consider referring to ISO standards for guidance. Opportunity: As the municipality and technology use have grown, so too have the challenges of meeting client expectations. IT cannot be everything to everyone, but when staff assert this reality, the result is often dissatisfaction and decline in trust. The IT section needs to build this trust and increase client satisfaction, while at the same time providing great services focussed on delivering customer value. Action: The IT team should engage its clients in identifying their service and support needs and propose simple but formal service offerings and levels. These should be documented, approved by the IT Steering Committee and posted on the IT intranet. As you mature, start developing formal Service Level Agreements (SLAs) and service uptake and performance measures. Prior & Prior Associates page 50 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Opportunity: The municipality currently uses a custom made application to log and track IT service requests and trouble tickets. Garnering end user compliance in the new process has been challenging, and reports are limited. To measure and improve IT service management, the municipality needs to invest in a more robust solution providing web based issue logging and tracking for end users, knowledge base development, and performance reporting. These capabilities may be met through one of the Customer Relationship Management modules to be acquired for other services. Action: Make this a task for the enhanced IT team to gather requirements, partner on or acquire a solution and configure to practice their project management and change leadership skills. 4.3.4 Connect Field Staff using Technology ❑ mobile & remote The municipality needs to connect field staff to technology and information through mobile devices, applications, and services. It also needs to provide remote access to business applications Mobile &Remote WU?XJK3&VLDCEE1KFLIH—For IT to enable this connectivity, it Access needs to develop a holistic understanding of the current and short term needs and opportunities and take action on the infrastructure side to support the needs efficiently, effectively and securely. 17[s enablement of a mobile and remote workforce should begin with a strategy but plan on expenditure on network and mobile device management tools. Improvements in networks, devices and solutions also now make it viable to connect field staff to systems used in the office. By accessing technology and systems that are available in the office, field crews can have access to maps and information immediately to hand, avoiding wasted trips to the office to check drawings and review information. For example, crews can respond faster to customer requests, as office staff can send requests electronically, in real time. Time spent by staff in the office to update records can be e 1 i m i n a \HGDV-FL -] VLFDQIXSCDN RLNRLO-WDCG - i m e, electronically in the field. This all adds up to increased overall efficiency and means more time working and less time travelling into the office to access information. This will lead to a significant boost in productivity. The municipality should ensure that it makes the most of the opportunity to mobilize field staff through its acquisition of major business systems. IT should act quickly to develop a mobile and remote access strategy, informed by high level needs and opportunities garnered from stakeholder engagement plus research into the capabilities of potential business systems. The strategy should identify enabling policies and Prior & Prior Associates page 51 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan standards, network capability and capacity, and security. Architecture should also plan for capacity and flexibility for future internet device connectivity. These are the kinds of topics that departments are looking for leadership from IT for keeping decision makers current on technology opportunities and best practices. A discussion of mobile devices by stakeholders may be most fruitful if IT organized a learning event ahead of time. There is also proven benefit from providing access to major business applications from remote desktops. In some cases, such as email, mobile devices have reduced the need for staff to access the network from home for email. The demand will also drop as major cloud -based business applications provide the same web interface to any desktop. However there remains a need for staff to access email, files, intranet resources, business applications, reports and Microsoft Office productivity applications. The municipality needs to develop policy, standards and request procedures for various levels of remote network access. The following action is recommended for Clarington: Opportunity: Managing the security and support of mobile devices has become a problem for IT. The variety and number of mobile devices has burgeoned and clients may not be getting and using the best devices for their needs. The municipality needs to identify all opportunities for business enablement through mobile devices and remote access, and update policies, procedures, standards and management of same. Device management technology needs to be enhanced to cover all types. Action: Review existing mobile deployments with frontline users of the services to identify strengths, weaknesses and lessons learned for existing deployments. Identify all areas to benefit from mobile; re -set mobile strategy and develop rollout and extension plan. Acquire a mobile device management system for IT. 4.3.5 Deliver Digital Services, Anywhere, Anytime Clarington needs to maximize all opportunities to deliver value to its residents, businesses and visitors through modern, Strengthen I& technology -enabled services. Customer expectations now Integration include 24/7 access to service information, booking and application processes, status updates and personal account information. In most cases these customer -facing systems and views require access to Prior & Prior Associates page 52 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan real-time data, and assume that processes will move along in a predictable fashion. Couriers have set the bar high for online service request and service tracking, and establishing service standards. We identified several eServices that could be introduced or improved. These included eRequest, an electronic service request and tracking application, and ePermitting for building permits and inspections. These functions should be sought in replacement Work and Asset Management Solutions and Development, Licensing and By -Law solution. Customers also need good tools and information to be engaged in the business of municipal government in Clarington. The current internet site is supported on a solid content management platform, but there is need for internal and external collaboration tools and an intranet site. The municipality also needs to begin work on performance measurement, scorecarding and public dashboards. These will be simple and manual measures at first, but should evolve into meaningful and actionable indicators of performance and the value delivered for taxpayer dollars. The municipality already has a good collection of electronic forms on the internet built on the eSolutions platform. The technology is used widely among smaller municipalities 02 QU E T)QG P H % & QUIDJ VRQV- FXUkQA -HC1/I 4 RC IG!3-M-0 ZSP F XR DRIP V RQ❑ this platform is recommended. Consultants also heard significant need for staff to have access to integrated business systems. In the case of customer service requests, for example, some workflows require notifications and creation of work orders in multiple systems. In some cases, it is helpful for providing good customer service if appropriate participants anywhere in the SU; FMM-FDQ—I CQARAN irn RUTRL04JKLARUTRLNAUXVlQZ-1 The re a re several other key opportunities to create or improve integration by creating a single authoritative source of master data such as locations and assets or by sharing kUXXUFU'RCVA0TKZVD1U RU-DA'RCff RLH-UVN441FU W KHGXW A/L\APoP and population of instructor in recreation courses. Opportunities for integration include the following: - Capital Planning - Asset inventory - Recreation Management []Asset Inventory - Recreation management []Work Order Management - Work Orders and Payroll - Work Scheduling - Recreation Management The IT unit needs to improve its own capability for managing all these interfaces. The number and complexity of integration requirements is going to increase dramatically in the near future, so IT should document the current integration architecture, identify high level integration needs of major business systems, and plan the appropriate network and integration architecture. Specific initiatives to strengthen IT Integration are the following: Prior & Prior Associates page 53 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Opportunity: The Municipality does not have adequate systems and processes for recording and managing customer service interactions. The current WorkTech system does not meet needs for service request and complaint tracking. A new recreation management solution will have CRM capabilities for that register for activities and rentals, and a new development tracking and bylaw system will have accounts for customers with interests in property. Customers' personal and property information is collected in different ways, over and over, creating inefficiencies and customer inconvenience. There is no integrated customer record across processes such as complaint, inquiry, service request, account inquiry, billing etc. The municipality needs a central Customer Relationship Management system to serve as the hub and give a unified view of the customer across apps and departments. Action: Collect CRM requirements across all customer facing services in the short term for use as configuration and integration inputs for the big 3 new solutions - Work and Asset Management, Development, Licensing and Bylaw, and Recreation. Public expectations for eservices, self-service and personalization of the web experience should be captured in a single engagement for all three projects. This could be done as a sidebar on the WMS project, or could be the first phase of technology enablement of a future customer service review. These requirements will inform the data integration architecture for a central corporate customer service application and e -services. After digesting the requirements, acquire an off -the -shelf or cloud based CRM solution to meet the need. Opportunity: Clarington has a geographically dispersed and increasingly technology savvy customer base. It needs to provide customer facing service access interfaces that are easy to use, and are available on the customer's channel of choice, anytime and anywhere. The municipality has an excellent opportunity to provide many more services online as components of new major business systems. While the requirements gathering process for new business systems will reveal eservice needs for each, a holistic view will lead to a more consistent and integrated customer experience. In some cases the built-in eservice functions of business systems will not be satisfactory. A high level online service strategy will identify priorities, standards and integration architecture. Action: Develop an online service strategy by engaging external and internal stakeholders to establish priorities and expectations. Consider combining with the mobility strategy since device of choice is becoming a real expectation. Prior & Prior Associates page 54 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Opportunity: Clarington has a large number of internal and external forms in paper and various electronic formats that will not be replaced by application interfaces of new business systems. It needs consistency in look and feel, data standards, compliance with AODA regulations, and integrations with systems and processes. The existing form solution provided by eSolutions may suffice, however the development of a planned and standardized approach to forms development requires knowing the priority list of electronic forms and the common information to be captured. Action: Conduct a strategy exercise to identify needs and opportunities to use electronic forms for internal and external processes that do not have direct online service interfaces. Conduct a fit/gap analysis with eSolutions and consider augmenting other technologies such as Adobe forms. Opportunity: Several departments indicated that they need to communicate better with each other. While the municipality has an intranet, the technology is old and the information architecture has developed in a ad hoc manner through individual department initiatives. The platform needs to be updated