Stim ⋅ u ⋅ lus stim ⋅ u ⋅ lus stim ⋅ u ⋅ lus – n. [stim-yuh-luhs]
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stim u lus⋅ ⋅ stim u lus⋅ ⋅
stim u lus – ⋅ ⋅ n. [stim-yuh-luhs]
a) change in the environmentb) acts to arouse actionc) something that triggers a responsed) something that incites to action or exertion or
quickens action....
stim u lus⋅ ⋅ stim u lus⋅ ⋅
stim u lus – ⋅ ⋅ n. [stim-yuh-luhs]
ren o vate – ⋅ ⋅ v. [ren-uh-veyt]
a) to restore to good condition; make new or as if new again; repair
b) to reinvigorate; refresh; revive.
Noun and a Verb: Means to an EndNoun and a Verb: Means to an End
The “Stim” Trio
Health Information Technology (HIT) Standards and adoption incentives for electronic medical records -- $2 billion to invest in health information technology and $17 billion in incentives for Medicare and Medicaid providers.
Sustainability Expand
renewable energy
Double production of alternative energy
Modernize schools and 75% of federal buildings
Green the fleet
Infrastructure• Expand
broadband access
Smart Grid (Energy), Transportation
Invest in science, technology and research
www.govtech.com/renovationnation
17761776 20092009 At 230+ years, there are no green field opportunities. Brings everything of value forward, makes ready for another season of service.
Why Renovation?Why Renovation?
“Only a crisis, real or perceived, produces real change. When that crisis occurs, the actions that are taken depend on the ideas that are lying around.”
-Milton FriedmanChicago School free market economist
Crises Drive Major Periods of Change
In the January 22 issue, Economist Paul Krugman wrote an open letter to the new president:
“As much as possible, you should spend on things of lasting value, things that, like roads and bridges, will make us a richer nation. Upgrade the infrastructure behind the Internet; upgrade the electrical grid; improve information technology in the health care sector, a critical part of any health care."
“Provide aid to state and local governments, to prevent them from cutting investment spending at precisely the wrong moment.”
The Idea Lying Around
1930-19351930-19351835-18691835-1869
Old School Public WorksOld School Public Works
It was not our wealth that made our highways possible. It was our highways that made our wealth possible.
- Thomas Harris MacDonald, US Bureau of Public Roads, 1953
1950s1950s 1980s1980s
The Long ViewThe Long View
• Roads were important. But without cars, insurance, traffic signals, driving schools, civil engineering schools, car and driver registration systems, fuel distribution networks, and parking lots, the benefits would be minimal.
• Electrical wires were important. But without electricity generation, standards, appliances and programs to help people use electricity (regulations on utilities, etc.) the benefits would be limited.
• Today, wired and wireless networks are important. But without widespread digital take-up and literacy; standards, shared practices and systems (e.g., security, identity resources, etc.); tools (computers, sensors, software) and applications (e.g., e-health, telematics, e-gov, etc.) the benefits will be limited.
Digital Recovery
Consensus view of policy makers or state executives and state CIOs in identifying those areas most likely to become a higher priority in the coming biennium.
Priorities Then and Now: Stay True
Swapping Out the Plumbing
Cities of King County WA eCityGov.net North Central Texas Council of
Governments iCommunities New York Digital Towpath Newport News, VA (Open eGov) Service New Brunswick Free File Alliance nicusa.com force.com G2G App Exchange YouTube Google Maps Flickr twitter Social Networking (Facebook, myspace,
Ning, Nexo, Twango) Social Platforms (KickApps, Open Social,
Socialcast)
New Models of Collaboration
• The $787 Billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA)– Preserve and Create jobs– Assist those in need– Advance technology and science– Investments in infrastructure, transportation and
environment– Stabilize state and local government budgets
ARRA: Jobs, Stabilization and “Next”
• How Much Money is There?• $280 Billion for State and Local Government– Distributed to state and local governments through grants
and direct assistance
• $49 Billion to State and Local in FY 2009– 90% of the FY 2009 funding dedicated to transportation,
education and health
State and Local’s Share
$ 19$ 19BillionBillion
$ 56$ 56BillionBillion
$ 4.7$ 4.7BillionBillion
$ 100$ 100BillionBillion
$ 48$ 48BillionBillion
$ 11$ 11BillionBillion
$ 42$ 42BillionBillion
$ 7.2$ 7.2BillionBillion
Health IT
K-12Education
Public WorksConstruction
Transport
Smart Grid
Clean Energy/Clean Water
Broadband
Original R&D(NIST/NOAA/NETL)
& Federal IT Infra-structure
$ 5.5 Billion
$ 2.2 Billion
$ 1.2 Billion
$ 620 Million
$ 13.5 Billion
Buckets of Money
Slicing $787 BillionHighlighted Areas Allocation IT EstimateState and Local Stabilization $ 114 Billion
Broadband $ 7.2 Billion $ 5.5 Billion
K-12 Education $ 56 Billion $ 620 Million
Transportation $ 48 Billion TBD
Smart Grid $ 11 Billion $ 2.2 Billion
Health IT $ 19 Billion $ 13.5 Billion
Public Works (Construction) $ 100 Billion TBD
Clean Energy/ Clean Water $ 42 Billion TBD
Original R&D/ Fed IT Infra $ 4.7 Billion $ 1.2 BillionSource: White House/ ARRA, 2009
Administered separately across 15 federal agencies, 215 funding lines and 86 grant programs.
