Saturday, January 30, 2010

Two-thirds of government web sites now on Directgov

Tom Young, Computing, Friday 29 January 2010 at 14:38:00




Government web sites consolidated into one





The government has closed almost two-thirds of its web sites as it moves
information onto its central site Directgov.



In 2006
Sir David
Varney's review
of public service transformation found that there were 1,499
government web sites, many with overlapping or conflicting information.



The government has since revised this number up to 1,700 after departments
carried out a number of web site reviews.



In a letter to parliament, Mark Lund, chief executive of the Central Office
of Information, wrote:



"Of the 1,700 web sites identified by departments by 31 December 2009, 907
were closed with a further 479 still open but committed to be closed."



The intention is to make Directgov the
single
point of contact
for all public information and services, enabling citizens
to find what they need easily.



The project reflects the vision of the Transformational Government agenda,
which aims to centre public services around the citizen rather than vice versa.



Since launching in April 2004, the service has gone from being a purely
online offering to being available on teletext and digital TV - accessible on
Freeview and Sky.




Full story at http://www.computing.co.uk/computing/news/2257019/two-thirds-government-web-sites

No comments:

Post a Comment