to better support distributed content management and the information needs to be designed for easy access from a variety of perspectives. Gather requirements and priorities for corporate information and departmental information. Use weblogs to identify the most important pages and look for ways to standardize their format. Design a new site with multiple perspectives including corporate, departmental sharing, and departmental internal perspectives. Select a technology that meets the needs and implement core content all at once. Prior & Prior Associates page 55 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Opportunity: Several stakeholders, including senior managers, noted that the departments operate separately, often unaware of what each other is doing and thus missing opportunities for collaboration, process integration and efficiencies. Key documents are often locked inside file server structures, invisible or inaccessible to innovators. Internal communications platforms are needed to provide alternative sharing and discussion opportunities for groups based on project, position or areas of interest. Action: Acquire or subscribe to basic collaboration tools for use in all new technology projects. Develop a formal pilot project including training then measure the value. If successful, encourage other groups to use the technology. Prior & Prior Associates page 56 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 4.4 Major Business Applications The remaining projects recommended in this strategy are for the acquisition and implementation of major business applications. The needs for these systems was heard clearly through the interviews and staff survey. Municipal comparisons also show that Clarington needs to invest in new and better major business applications. As the current stat assessment indicated, the municipality has opportunity for renewal or enhancement of most of its major business applications, most of which can deliver new capabilities that will enhance the customer experience, and provide demonstrable gains in efficiency and effectiveness. Web Site Social Media Open Gov Open Hata = R w & ® � � = eRegister e6oaking ePermit Pets eForms eRe nest epa ePa Tickets v Customer Relationship Ma 'agement lCRM Electronic Integrations Mobile Business Intranet Document & Collaboration GIS and Business Intelligence/ ° Record Management Interfaces Apps Analytics c m v Planning, Development, Licensing Asset & Work Management` Recreation and Bylaw Management & Facility EMS Booking' v�. . e Rayroll Schedulirg Budgeting Purchasing' Sale and billing Capital Mgmt' m HR Finance and Accounting The following acquisitions and their enabled business transformations are recommended: At time of writing the Municipality has three important projects in flight. These are: ❑ Recreation Management and Facilities Booking System (ActiveNet) ❑ Work Management System (CityWide Works) ❑ Enterprise Financial System Update (Great Plains 2016) This strategy assumes that these projects will be successful in meeting the major business enablement needs of the Recreation and Operations departments for the next five years. It assumes the Great Plains system will be upgraded and remain an Prior & Prior Associates page 57 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan on-site hosted system for the next five years since the strategy recommends several new integrations and extensions. The municipality has invested in new work management technology with the initial phase focused exclusively on the Operations Department. Full value of the solution can be gained by rolling it out to Parks and Recreation for facilities management. Both departments should use the new system to plan and track daily activities in service delivery work such as park maintenance and ice cleaning. Action: This phase of the project should proceed with more planning, stakeholder engagement, project management and quality management. Follow a sound software implementation lifecycle and take the time to document processes and do prototypes and pilots where change is profound or user acceptance is at risk. Opportunity: The municipality does not have adequate systems and processes for recording and managing transactions associated with property. These include development tracking, engineering, bylaw enforcement, permits, and licenses. Current processes will be unsustainable with continued growth. Clarington needs technology to enable more efficient and effective management of processes and information, with e -service, mobile and GIS integration. Action: Acquire an on -premise off-the-shelf or cloud -based municipal planning and compliance solution. Opportunity: The municipality does not have a robust technology for online delivery and management of training. Fire Services, Operations, and HR have onboarding and ongoing training needs, and IT needs to support better technology implementations with more and better training. Online, self -paced courses are an Prior & Prior Associates page 58 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan effective and efficient choice for many policy, procedure, safety and technology training for broad, dispersed audiences. Solutions deliver online training and track both online and other training experiences. Action: A Business Co-ordinator/Supervisor should detail the municipality's short and medium-term training requirements and acquire a cloud -based learning management platform. Once selected and architected for both corporate and departmental needs; this platform can be implemented in phases, starting with Fire, Operations and IT. Opportunity: As the municipality makes significant investment in new technology over the next 5 years, it needs to ensure that users fully understand the capabilities and procedures of the new systems. Action: Technology training should be supported by a learning culture, adopting IT training best practices such as planning and assessment, and the train -the -trainer model. The current training room needs to be modernized. Select and support a web - conference service for web- based interactive training and purchase access to self- directed modules for each new solution for knowledge reinforcement. Plan to spend capital money on multifaceted training for all new solutions. Opportunity: Parks and Recreation, Operations and Fire and Emergency Services need technology that streamlines the processes of applying for and scheduling workers into part time roles and time slots. There is also need for a volunteer management solution. Action: Acquire an off the shelf or cloud based solution that integrates with the payroll system. Look for remote access and mobile enablement as key requirements Prior & Prior Associates page 59 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Opportunity: The municipality currently uses manual processes for creating purchase orders, receiving goods, and matching invoices to them. Processes involve moving paper or images of invoices and no three way match. The municipality needs further enhancements to automate its purchasing process with electronic workflows. Action: Determine desired business model and conduct a fit/gap analysis of the capability in the most recent MS Dynamics GP accounting system. If that is not suitable acquire an off the shelf solution that integrates with it. Look for mobile enablement as a key requirement and integration with Laserfiche for archiving image records as desirable. Opportunity: The municipality currently uses manual processes for managing the flow of payables and receivables. Processes involve moving paper or images of invoices. The municipality needs to automate its accounts payable and accounts receivable processes with electronic workflows. Action: Determine desired business model and conduct a fit/gap analysis of the capability in the most recent MS Dynamics GP accounting system. If that is not suitable acquire an off the shelf solution that integrates with it. Look for mobile enablement as a key requirement and integration with Laserfiche for archiving image records as desirable. Prior & Prior Associates page 60 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan S. IT Organization 5.1 Current IT Organization The current IT team of nine (9), has done an impressive job building out a stable and reliable technology infrastructure. Nonetheless, a number of staffing risks and challenges emerged during the assessment, including: 1. The IT team is very lean with everyone having a focus on support and help desk issues, leaving little to no capacity for planning or strategic management. 2. The horizontal structure leaves little opportunity for effective succession planning 3. There is a great deal of dependency on one staff resource 4. There is very little communications from IT to the rest of staff 5. IT has maintained a traditional approach to IT support, providing excellent reactive service rather than being able to provide strategic services to help the business move forward. 5.1.1 Process Maturity Model The effectiveness of service delivery organizations can be measured in a variety of ways. One of the most commonly used tools is the process maturity model C -1-W( FiaE- NH1 DLX&-Ill LPXS-1 DIYQiJY�GF­IlQ11 QV -1 7 --interactive tool for assessing the maturity of process -driven organizations enables business and IT leaders to sense and evaluate their current readiness for progress in the discipline of business process management and improvement, while providing a full ❑MITHEI[O1E]❑❑��❑LLLLL 1❑ Prior & Prior Associates page 61 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Level 0 Chaotic • Ad hac • Undocumented • Unpredictable • Multiple help desks • Minimal IT o pe rations • User call notification Level 2 Level Proactive • Analyze trends Reactive • Set thresholds • Fight fires • Predict problems • Inventory • Measure app lica- •Desktop tio n avai lab i lity software • Auto mate distribution i Mature problem, •Initiate problem configuration, rranagement change, asset process and performance •Alert and event rngrnt processes Level 3 Service • IT as a se rvic e provider • Define services, classes, pricing • Understand costs • Guarantee SLA,- • Measure and report service avai lab i I iry • Integrate processes • Caparrty management Level 4 Value • IT as a strategic business partner • IT and business metric linkage • ITfbusiness col labo rah is n improves business p roc ess • Real-time infrastructure • Business planning Manage IT as a Business Service and Account Management management -Measure component Service Delivery Process Engineering availability (upJdown) Operational Process Engineering Tool Leverage Gartner IT Management Maturity Model Analysis of this model and the current IT Department indicates the department would be at a level 1 - 2. This is primarily due to the fact that everyone in IT has a focus on support and help desk response. The IT team works very well together, is supportive and respectful of one another. Yet, there is little opportunity for strategic thinking or planning resulting in the reactive mode of IT services. There are few opportunities to plan ahead, to predict problems or to analyze issues. The IT team responds very quickly to issues and requests for help and always put forward their best effort to resolve any problem. The IT Department is not always involved in discussions regarding technology, existing or new. As the municipality moves forward to achieve its strategic goals, it will need to ensure IT is involved to ensure corporate standards are being met. 5.2 IT Service Delivery To accommodate the new demands and achieve the goals laid out in this Strategic Plan, IT service delivery must become more: ❑ Agile and responsive to new and emerging needs ❑ Proactive and strategic Prior & Prior Associates page 62 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan To achieve this, we suggest three key things: 1. Enable the Manager of IT to focus on IT strategy and planning, business systems and project delivery. 