Can be combined in creative ways that demonstrate the whole really is more than the sum of the parts.
That will necessarily include bringing something to the table, including but not limited to local resources and collaboration agreements that reflect that the proposal is a priority to the requesting communities.
Existing Channels/ Partnerships
Existing Contracting Vehicles
80% of purchases come through term or convenience contracts Sell against the ones that you and your partners are on
Aggregation Vehicle States Counties Cities
State Term/ Convenience Contracts 95% 90% 93%
US Communities Program 5% 50% 26%
Western States Contract Association (WSCA)
55% 40% 58%
General Services Administration (GSA) Schedule
55% 80% 71%
Other 32% 50% 38%Source: Center for Digital Government, 2008-2009
Year 1 Expenditures (after Year 1 Expenditures (after adjusting for tax incentives): ~ adjusting for tax incentives): ~ $120 Billion.$120 Billion.
Stimulus coincides with Stimulus coincides with procurement reform and small procurement reform and small business preferences.business preferences.
Spending must be (a) fast, (b) wise Spending must be (a) fast, (b) wise and (c) transparent – pick your and (c) transparent – pick your bottleneckbottleneck
Wild Cards: Hoarding, swapping Wild Cards: Hoarding, swapping and an a la carte approachand an a la carte approach
The Bottlenecks
Governors can choose to spend 18.2 percent, or $8.8 billion, of their portion of the $53.6 Billion Stabilization Fund allotment on public safety. Other provisions for the benefit of criminal justice and law enforcement:$1 billion for checked baggage and checkpoint explosives detection machines$730 million on border and port security $150 million on public transportation and railroad security $500 million for wildfire mitigation;$210 million in firefighter assistance grants for building new facilities or modernizing older ones.$1 billion to fund 5,500 local police officers through Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS) program$2 billion in the Edward Byrne Justice Assistance Grants (JAG) program -- 60 percent to the states and 40 percent to local law enforcement efforts.$225 million in Violence Against Women Act Grants.$100 million through OJP for grants to assist victims of crime$225 million for tribal law enforcement assistance$50 million for the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Forces.$390 million from OJP for local law enforcement assistance$125 million targeted for rural areas$40 million for the Southern border
Criminal Justice and the ‘Stim’
Certifiably Stimulative States have a 45-day window -- until April 3, 2009 -- to certify that they will
"request and use" stimulus. To date, Connecticut, Illinois, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, New
Hampshire, Ohio, Oregon, Texas, Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming have certified.
Reticence to accept all stimulus funds may stem from bow wave from one time money.
Risk that states will divert, delay and hoard
• 16 States Will Receive Bi-Monthly Spending Reviews– U.S. Government Accountability
Office (GAO) picked 16 states to monitor spending
• Accountability– States are concerned with lack of
funding dedicated to accountability and oversight
– Decline in staffing hinders capabilities– Differing accounting software may
pose difficulties
States StatesArizona Mississippi
California New Jersey
Colorado New York
Florida North Carolina
Georgia Ohio
Illinois Pennsylvania
Iowa Texas
Massachusetts Washington, D.C.
