Glasgow revamps e-government plan

Cisco wins £42m contract to update infrastructure

By Gemma Simpson, 20 February 2007 14:20

NEWS

Glasgow City Council is revamping its IT infrastructure with a £42m contract to give the public a single point of contact for local services.

Alan Stewart, councillor and spokesman of ICT for the council, told silicon.com: "We have lots of different switchboards and networks but what we need is one state-of-the-art network for the whole of the local authority."

The e-government initiative is focusing on combining voice and data networks to give everyone the same level of service no matter how they contact the council.

silicon.com Public Sector

Get the latest public sector news straight to your inbox. Sign up for the PS newsletter today!

Stewart said citizens can get in touch with the council using a variety of means - whether on the phone or through emails - with a single point of contact handling every enquiry.

The rollout is still in the preliminary stages but a system to help councillors collect council tax is already in operation.

Stewart said the council is already beginning to notice benefits - with communications between staff and citizens sped up.

He told silicon.com: "To have the IT infrastructure in place - as well as the staff that can process it all quickly - means it's more efficient and you're not chasing up the same people for the same money."

The programme will also enable greater integration between the council's departments - such as social services and education - and external agencies such as the NHS.

The contract will connect the council's 300 offices via LAN and WAN infrastructures with Thus - using the Cisco Unified Communications System - providing the council with IP telephony services to connect council staff with the council's call centre which handles citizens' enquiries.

Cisco and Thus are also working on other connected-government initiatives such as the Glasgow Young Scot card - an electronic card giving young people in Glasgow access to leisure facilities, libraries, discounts at local shops, and a payment facility for school meals.

Stewart said Cisco and Thus provided the best value in terms of cost and service support.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Log in or create your silicon.com account below

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy.

Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Membership FAQ