2. Reorganizing the department to establish dedicated teams within IT, that allow for service excellence and specialization in 3 key areas: a. Client and Application Services (help desk and customer support) b. Technology Infrastructure (data and voice networks) c. Business Development Services (application and data analysis) 3. Building sustainability into the IT organization by: a. Updating job responsibilities to reflect more current requirements b. Improve training opportunities for all staff c. Adopt a hybrid model to augment service delivery 5.2.1 IT Leadership A strategic area of focus for the municipality is to more effectively manage the intake, selection and management of technology projects. To do this, the recommendation is the addition of resources. The Manager of IT should have the responsibility for working with departments on a continuous basis to integrate technology into business plans, and ensure that technology strategy reflects business needs. In addition, the Manager will be responsible for building out the IT governance model, methods and practices. In a smaller department such as this, the Manager will also be tasked with Project Management and project portfolio tasks in order to provide leadership and guidance on technology projects. The Manager will move towards establishing other operational improvements such as: ❑ Overall project and portfolio management ❑ Coordination and relationship building with the IT Steering Committee ❑ Developing new service targets for setting expectations, managing and communicating performance Implementing change control processes to more effectively track, monitor and manage systems changes ❑ Implementing an after-hours, standby and call out service ❑ Developing a communications plan for IT, to improve corporate communications to staff about technology and IT services Leadership in the formation of the IT technical standards, policies and procedures. Current support and operational duties performed by the IT Manager will have to be assigned elsewhere in IT. This will not be an easy transition but will be critical for the successful evolution of IT services. Prior & Prior Associates page 63 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 5.2.2 Deliver IT Service Excellence The caliber of the IT team is high. They are helpful, resourceful and ready to do whatever they can to provide support and assistance. The challenge is they are focused on help desk support and operational tasks. They do not have the time or the direction for planning, for detailed analysis, for building relationships, for determining training requirements or for software and business application support or development. At a high level, the IT Department as currently configured and staffed, lacks adequate resources (for example, there are gaps in applications support and in business analysis) or skills (for example, in data and application architecture, systems integration, and cloud systems implementation and management) to support the program of work that is underway and expected. There remain many more opportunities for continuous service improvement which the IT Team should continue to drive. This will require a focus upon several areas: ❑ Making it simpler and easier to understand how to access IT services and resources ❑ Establishing clear service expectations for IT service delivery (e.g. how quickly will my helpdesk problem get resolved?) Set a service standards ❑ Formalizing internal IT processes and documentation The IT team should work on improving corporate communication to staff about IT plans and initiatives to help promote the work that IT performs and their contribution to the overall success of service delivery. Moving forward, responsibility for communicating about IT initiatives, especially those projects that impact more than one department become the responsibility of everyone involved. Improved communications should help to reduce staff frustration and improve awareness of technology projects as well as overall coordination of the new initiatives. 5.2.3 Restructure the IT Department Ideally the IT Department is set up to specialize in three teams to address all the different functions and requirements around technology implementation and support. The following is a best practice breakdown of the different job functions: Prior & Prior Associates page 64 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan This model works well to position the IT Department to provide a higher level of service with the business departments. With the growing expectations in the use of technology and applications at the municipality, support for a planned and managed technology environment is more important than ever. With several new business applications coming on board in the near future (Document management system, Recreation system, and Asset Management), the existing team will not be able to meet the near term requirements. IT will need to have the business leadership and project experience to complement the technical expertise. This model provides for the development of the application support and project management skills. It may be a consideration for the future to move GIS into the Applications section but is not necessary at this time. As well, this model allows for a greater focus on providing good service delivery. Although there have not been significant complaints, as the use of technology grows and as staff become even more dependent on IT support, expectations for excellent service delivery will increase. Through the formalization of IT service management processes and practices the IT Department should continue to adopt best practice standards (e.g. ITILI) to deliver improvements to service delivery. Specifically, the team will focus on setting service expectations, improving incident, problem and change management processes, expanding the use of self service, and automating repetitive IT tasks wherever possible. 1 ITIL - Information Technology Infrastructure Library, is a set of detailed practices for IT service management (ITSM) that focuses on aligning IT services with the needs of business. Prior & Prior Associates page 65 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan The strategy recommends a new leadership structure in IT along with staff being added over the next few years to augment capacity and fill in gaps in skills, but it also requires existing staff to change their roles and change the way IT operates to be better prepared to meet the new expectations. Some of the underlying changes described require a mindset or culture change for both IT and the business departments. These changes will be gradual, and will not happen overnight. However, significant progress must be made over the next few years if the municipality is to be able to deliver on the strategy outlined here. The following organization chart depicts how the IT department should be restructured in the interim to meet the immediate requirements: Prior & Prior Associates page 66 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Recommended 2017 Restructured IT Division Client/ Application Services Supervisor Network Support Technician * (vacant) 2017 Network Analyst I Network Anal st Y Quick Summary: IT Manager Network Administration Supervisor IT Security Specialist ** 2018 "Network Analyst Business Development Supervisor *** Non Affiliated Non Affiliated Union Union NEW NEW Existing staff complement 9 Recommended changes: Database dministrator iior GIS Analyst J GIS Analyst * Fill vacant position (approved in 2017 budget) ** Re -call existing IT Security Specialist to Network Administration Supervisor *** Add Business Development Supervisor Total IT Staff 2017 ❑from 9 to 11 (note: 1 additional in 2018) Prior & Prior Associates page 67 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 5.3 Build Sustainability into the IT Department Once the major business systems are in place, consideration should be given to moving into more digital and online service delivery. The organization will want to take advantage of emerging technologies such as analytics and business intelligence and SHLKDSV_EHJ LQP RYLQJ ARuDL&/FHFRP LQJ IDLA/P DWLN L\KP RIJHROIEH-customer engagement and intuitive customer facing online services. The IT department will need to evolve and grow in order to meet these future service demands. Given the changes in play, IT roles cannot remain static. New skills for the IT team in these areas will be required. In some cases, the current Application Analysts with some training and development may be well positioned to fill these requirements, and will evolve into those areas and a redefined role. In other cases, new skills may be required, and an existing job role may be repurposed as vacancies naturally arise to address the need. The IT Manager will have to work with Human Resources to regularly update job responsibilities, to adjust job roles and move staff between teams as needed. This is a challenge in a department with a mix of union and non-affiliated positions. Consideration will have to be taken as new skills requirements evolve and new job responsibilities are developed. It is recommended that investment be made in IT staff skills development to grow their knowledge and prepare them to implement and support solutions in these areas such as cloud solutions, data analytics and business intelligence. To achieve this and to deliver on this strategy, the addition of a number of resources is recommended. In addition to the changes in job responsibilities noted above, it is recommended a new Business Development Supervisor position be added to the staff complement. This new position will take responsibility for working with departments on a continuous basis to integrate technology into business plans, and to ensure that technology strategy reflects business needs. This position will be part of the IT Leadership team with a focus on the business application and data management portfolio. This team will include the Business Analyst resource, Database Administration and GIS. They will be responsible for leading and participating on technology projects and working with the business departments to better implement solutions that will work for the longer term. The importance of business process reviews and meeting the business requirements have been stressed throughout this plan. It is understood that service reviews are a current practice of the municipality and have achieved much success to date. Continuation of this CAO initiative is encouraged with the addition of the IT perspective. IT or the inclusion of technology often can enable a good business process by increasing efficiency as well as accessibility. This should be considered as part of every service review moving forward. The role of the Business Development section is crucial in helping departments step back from their day-to-day operations and look critically at the way they conduct business. Using business process mapping and analysis, and applying process optimization techniques (e.g. lean six sigma), this team will work with departments to Prior & Prior Associates page 68 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan significantly improve business processes, usually while reviewing technology options. The analysts will also be able to determine if the best practices built into some software applications provide opportunities for the municipality to improve their business processes. Redefining and remapping process will encourage a more efficient service delivery model. The following figure illustrates the recommended future organizational model, required to achieve the anticipated future goals of the organization. Recommended Future Structure for IT Division IT Manager Client/ Application Network Services Supervisor Administration Supervisor pplication Analyst (Mitel, Exchange - Application Analyst IT Security previously Network (Laserfiche) Specialist Analyst Application Analyst Client Services (Dynamics) Support Tech. Network Analyst (previously Network Support Tech) Client Services Application Analyst Support Tech. Network Analyst pp (Active - previously Network Analyst) Quick Summary: Business Development Supervisor Database Administrator Business Analyst Non Affiliated Non Affiliated Union NEW NEW Existing 2017 staff complement after restructuring ❑ 11 Additional future positions - 6 Total IT Staff future a 17 Senior GIS Analyst GIS Analyst Prior & Prior Associates page 69 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan The new IT leadership team must focus a significant portion of its attention on developing, stimulating, motivating and challenging team members, and building a high performing IT team. This will involve careful handling of organizational changes, thoughtful selection of new hires, clear definition of roles and responsibilities, and delegation of tasks. This should be accompanied by ongoing team meetings, team building activities and collaborative service design work. Budgets are tight right now for all municipalities but it can be argued that investment is required to enable the organization be ready to move these critical initiatives forward to realize the benefits of making the business more efficient and to be more customer service focused rather than just getting the job done. Hiring these new resources who will be dedicated to delivering the large systems required by the municipality will help to ensure success and effective service delivery. It should be noted that by hiring these resources as full time positions, the municipality will avoid some future costs where they would need to hire contract resources to implement projects and would then lose much of the knowledge gained through the project. By evaluating the longer term needs as opposed to a short term reaction, the IT team will gained much needed expertise and build further capacity in the department for the successful evolution of IT to becoming the trusted partner of the business departments. 