Michigan
Transparency and Accountability
Defining “Meaningful Use”– Meaningful use must be demonstrated…but first, it must be defined– Discussions surrounding the definition are ongoing– Definition will determine how HIT is deployed
– Industry groups are submitting their definitions which include:• Adopting CCHIT as the certified EHR standard• EHRs being used to e-prescribe• A phased approach to adoption• Connection to a health information exchange (HIE) or alternative
connection methods in the short-term while HIE is in development• Interoperability
Electronic Health Records
State Plans– California, New York have proposed health information technology
infrastructure plans – Other states have started their infrastructure plans.– New York
• HEAL NY Phase 10 $60 million to improve care for patient-centered medical homes using health information technology
– California
• Johan Frohlich appointed as Deputy Secretary for Health Information Technology, Health and Human Services
Electronic Health Records
Hearings are being held– $4.7 Billion- Broadband Technology Opportunity Program (BTOP)– $2.5 Billion- Distance Learning and Telemedicine Program
– Congress’ priority is to ensure schools, community centers universities, hospitals and public safety personnel have high-speed access
– NTIA is currently consulting with states, FCC and RUS– Developing a common application form for both programs
Broadband
National Telecommunications Information Agency– $4.7 Billion- Broadband Technology Opportunity Program (BTOP)– Encouraging local government partnerships
Challenges– Defining “broadband”, “unserved” and “underserved”– Deciding what applications to fund– Seeking applicants that:
• Deliver an affordable service to the greatest population of users in an area• Enhance healthcare, education in an area• Socially/Economically small businesses• Greatest broadband speeds to the greatest areas• Hoping to make broadband available for:
– Video conferencing– Smart grids– Health IT– Research and science
Broadband
Timeline– A Notice of Funding Availability (NOFA) will be released in roughly two
months detailing:• Application process• Requirements and progress reports• Job creation measurements
Funding• Funding in three waves– Early Fall 2009– Fall/Winter 2009– Spring 2010
NTIA: Broadband
State Progress– States are planning highway projects
• Repairs, restoration construction projects
– Projects must be approved by Federal Department of Transportation• Priority given to projects that can be completed in three years• Priority given to economically distressed areas
– Few projects have started• According to the GAO, only $6.4 billion of the $26.6 Billion has
been obligated
Transportation
Date Program Description Funding
May 18th Health IT Deadline for program description.
N/A
May 18th National Surface Transportation System
Grant criteria due. $1.5 billion
June 17th High Speed Rail Deadline for grant terms.
$8 billion
June 30th Highway Infrastructure Deadline to obligate 50% of funds.
N/A
July 1st State Fiscal Stabilization Phase two award of SFSF funds.
N/A
July 10th State Report 1st quarterly report due.
N/A
October 10th State Report 2nd quarterly report due.
N/A
Deadlines: 2009
Date Program Description Funding
Feb. 17th Clean Drinking Water Funds
Deadline for beginning construction for priority status.
$6 billion
Feb 17th National Surface Transportation
Grant awards announced.
$1.5 billion
March 2nd Highway Infrastructure Investment
Deadline for funds to be obligated.
N/A
Sept. 30th NTIA Broadband (BTOP) Deadline for awards. $4.35 billion
Sept. 30th COPS grants End of additional funding.
$1 billion
Sept. 30th ARRA Funds All ARRA funds available until this date.*
N/A
Deadlines: 2010
Urgent Start
APRIL 2009 MAY 2009FEBRUARY 2009 MARCH 2009
HR 1 signed into law
Block Grant
Awards
Reporting on use of
funds begins
$ 7.9 B for Job
Creation
$ 10. 1 BHousing
Assistance
Home Weatheriz
ation Funds
Released/ UI
Benefits Increase
$ 155 MHealth Center Construction
Funds
$ 830 MNOAA
Innovation Funds
$ 610 MNIST
Research Funds
$ 8.4 BPublic Transit Funds
Reporting on Entitlement
Funding Begins
Performance Plans become
publicly available
Detailed financial
reports go public
Reporting on competitive grants and contracts
begins
$ 15 B Federal Medical
Assistance Percentage
(FMAP) funding
NTIA begins series of discussions on allocations of its portion of $ 7.2 B in
broadband funding
The Long RunwayThe Office of Management and Budget will issue new guidelines on contracting by September 30, 2009.“Fair, full and open competition” may attenuate process, heightening importance of existing vehicles to get money moving. It could take 2 – 4 years to spend the first $787 Billion. There is still time to get aligned….
No such thing as free money: unprecedented reporting and accountability requirements
Big league competition: Those taking a flyer need not apply
Don’t apply if you can’t get out of your own way
Too busy and/or constrained to do anything with it even if you received Stim funds
Four Reasons to Take a Pass
State Recovery Siteswww.recovery.gov www.grants.gov http://www.recovery.ca.gov
www.govtech.com/renovationnation
John MiriSenior FellowCenter for Digital Governmentjmiri@erepublic.com 512-350-3344
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