5.4 Update Job Responsibilities The IT Department structure and competencies are a function of the needs of the organization at the time. The expertise and experience of the staff are exactly what has been needed to deliver on these earlier requirements. Moving forward, redefining roles to better meet the current and future needs of the organization is necessary. It is recognized that resource and funding constraints exist, and that this model cannot be achieved immediately. With that in mind, the following table provides an outline of the roles and a suggested timetable for the creation of these new roles, based on the identified needs of the organization. The changing of the structure to be more vertical yet still meeting the needs of the different functions supports succession planning and career growth opportunities. It also encourages greater specialization and more focused training opportunities for the IT staff who no longer have to be generalists across all the different disciplines. Year Recommended Organizational Change Rationale 2017 Manager, IT Redefine role to provide leadership to the IT Department, including project and portfolio management, establishing processes and building relationships with other department heads and staff. Prior & Prior Associates page 70 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 2017 Network Support Technician This position is currently left vacant pending this strategic plan. It is recommended that it be filled as soon as possible to help alleviate the help desk and support function. As the other positions become more focused on escalated responsibilities, there is a need for front-line technician to do call triage and tracking. 2017 [Change] Client & Applications Re- position current Network Senior Analyst/Supervisor Administrator to this role to have greater focus on leading the client services (Help desk) and applications solutions side. This will include business analysis, project management and developing functional specifications. The position will also provide oversight to the help desk function ensuring client support is always a top priority. 2017 [Change] Network Re -position IT Security Specialist Administration/Supervisor for this role to provide oversight to the network team, and to provide a 2nd level of support for the network and infrastructure components. This includes a focus on both voice and data networks, backups, disaster recovery and security programs. 2017 [New] Business Development This role will be dedicated to Supervisor managing specific large projects such as Asset Management, Document Management as well as major application upgrades and new installs. Responsibilities will include project management, business analysis, process and workflow documentation and software contract management. Prior & Prior Associates page 71 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 2018 [Change] Network Analyst Modify these two positions to provide general application support for business solutions. The position should be the first point of call for application support and would escalate calls to vendors as appropriate. In the future, titles should be changed to better reflect the focus on Applications rather than the more generic network term. 2018 IT Security Specialist Fill this position that was left vacant when the current staff member moved into the Supervisor role. This position was identified as a crucial requirement from the 2015 Security Assessment done by Digital Boundary Future Business Analyst This role brings skills, with training and experience to help translate business needs into systems requirements, and help implement the projects. (please see below for more information) Future Client Services Support This role provides front line support Technicians for all IT support calls. They perform triage on all issues, solve where possible and escalate when necessary. All calls are tracked so trends can be identified and dealt with appropriately. The Technicians can also do the routine tasks such as device deployment, asset tracking support the rest of the IT Department. 5.5 Training One of the results of our staff survey was that approximately 29% of staff surveyed indicated that they have not received any formal technology training in the past 2 years and 16% have never received technology training. It is recommended that the municipality establish and fund a formal corporate level training program which defines Prior & Prior Associates page 72 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan base competencies for staff using technology and then ensures that each member of staff completes the necessary training (and certification) to achieve that level of competency. With the many new major business systems being planned for the future, the project methodology should reinforce the need to properly plan short, medium and long term training programs that support staff in their adoption of new technologies. It is important that the new project plans provide sufficient attention and funding to address immediate and ongoing training needs. These projects represent an opportunity to define a training model that works and that can be replicated across future projects, and for new employees. IT should partner with HR in strengthening the toolset so staff can develop and deliver effective technology training. The broader training program is also designed to address this area by ensuring that all staff have a basic understanding of the tools and capabilities available to them which will help them make the right choice of tools (for example knowing when to use Word vs. Excel) to achieve their end goal. 5.6 Developing an Enhanced Hybrid Business Delivery Model In order to address this resource challenge moving forward, the municipality should adopt a Hybrid IT Service Delivery model. Smart IT organizations rely on a team of in- house IT staff, who in turn work with a network of trusted partners, vendors and solution providers to deliver the required services. This is what we call a hybrid model of IT service delivery. This model relies on a combination of internal IT and business skills as well as external market based expertise and services. The IT Department has recognized the value of this model of support and has been utilizing it at times. It is recommended that the IT Manager continue this practice and look for more opportunities where appropriate. Ultimately this means that the IT team will take on an expanded role that allows it to properly support the business needs of each department and the municipality as a whole. 5.8 Contracting Implementation and IT assistance It is also important that the municipality recognize the significant resource demands of some of the major projects identified such as Asset Management and Document Management. These are significant projects that will require fully allocated resources with previous experience. When undertaking such significant projects, the municipality should consider funding temporary staff (e.g. project manager, analysts) as part of the overall capital project, to resource the project and to backfill existing resources both in IT and the business departments. 5.9 Building Partnerships As has been noted throughout the document, successful business transformation comes through a combination of people -process -technology. IT, in partnership with the business units are responsible for the technology component -1 but departments are responsible for the people and process elements. An excellent example of this type of partnership is the position of Active/Class Administrator in the Recreation Department. Prior & Prior Associates page 73 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan A close working relationship with the IT department will ensure a successful adoption of technology best practices in all departments. Technology is such a part of every business now that there needs to be this kind of bridge between the business requirements and the technology available. 7 KHP XC IFLS W DQGI 1Pl1❑G1 MHVDL HIG-W q-Q_I.7 K4 L transformative level of business and service change cannot be lead from the IT Department. Business vision and leadership is critical to transformation. Digital transformation is not just about technology ❑ it is about people, process and culture change. To effectively and consistently take advantage of technology across the municipality, department heads and those involved in service design need to fully understand the potential of technology and digital services. Department Heads should proactively develop the technological literacy of those in leadership positions so that they can lead technology driven business transformation. This will mean partnering to deliver education and training programs that can expose leaders to the potential and opportunity that technology and a digital approach can bring. As previously mentioned, the Gartner Process Maturity Model details the steps needed to take an IT Department from being purely reactive to one that provides full value to the organization. This is achieved when IT can become a strategic business partner, when both IT and the business department collaborate on new operational means using technology to improve the overall service delivery. Developing stronger partnership EHWI I[[] 10EH1 FUWDaRV&� IP XC FISDWV-DEL DSSUUFK❑ technology in a new way, and to successfully deliver this plan. The following figure illustrates the transition that is required ❑ moving from an IT organization that is focused upon keeping the lights on, to a trusted supplier, to a proactive business partner. Increasing Costs and/or Resources IT is integral to how we do business: IT organization is expected to closely partner with the business to help identify, plan and deliver significant business transformation initiatives - plus be a trusted supplier. ITdelivers critical functionality and services: IT organization is expected to deliver application projectson time and on budget, based upon the operating units requirementsand priorities - plus be a solid utility. Keepthe lightson: The IT organization is expected to provide cost effective -dial tone reliability with transparent costs. Organization Type Pyramid Prior & Prior Associates page 74 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan The strengthening of the governance arrangements through the new IT Governance framework recommended in Section 6 is one mechanism that is designed to foster stronger partnership and joint working between business units and IT. The leadership of IT will become more connected to the departments and providing stronger leadership around the Enterprise Architecture and Enterprise Business Systems. Prior & Prior Associates page 75 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 6. IT Decision Making: IT Governance 6.1 What is IT governance? IT Governance encompasses the processes and structures that inform, direct, manage, and monitor how the organization makes the best and most effective use of technology. The goal of establishing IT governance is to ensure that the right people are making the right decisions about technology, armed with the right information, at the right time and for the right reasons. Organizations often view such decisions about technology as complicated, technical DQGF1EH`\AMVVU1HM SHLW40/ /FmR❑HYHL DQ7ffases, decisions about technology have ramifications, well beyond the technology itself: o How do we want to use technology in our business? o What technology do we want our people to use, and how do we want them to use it? o How much should we spend on technology? o Which of our business processes should we direct our IT dollars towards? o What do we need to tackle first? o Should we do this now, or later? o How secure do we need to be? These are not decisions for technologists alone; they are fundamental business issues that should be addressed by Municipality VADDC3 LMQSTQ'N-IrFD\/H- I-SXLHDT +-KQFCG decisions, the right IT staff (with the appropriate skillsets) may lead the decision-making ❑ but in most cases IT experts should be advising and providing recommendations to business leaders for them to evaluate and approve. Strategic decisions will be made by an IT Steering Committee, project and policy decisions by project teams and standing groups. Prior & Prior Associates page 76 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 6.2 IT Governance Model The following diagram depicts a typical governance model: Standing Groups Web, GIS, Intranet Figure 10: Recommended IT Governance Model 6.2.1 The IT Steering Committee )ject Teams FIS, H RIS The primary body is the ITSC through which all of the key technology decisions will be considered. Other teams and staff will do the detailed hands on project and planning work and the ITSC will provide the strategic oversight and direction. 6.2.2 Standing Groups Some business solutions are not projects, but ongoing programs of work. The M u n i c i pa I ity VL[[ F E\4W-I RUIN DP S(HAV-E Q-RQJ F4U F DQG+IYI-UFKDQJ LQ17 FFRLIH_EX iCFW solution that requires co-ordination across all departments. In areas that cross departmental boundaries such as Web, Intranet and GIS, the Municipality may consider establishing Standing Groups, with departmental representation that meets 4 to 6 times a year to discuss current and new initiatives, and to identify and agree on priorities. These groups will also report into ITSC ❑ providing updates on strategies, roadmaps and major decisions. 6.2.3 IT Team The IT Team remains responsible for delivery of IT services and for operational IT matters. The IT governance arrangements are designed to assist the IT Manager in strategic decision-making ❑ not take over operational responsibilities. The IT Manager is Prior & Prior Associates page 77 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan responsible for sharing the insights about IT operations (e.g. IT resource availability, emerging risks) that are necessary to assist the IT Steering Committee in strategic decision-making. In terms of project work, while IT staff will lead technology infrastructure projects, for business systems, integration and customer facing projects, the IT team will be a strategic business partner with the business lead for the initiative. In these cases it is not IT who will project manage the initiative, a business leader should lead this work. The IT Manager will be the communication conduit for project status updates. 6.2.4 Project Teams Successful implementation of new solutions (e.g. a work management solution) requires involvement and participation from key stakeholders throughout the project lifecycle. The Municipality will need to establish project teams to carry out key initiatives. Project leads will report on project progress to the IT Steering Committee. Key decision points may also be referred to the ITSC for consideration. These teams will be decommissioned once a project is complete, or when the group is deemed to no longer be required. 6.3 IT Policies and Standards 6.3.1 IT Policies Policies and standards establish the parameters within which the Municipality uses technology, creating clear expectations for those that use and manage technology. In keeping with the commentary throughout this section, many of the decisions related to technology are business or management decisions. These are not decisions to be made by IT on behalf of the corporation. For example; ❑ Which employees get smartphones ❑ Who is authorized to register a web domain for the Municipality ❑ Which websites staff can access, and whether that activity should be tracked ❑ What content is saved when an employee retires ❑ How much space does an employee have in email For each of these decisions a number of factors need to be weighed, including business impacts, employee impacts and importantly, cost impacts. A standard IT policy framework typically addresses the following areas. ❑ Acquisitions ❑ Acceptable use ❑ IT Security (passwords, 3rd party access, physical access) ❑ Backup, recovery, BC and DR ❑ Asset lifecycle management ❑ Hosted / cloud solutions * ❑ Data management (lifecycle, privacy) * Prior & Prior Associates page 78 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan C IT procurement processes * F Email & voicemail standards (including archiving) The IT team should review, revise and augment the corporate IT policy framework in the context of this roadmap, to ensure that it accurately reflects how the Municipality wishes to use and manage technology. The items flagged with an * should be of particular focus for Clarington. 6.3.2 IT Standards Documentation of IT technical standards are important internal documents to help the IT team deliver its mandate and comply with policy directives. Published standards make it clear to clients the boundaries of choice in technologies that fit within the Municipal ityV[ID1 KL\FnF\XLIHFFF&Qt-CVJ-L®FFHSVCQGAk-DIFK4RUstandards when they have been engaged in their development. 6.3.3 IT Acquisition Process One of the first orders of business for the IT Steering Committee, should be for the Municipality to adopt policy and procedures for all technology acquisitions. Large and small, cloud or otherwise, all technology acquisitions affect the technology foundations of the entire organization. They need to be strategic in spending vital money and human effort on the right projects. They also need to fit with the current and planned technical architecture networks, systems, security, services. The policy should require all technology acquisitions to be initiated by a formal request. Desktop software, peripheral devices, mobile devices and anything users want to put on the network or a network device should be available through a straight -forward request process marshalled by a new Help Desk System. Any acquisition above $10,000 must be assessed and prioritized as to its strategic merit and impact on human resources anc appetite for change. Prior & Prior Associates page 79 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 7. Implementation Plan and Costs 7.1 Approach The table below lists 27 key initiatives and actions that should be tackled over the next five years. The intranet development project is already funded for 2017. The strategy projects for online services and mobilizing the workforce should be done as soon as possible, as their discoveries and strategies will inform the other projects. The list includes several projects that are large business enablement initiatives requiring engagement of multiple corporate or operating departments. The projects that are already in flight should be completed. The others need to be spread out over the five year horizon since they will use some of the same IT and other resources. They are also dependent on a strengthened project management capability, which can be developed through training and participation in these projects as a mentee. We recommend these projects include funding for backfill of key resources and for experienced consulting project managers. It is also important to establish the business and technical architecture for Customer Service early on. Several of the proposed systems have built-in Customer Relationship Management capabilities, one of which may meet all the needs. Alternatively, if the municipality chooses a centralized customer service call centre model, then integration requirements may become important for the business solutions. We recommend doing that discovery and analysis work in 2018, and look for an integrated solution after businesses succeed in getting automated processes. IT organization initiatives, service improvements and infrastructure upgrades should be defined and prepared for action. The project management capabilities are necessary as soon as possible. Service management projects should be started as soon as practicable. Once the frameworks are established, the formalization and documentation and implementation of quality processes and tools can proceed as a series of continuous improvement projects. Prior & Prior Associates page 80 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 7.2 Implementation Roadmap The following chart provides a high level outline of the recommended projects and their scheduling over the next 5 years. Details about each of these projects can be found in the Recommended Project Portfolio, Appendix A. 1 CUSTOMER FACING SYSTEMS 2 Online Serkes Strategy 3 eForms Strategy 4 D INTEGRATION 5 Customer Relationship Management Solution 6 Mobile Device and Remote Access Strategy 7 Electronic Document and Record Management Solution $ Intranet Re6esh Collaboration Tools 10 0 MAJOR BUSINESS SYTEMS 11 Development, Licensing and By-law System 12 Work and Asset Management Solution Phase 2 13 PurchasingWoWowSolution 14 Learning Management Solution 15 Technology Training Tools 16 Staff Scheduling System 17 AccountingWorlrflowSolutions 18 0 IT INFRASTRUCTURE 19 Adopt. IT Governance 20 Formalize IT Service Offerings 21 IT Help Desk System Replacement 22 T Policy and Procedure Development 23 Email System Update 24 Business Continuity & ff Disaster Recovery Plan 25 O IT ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT 26 T Resou rce Al ign me nt 27 Project Manage roe ntCapa6ility 28 Portfolio ManagementCap6ility 2013 12019 12020 12021 12022 Prior & Prior Associates page 81 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 7.3 Recommended Investments The following table summarizes the recommended technology investment strategy for the Municipality of Clarington for the next 5 years. Cost is the total capital cost of technology implementations, capability development, and deeper dives into key areas for future investment. Operating costs are incurred the year following implementation and thereafter. 71 HARDGM I)MWffl V9HI1E D1JSL J LEP WG*HO S[& OLID ,J7 RMDEMWV DM business technology so that it can enable efficient customer service, workflows, processes, mobility, communications and reporting is approximately $1.47 million for capital budget. This amount is in line with the current commitment to capital through the normal budget allocation however it does not include the annual IT asset replacement (hardware and software) capital program. CUSTOMER FACING SYSTEMS 50,000 Online Services Strategy 15,000 eForms Strategy 15,000 INTEGRATION 0 430,000 Customer Relationship Management Solution 200,000 Mobile Device and Remote Access Strategy 20,000 Electronic Document and Record Management Solution 300,000 Intranet Refresh 50,000 Collaboration Tools 30,000 MAJOR BUSINESS SYTEMS 2,500 Development, Licensing and Bylaw Solution 250,000 Work Management System Phase 2 150,000 Purchasing Workflow Solution 75,000 Learning Management Solution 25,000 Technology Training Tools 10,000 Staff Scheduling Solution 50,000 Accounting Workflow Solutions 150,000 IT INFRASTRUCTURE Adopt IT Governance 0 Formalize IT Service Offerings 0 IT Help Desk System Replacement 10,000 IT Policy and Procedure Development 0 Email System Update 60,000 Business Continuity and IT Disaster Recovery Plan 20,000 IT ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT IT Resource Alignment 20,000 Project Management Capability 10,000 Portfolio Management Capability 10,000 TOTAL COSTS 1,470,000 Notes: COST= Total Capital Cost OPERATING = Annual Costs after Implementation 0 0 0 0 0 15,000 0 15,000 20,000 50,000 150,000 5,000 20,000 50,000 50,000 2,000 10,000 50,000 10,000 10,000 0 430,000 30,000 50,000 50,000 200,000 50,000 150,000 10,000 75,000 5,000 25,000 2,500 10,000 10,000 50,000 20,000 150,000 0 0 2,000 10,000 0 35,000 60,000 12,000 120,000 20,000 2,000 10,000 2,000 10,000 415,500 0 430,000 10,000 10,000 0 150,000 100,000 450,000 190,000 300,000 100,000 Prior & Prior Associates page 82 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 8. Why invest in IT? Why invest in this Strategic Plan? To implement the IT Strategic Plan requires increased in investment in IT, both capital and operating. The plan maintains that this investment is warranted, as it will build the foundation for delivering service excellence, efficient and effective government and for meeting FXVUNP Hl9 expectations. 8.1 Invest to Save IT should be seen as an investment a long-term investment in increased productivity and improved customer service. The investment is in building a platform, the digital foundations for delivering efficient services. This is investment that will keep delivering benefits year over year by enabling corporate flexibility, releasing capacity to grow and add new services, without adding new administrative staff and hence new costs. ,Q+MRHWAC1,!AA4ZX(GEH [ DYH[L7KH[Municipality makes investments upfront in technologies and expects to receive pay back, year over year on an ongoing basis. But, technology projects should be considered in the longer term on their ability to transform services, achieving future cost avoidance, not just immediate cost savings. A pay back of three to five years is a reasonable time frame for IT investments; some deliver much faster payback. Many of the solutions that Clarington plans to implement over the course of the plan are expected will deliver a range of benefits. Some deliver tangible returns on investment such as time savings. The Development Management solution will save considerable time in streamlined transactions and work flows for building permits, and development application tracking. An improved record management solution will save staff time spent looking for records, as well as support improved records management practices. In other cases, the new systems will create new work data entry work to be done by front line staff that will support performance measurement, decision-making and transparency. Work Management is a good example. In these cases, the technology will make doing that extra work palatable by enabling it to be done efficiently. So, many of the investments in technology, specifically in business systems, are designed to simplify processes, eliminate data duplication and reduce errors, saving time for staff and customers alike. Prior & Prior Associates page 83 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan 8.2 Build foundations to support the 0 ❑ LFLSDOiI V growth The Municipality is poised to grow over the coming years. The pace and volume of development and building is expected to accelerate, new facilities and new infrastructure are expected to be added to the MunicipalityV responsibilities. This growth will place pressures on existing service delivery avenues, as volumes of service requests, applications for permits and licenses and customer expectations for services grow. As the Municipality Jl9Z❑ P V1DLI I APEIMNAFSHIEJ ❑ effectively. So, the focus should be upon ensuring that its business process and technology foundations are well established now. Building these efficient business processes and supporting systems now, will ensure that as the Municipality can contain its costs as it grows, as it can minimize the number of staff that it needs to hire to support these business functions. 8.3 Managing better starts with the right information � 111' 1. � 1�.1►,1''' � �,1`�illl' 1 � � l�. ,1''' �1�� ,1l Experience has shown that if service managers can access the right data they can use the data to identify the best and most efficient ways of delivering services. More effective information management, tracking and analysis as to the work that staff do and how staff time is spent will lead to many opportunities to streamline operations and reduce costs. For example, one City found by analyzing their own data that nearly ❑[I[SHIFHC I VQ -i1111 DAN-] DhU -ISDLR HCV" I RLW DV�SHQAVVR0Q LSLREOP VFW 1.4 percent of customer sites. With this information, the city developed and implemented a repair plan that resolved these ongoing issues and ultimately reduced FRA"VV6"WSWR U1 KUB EIS RLP D/flC0 C M-I(S-RLD DC40-YH❑ money and deliver better value. Access to data and information in real time helps Directors and Managers monitor and manage their programs, and direct staff to ensure that services are running smoothly. Changes can happen in real time, resulting in immediate improvements to service quality and effectiveness. Cities, such as Waterloo, that have implemented real time management dashboards for the Building Department, have made significant improvements in customer satisfaction and staff efficiency. The knowledgeable access to data also builds the foundation towards future service delivery options such as open data. Open data is a program being adopted by municipalities as a means of improving transparency and accountability but also because it provides access to hundreds of app developers who will create apps that can be shared by all. These apps are key to improving citizen engagement, providing new opportunities to push information out, as well as to receive valuable feedback. Prior & Prior Associates page 84 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Appendix A: Recommended Project Portfolio Prior & Prior Associates page 85 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Table of Contents W Implementation Roadmap 87 Investment Strategy 88 Recommended Project Descriptions 89 CUSTOMER FACING SYSTEMS Online Services Strategy 89 eForms Strategy 90 INTEGRATION Customer Relationship Management Solution 91 Mobile Device and Remote Access Strategy 92 Electronic Document and Record Management Solution 93 Intranet Refresh 94 Collaboration Tools 95 MAJOR BUSINESS SYTEMS Development, Licensing and Bylaw Solution 96 Work Management System Phase 2 97 Purchasing Workflow Solution 98 Learning Management Solution 99 Technology Training Tools 100 Staff Scheduling Solution 101 Accounting Workflow Solutions 102 ITINFRASTRUCTURE Adopt IT Governance 103 Formalize IT Service Offerings 104 IT Help Desk System Replacement 105 IT Policy and Procedure Development 106 Email System Update 107 Business Continuity and IT Disaster Recovery Plan 108 IT ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT IT Resource Alignment 109 Project Management Capability 110 Portfolio Management Capability 111 Prior & Prior Associates page 86 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan .mplementation Roadmap 201R 2019 2020 2021 2C CUSTOMER FACING SYSTEMS 0 0 0 0 0 Online Services Strategy 15,000 0 0 0 0 eForms Strategy 15,000 0 0 0 0 INTEGRATION 0 0 0 0 Customer Relationship Management Solution 200,000 20,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 Mobile Device and Remote Access Strategy 20,000 5,000 0 0 0 Electronic Document and Record Management Solution 300,000 50,000 0 0 0 00 00 Intranet Refresh 50,000 10,000 0 0 0 Collaboration Tools 30,000 10,000 00 0 MAJOR BUSINESS SYTEMS 0 0 0 0 0 Development, Licensing and Bylaw Solution 250,000 50,000 0 0 0 0 0 Work Management System Phase 2 150,000 50,000 0 0 0 Purchasing Workflow Solution 75,000 10,000 0 0 0 Learning Management Solution 25,000 5,000 0 0 0 Technology Training Tools 10,000 2,500 0 0 0 Staff Scheduling Solution 50,000 10,000 0 0 0 Accounting Workflow Solutions 150,000 20,000 00 0 IT INFRASTRUCTURE 0 0 0 0 0 Adopt IT Governance 0 0 0 0 0 Formalize IT Service Offerings 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 IT Help Desk System Replacement 10,000 2,000 0 0 0 IT Policy and Procedure Development 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Email System Update 60,000 35,000 0 0 0 0 0 Business Continuity and IT Disaster Recovery Plan 20,000 12,000 00 00 0 IT ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT 0 0 0 0 0 IT Resource Alignment 20,000 120,000 0 0 0 0 0 Project Management Capability 10,000 2,000 0 0 0 0 0 Portfolio Management Capability 10,000 2,000 0 0 0 0 0 TOTAL COSTS 1,470,000 415,500 Prior & Prior Associates page 87 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Investment Strategy CUSTOMER FACING SYSTEMS 0 0 0 0 0 Online Services Strategy 15,000 0 15,000 eForms Strategy 15,000 0 15,000 INTEGRATION Customer Relationship Management Solution 200,000 20,000 50,000 150,000 Mobile Device and Remote Access Strategy 20,000 5,000 20,000 Electronic Document and Record Management Solution 300,000 50,000 50,000 150,000 100,000 Intranet Refresh 50,000 10,000 50,000 Collaboration Tools 30,000 10,000 30,000 MAJOR BUSINESS SYTEMS Development, Licensing and Bylaw Solution 250,000 50,000 50,000 200,000 Work Management System Phase 2 150,000 50,000 150,000 Purchasing Workflow Solution 75,000 10,000 75,000 Learning Management Solution 25,000 5,000 25,000 Technology Training Tools 10,000 2,500 10,000 Staff Scheduling Solution 50,000 10,000 50,000 Accounting Workflow Solutions 150,000 20,000 150,000 IT INFRASTRUCTURE Adopt IT Governance 0 0 Formalize IT Service Offerings 0 0 IT Help Desk System Replacement 10,000 2,000 10,000 IT Policy and Procedure Development 0 0 Email System Update 60,000 35,000 60,000 Business Continuity and IT Disaster Recovery Plan 20,000 12,000 10,000 10,000 IT ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT IT Resource Alignment 20,000 120,000 20,000 Project Management Capability 10,000 2,000 10,000 Portfolio Management Capability 10,000 2,000 10,000 TOTAL COSTS 1,470,000 415,500 0 430,000 450,000 190,000 300,000 100,000 Notes: COST= Total Capital Cost OPERATING = Annual Costs after Implementation Prior & Prior Associates page 88 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Online Services Strategy Project Type Strategy Description Clarington has a geographically dispersed and increasingly technology savvy customer base. It needs to provide customer facing service access interfaces that are easy to use, and are available on the customer's channel of choice, anytime and anywhere. The municipality has an excellent opportunity to provide many more services online as components of new major business systems. While the requirements gathering process for new business systems will reveal eservice needs for each, a holistic view will lead to a more consistent and integrated customer experience. In some cases the built-in eservice functions of business systems will not be satisfactory. A high level online service strategy will identify priorities, standards and integration architecture. Approach Develop an online service strategy by engaging external and internal stakeholders to establish priorities and expectations. Consider combining with the mobility strategy since device of choice is becoming a real expectation. Stakeholders Corporate Services, Planning, Engineering, Operations, Parks and Recreation Benefits and Outcomes * improved customer service - rationalized portfolio of eservices with requirements and standards for a consistent look and navigation * improved effectiveness - prioritize the right eservices Strategic Alignment * Enhance Online Services>l m prove Customer Service * Enhance Online ServicesAncrease Efficiency Project Sponsor Director, Corporate Services Project Cost 15,000 Operating Cost 0 Timing 2018 Prior & Prior Associates page 89 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name eForms Strategy Project Type Strategy Description Clarington has a large number of internal and external forms in paper and various electronic formats that will not be replaced by application interfaces of new business systems. It needs consistency in look and feel, data standards, compliance with AODA regulations, and integrations with systems and processes. The existing form solution provided by eSolutions may suffice, however the development of a planned and standardized approach to forms development requires knowing the priority list of electronic forms and the common information to be captured. Approach Conduct a strategy exercise to identify needs and opportunities to use electronic forms for internal and external processes that do not have direct online service interfaces. Conduct a fit/gap analysis with eSolutions and consider augmenting other technologies such as Adobe forms. Stakeholders Corporate Services, Planning, Engineering, Operations, Parks and Recreation Benefits and Outcomes * improved customer service - consistent format and design, auto -filled fields, electronic submission anytime, anywhere, any device * improved efficiency - re -use parts of forms Strategic Alignment * Enhance Online Services>l m prove Customer Service * Enhance Online ServicesAncrease Efficiency Project Sponsor Director, Corporate Services Project Cost 15,000 Operating Cost 0 Timing 2019 Prior & Prior Associates page 90 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Customer Relationship Management Solution Project Type New Technology Description The Municipality does not have adequate systems and processes for recording and managing customer service interactions. The current WorkTech system does not meet needs for service request and complaint tracking. A new recreation management solution will have CRM capabilities for customers who register for activities and rentals, and a new development tracking and bylaw system will have accounts for customers with interests in property. Customers' personal and property information is collected in different ways, over and over, creating inefficiencies and customer inconvenience. There is no integrated customer record across processes such as complaint, inquiry, service request, account inquiry, billing etc. The Town needs a central Customer Relationship Management system to serve as the hub and give a unified view of the customer across apps and departments. Approach Collect CRM requirements across all customer facing services in the short term for use as configuration and integration inputs for the big 3 new solutions - Work and Asset Management, Development, Licensing and Bylaw, and Recreation. Public expectations for eservices, self-service and personalization of the web experience should be captured in a single engagement for all three projects. This could be done as a sidebar on the WMS project, or could be the first phase of technology enablement of a future customer service review. These requirements will inform the data integration architecture for a central corporate customer service application and e -services. After digesting the requirements, acquire an off -the -shelf or cloud based CRM solution to meet the need Stakeholders Corporate Services, Operations, Parks and Recreation, Planning, Engineering Benefits and Outcomes improved customer service - relationship, tracking, notification improved efficiency - reduce duplicate collection of data, electronic notification ❑ improved accuracy and completeness of data Strategic Alignment ❑ Improve Communication and Collaboration> Improve Customer Service ❑ Automate Workflows> Increase Efficiency and Effectiveness Project Sponsor Director, Corporate Services Project Cost 200,000 Operating Cost 20,000 Timing 2018 (requirement and architecture), 2021 Prior & Prior Associates page 91 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Mobile Device and Remote Access Strategy Project Type Strategy Description Managing the security and support of mobile devices has become a problem for IT. The variety and number of mobile devices has burgeoned and clients may not be getting and using the best devices for their needs. The municipality needs to identify all opportunities for business enablement through mobile devices and remote access, and update policies, procedures, standards and management of same. Device management technology needs to be enhanced to cover all types. Approach Review existing mobile deployments with frontline users of the services to identify strengths, weaknesses and lessons learned for existing deployments. Identify all areas to benefit from mobile; re -set mobile strategy and develop rollout and extension plan. Acquire a mobile device management system for IT. Stakeholders All departments needing mobile devices and remote access, IT Client Services Benefits and Outcomes Policies, procedures and standards to reduce current frustrations with mobile device choices and remote access tools and privileges ❑ Proactive identification of all near term needs and a rational plan to meet them ❑ Increased adoption of technologies to improve operational efficiency and information quality Strategic Alignment ❑ Strengthen Mobile and Remote Access > Connect Field StaffAncrease Efficiency ❑ Strengthen Mobile and Remote Access > Connect Field StaffAncrease Effectiveness Project Sponsor Director, Corporate Services Project Cost 20,000 Operating Cost 5,000 Timing 2018 Prior & Prior Associates page 92 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Electronic Records and Document Management Solution Project Type Technology Enhancement Description The municipality needs to upgrade its existing electronic and paper records management capacity and capability. Physical archives are full and paper records continue to be generated. The legacy records management system is out of date. Approach In the first of two phases, conduct a detailed assessment of the current situation and enterprise needs for records and document management. This analysis will identify opportunities and requirements for integration with new business systems and processes, and requirements for legacy document disposition. In the second phase, review the existing Laserfiche/Versatile system for fit and gaps to the enterprise requirements. Upgrade these systems or select and implement new solution. Integrate record and document capture in parallel with Major Business System rollouts, then migrate legacy documents where necessary. In the meantime, develop enabling policies, procedures, forms and standards to initiate the business change. Stakeholders All Departments Benefits and Outcomes ❑ demonstrable compliance with Federal and Provincial records management, accessibility and privacy regulations and standards ❑ increased efficiency in storing, finding and retrieving important records ❑ increased accessibility ❑ reduce physical warehousing costs Strategic Alignment ❑ Improve Accountability Improve Communication and Collaboration > Improve Efficiency Project Sponsor Clerk Project Cost 300,000 Operating Cost 50,000 Timing 2018, 2021-2022 Prior & Prior Associates page 93 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Intranet Refresh Project Type Technology Enhancement Description Several departments indicated that they need to communicate better with each other. While the municipality has an intranet, the technology is old and the information architecture has developed in a ad hoc manner through individual department initiatives. The platform needs to be updated to better support distributed content management and the information needs to be designed for easy access from a variety of perspectives. Approach Gather requirements and priorities for corporate information and departmental information. Use weblogs to identify the most important pages and look for ways to standardize their format. Design a new site with multiple perspectives including corporate, departmental sharing, and departmental internal perspectives. Select a technology that meets the needs and implement core content all at once. Stakeholders Senior Management Benefits and Outcomes ❑ better platform, information architecture and governance to deliver valuable information and tools to staff efficient access to important corporate information broader knowledge and understanding of business across departments Strategic Alignment ❑ Strengthen IT Infrastructure>lmprove Communication>Increase Effectiveness Project Sponsor Director, Corporate Services Project Cost 50,000 Operating Cost 10,000 Timing 2018 Prior & Prior Associates page 94 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Collaboration Tools Project Type Technology Enhancement Description Several stakeholders, including senior managers, noted that the departments operate separately, often unaware of what each other is doing and thus missing opportunities for collaboration, process integration and efficiencies. Key documents are often locked inside file server structures, invisible or inaccessible to innovators. Internal communications platforms are needed to provide alternative sharing and discussion opportunities for groups based on project, position or areas of interest. Approach Acquire or subscribe to basic collaboration tools for use in all new technology projects. Develop a formal pilot project including training then measure the value. If successful, encourage other groups to use the technology. Stakeholders Senior Management Benefits and Outcomes ❑ greater team engagement and user acceptance and satisfaction with new technology and processes ❑ broader knowledge and understanding of the business across departments ❑ efficient and effective project task and document management Strategic Alignment ❑ Strengthen IT Infrastructure>lmprove Collaboration>Increase Effectiveness Project Sponsor Director, Corporate Services Project Cost 30,000 Operating Cost 10,000 Timing 2020 Prior & Prior Associates page 95 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Development, Licensing and By-law System Project Type Technology Enhancement Description The municipality does not have adequate systems and processes for recording and managing transactions associated with property. These include development tracking, engineering, bylaw enforcement, permits, and licenses. Current processes will be unsustainable with continued growth. Clarington needs technology to enable more efficient and effective management of processes and information, with eservice, mobile and GIS integration. Approach Acquire an on -premise off-the-shelf or cloud -based municipal planning and compliance solution. Stakeholders Engineering, Planning, Operations, Finance, Clerk Benefits and Outcomes improved customer service - e -submission, tracking, notification improved efficiency - enable electronic workflows & document management for faster approvals improved accuracy and integration of property -related of data Strategic Alignment Automate Workflows>Increase Efficiency ❑ Enhance Online Services> Improve Customer Service ❑ Strengthen Reporting and AnalyticsAncrease Effectiveness Project Sponsor Director, Planning; Director, Engineering Project Cost 250,000 Operating Cost 50,000 Timing 2018-2019 Prior & Prior Associates page 96 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Work Management System Phase 2 Project Type Technology Enhancement Description The municipality has invested in new work management technology with the initial phase focussed exclusively on the Operations Department. Full value of the solution can be gained by rolling it out to Parks and Recreation for facilities management. Both departments should use the new system to plan and track daily activities in service delivery work such as park maintenance and ice cleaning. Approach This phase of the project should proceed with more planning, stakeholder engagement, project management and quality management. Follow a sound software implementation lifecycle and take the time to document processes and do prototypes and pilots where change is profound or user acceptance is at risk. Stakeholders Operations, Engineering, Finance, Parks and Recreation Benefits and Outcomes * more cost, time and materials information to - improve work scheduling and resource planning - improved accountability and effectiveness for service management * improved effectiveness through inter -departmental integrations * improved efficiency in work management processes Strategic Alignment * Automate Workflows>lncrease Efficiency * Strengthen I&T Integration> Increase Effectiveness * Strengthen Reporting and AnalyticsAncrease Effectiveness Project Sponsor Director, Parks and Recreation Project Cost 150,000 Operating Cost 50,000 Timing 2019-2020 Prior & Prior Associates page 97 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Purchasing Workflow Solution Project Type New Technology Description The municipality currently uses manual processes for creating purchase orders, receiving goods, and matching invoices to them. Processes involve moving paper or images of invoices and no three way match. The municipality needs to automate its purchasing process with electronic workflows. Approach Determine desired business model and conduct a fit/gap analysis of the capability in the most recent MS Dynamics GP accounting system. If that is not suitable acquire an off the shelf solution that integrates with it. Look for mobile enablement as a key requirement and integration with Laserfiche for archiving image records as desirable. Stakeholders Finance, All Departments, External vendors Benefits and Outcomes ❑ increased efficiencies - process time and effort ❑ improved accountability ❑ improved record management Strategic Alignment ❑ Automate Workflows > Increase Efficiency ❑ Automate Workflows > Increase Customer Satisfaction (vendors) ❑ Strengthen Reporting and Analytics > Increase Accountability Project Sponsor Director, Corporate Services Project Cost 75,000 Operating Cost 10,000 Timing 2018 Prior & Prior Associates page 98 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Staff Scheduling Solution Project Type New Technology Description Parks and Recreation, Operations and Fire and Emergency Services need technology that streamlines the processes of applying for and scheduling workers into part time roles and time slots. There is also need for a volunteer management solution. Approach Acquire an off the shelf or cloud based solution that integrates with the payroll system. Look for remote access and mobile enablement as key requirements. Stakeholders HR, Parks and Recreation, Fire and Emergency Services, Operations Benefits and Outcomes increased worker satisfaction with the application and shift request process ❑ increased efficiencies in scheduling workers and preparing timesheets ❑ more effective application and accountability for business rules Strategic Alignment Connect Field Staff > Increase Efficiency ❑ Strengthen Reporting and Analytics > Increase Accountability Project Sponsor Manager, HR Project Cost 50,000 Operating Cost 10,000 Timing 2019 Prior & Prior Associates page 99 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Accounting Workflow Solutions Project Type New Technology Description The municipality currently uses manual processes for managing the flow of payables and receivables. Processes involve moving paper or images of invoices. The municipality needs to automate its accounts payable and accounts receivable processes with electronic workflows. Approach Determine desired business model and conduct a fit/gap analysis of the capability in the most recent MS Dynamics GP accounting system. If that is not suitable acquire an off the shelf solution that integrates with it. Look for mobile enablement as a key requirement and integration with Laserfiche for archiving image records as desirable. Stakeholders All Departments, External vendors Benefits and Outcomes * increased efficiencies - process time and effort * improved accountability * improved record management Strategic Alignment * Automate Workflows > Increase Efficiency * Automate Workflows > Increase Customer Satisfaction (vendors) * Strengthen Reporting and Analytics > Increase Accountability Project Sponsor Director, Finance Project Cost 150,000 Operating Cost 20,000 Timing 2020 Prior & Prior Associates page 100 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Learning Management Solution Project Type Technology Enhancement Description The municipality does not have a robust technology for online delivery and management of training. Fire Services, Operations, and HR have onboarding and ongoing training needs, and IT needs to support better technology implementations with more and better training. Online, self -paced courses are an effective and efficient choice for many policy, procedure, safety and technology training for broad, dispersed audiences. Solutions deliver online training and track both online and other training experiences. Approach A business analyst should detail the municipality's short and medium-term training requirements and acquire a cloud -based learning management platform. Once selected and architected for both corporate and departmental needs, this platform can be implemented in phases, starting with Fire, Operations and IT. Stakeholders Fire Services, IT, Parks and Recreation, Operations, All new solution owners and users Benefits and Outcomes * more accessible training of all types - more knowledge * support for competency development, succession planning * accurate and timely tracking of mandatory health and safety training * easy compliance with documentation requirements Strategic Alignment * Strengthen Reporting and Analytics > Increase Effectiveness * Strengthen I&T Integration > Increase Efficiency Project Sponsor Manager, HR Project Cost 25,000 Operating Cost 5,000 Timing 2019 Prior & Prior Associates page 101 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Technology Training Tools Project Type Capability and Capacity Description As the municipality makes significant investment in new technology over the next 5 years, it needs to ensure that users fully understand the capabilities and procedures of the new systems. Approach Technology training should be supported by a learning culture, adopting IT training best practices such as planning and assessment, and the train -the -trainer model. The current training room needs to be modernized. Select and support a web conference service for web- based interactive training and purchase access to self-directed modules for each new solution for knowledge reinforcement. Plan to spend capital money on multifaceted training for all new solutions. Stakeholders All new solution owners and users Benefits and Outcomes * increased efficiencies and effectiveness from technology investments * increased acceptance of new processes and supporting technologies Strategic Alignment Align and Mature IT Service > Increase Effectiveness Project Sponsor Manager, HR Project Cost 10,000 Operating Cost 2,500 Timing 2019 Prior & Prior Associates page 102 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Adopt IT Governance Project Type Policy and Procedure Description This strategic plan recommends strategic investment in a significant list of projects. The organization needs a governing body that will execute the strategy by planning and monitoring the portfolio of projects, ensuring that policy enablers are in place, approving and supporting standards, and ensuring a corporate -wide view of technology is cultivated. The strategy and implementation priorities need to be reviewed annually to accommodate new needs, halt or re -cast failing projects, and take advantage of new opportunities. Approach Strike a formal IT Steering Committee of senior managers and department heads (supported by the IT Manager). Assign a workgroup to develop Terms of Reference and meeting schedule in Q2 and meet quarterly thereafter. Stakeholders Senior Managers, Department Heads Benefits and Outcomes ❑ flexible technology plan ❑ policy enablers for project success ❑ authoritative IT policies and standards ❑ inter -divisional engagement, understanding and ownership of IT as a corporate resource Strategic Alignment ❑ Strengthen IT Governance > Improve Communication and CollaborationAncrease Accountability ❑ Align and Mature the IT Service > Increase Effectiveness Project Sponsor Director, Corporate Services Project Cost 0 Operating Cost 0 Timing 2017 Prior & Prior Associates page 103 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Formalize IT Service Offerings Project Type Capability and Capacity Description As the municipality and technology use have grown, so too have the challenges of meeting client expectations. IT cannot be everything to everyone, but when staff assert this reality, the result is often dissatisfaction and decline in trust. The IT section needs to build this trust and increase client satisfaction, while at the same time providing great services focussed on delivering customer value Approach The IT team should engage its clients in identifying their service and support needs and propose simple but formal service offerings and levels. These should be documented, approved by the IT Steering Committee and posted on the IT intranet. As you mature, start developing formal Service Level Agreements (SLAB) and service uptake and performance measures. Stakeholders All technology users Benefits and Outcomes clear understanding of client needs and expectations ❑ clear articulation of IT services ❑ increased client satisfaction Strategic Alignment ❑ Align and mature IT Service> Improve Customer Service Project Sponsor Director, Corporate Services Project Cost 0 Operating Cost 0 Timing 2018-2020 Prior & Prior Associates page 104 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name IT Help Desk Replacement Project Type Technology Enhancement Description The municipality currently uses custom made application to log and track IT service requests and trouble tickets. Garnering end user compliance in the new process has been challenging, and reports are limited. To measure and improve IT service management, the municipality needs to invest in a more robust solution providing web based issue logging and tracking for end users, knowledge base development, and performance reporting. These capabilities may be met through one of the Customer Relationship Management modules to be acquired for other services. Approach Make this a task for the enhanced IT team to select and configure together. Stakeholders GM, Corporate Services, IT Staff, IT support users Benefits and Outcomes Prior & Prior Associates page 105 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name IT Policies and Procedure Development Project Type Policy and Procedure Description Policies and standards establish the parameters within which the Municipality uses technology, creating clear expectations for those that use and manage technology. Clarington needs to have a strong and comprehensive set of policies, standards and procedures developed with engagement of the business units. Approach These should be developed as IT Governance projects led by the IT Manager and documented, published and maintained in accordance with a quality documentation standard. These exercises are excellent opportunities to build and share governance knowledge through participation in policy development workgroups. Stakeholders All IT Clients Benefits and Outcomes Prior & Prior Associates page 106 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Email System Update Project Type Technology Enhancement Description Clarington's current email system, Microsoft Exchange 2010 on Server 2008, has been in place for over 6 years. It is no longer meeting expectations, and takes a lot of staff time and effort to maintain. Increasing sophistication of security threats make failure to keep up with maintenance patches, server currency, SPAM, and virus prevention creates significant risks to business continuity. The municipality needs to investigate the costs and benefits of a cloud solution alternative and replace this solution when most of the value from its current investments has been realized. Approach Most municipalities the size of Clarington are moving to a cloud -based solution for email to reduce effort and complexity of managing email servers, doing backups, archives, and restoring content for users. Determine requirements and constraints and determine if a cloud solution provides the best value. Stakeholders All Departments Benefits and Outcomes improved efficiency in use of IT back-office resources improved security and availability ❑ improved remote access Strategic Alignment ❑ Strengthen IT Infrastructure> Connect Field Staff>lncrease Efficiency ❑ Strengthen IT InfrastructureAmprove Effectiveness ❑ Improved Efficiency (use of IT Resources) Project Sponsor Director, Corporate Services Project Cost 60,000 Operating Cost 35,000 Timing 2017-2018 Prior & Prior Associates page 107 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Business Continuity Plan Prior & Prior Associates page 108 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name IT Resource Alignment Project Type Capability and Capacity Description Speed up the process of shifting resources from generalist to specialist, to provide efficiencies in customer service and support to allow more time for team leaders to develop capabilities needed for a leadership role in project management, technology acquisition and implementation. Approach Restructure the IT Department to specialize in teams to address all the different functions and requirements around technology implementation and support. Create supervisory positions for sustainability and employee retention and development. Fill the vacant position as soon as possible and train existing staff for changed roles. Use capital funding for training and tools. Stakeholders IT Steering Committee, IT Manager Benefits and Outcomes ❑ Improved efficiencies in Customer Service and Support ❑ Enhanced capability in Project Management ❑ Enhanced capability in Technology Acquisition support Strategic Alignment improved Efficiency (use of IT Resources) Project Sponsor Director, Corporate Services Project Cost 20,000 Operating Cost 120,000 Timing 2017-2018 Prior & Prior Associates page 109 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Portfolio Management Capability Project Type Capability and Capacity Description Clarington does not have systems, processes or data to show a high level view of its technology investments and report on the impact of their links to corporate goals. Clarington needs a process for documenting, prioritizing, integrating and managing projects and their alignment and impact on corporate goals. Approach Establish IT leadership and departmental capability, best practices and tools for documenting project proposals, especially emphasising meaningful benefit statements and alignment to strategic goals. Mature the capability in year 3 by adding measurable cost reductions and revenue increases and calculating Return on Investment. Stakeholders IT Steering Committee, Department Heads Benefits and Outcomes ❑ improved process for documenting and submitting project proposals ❑ improved project alignment to corporate goals improved accountability for IT investment improved analytical capability for decision support Strategic Alignment Align and Mature IT Service > Increase Effectiveness Strengthen IT Governance > Increase Accountability Project Sponsor Director, Corporate Services Project Cost 10,000 Operating Cost 2,000 Timing 2017-2018 Prior & Prior Associates page 110 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Project Name Project Management Capability Project Type Capability and Capacity Description Clarington has limited capability in defining, prioritizing and executing business improvement and technology implementation projects. It needs policies, procedures, templates, technology and methodologies to define and execute projects. Approach Establish best practices and tools then take small, incremental steps toward developing capability and capacity throughout the organization through training and mentorship from consulting project managers on this portfolio of projects. Stakeholders Project sponsors. IT Steering Committee Benefits and Outcomes ❑ improved project alignment, prioritization and accountability ❑ improved project success widespread knowledge of basic project management practice Strategic Alignment Align and Mature IT Service > Increase Effectiveness Strengthen IT Governance > Increase Accountability Project Sponsor Director, Corporate Services Project Cost 10,000 Operating Cost 2,000 Timing 2017-2018 Prior & Prior Associates page 111 Municipality of Clarington Information Technology Strategic Plan Appendix 6: Staff Survey Report Prior & Prior Associates page 112