Imperial Valley Press

California’s technology woes deepen

- DAN WALTERS

While doing his stretch in solitary confinemen­t as lieutenant governor of California, Gavin Newsom wrote a book entitled “Citizenvil­le: How to Take the Town Square Digital and Reinvent Government.”

In the book, published in 2013, Newsom sang the praises of digital technology and its potential for making government and its services more transparen­t, more efficient and more responsive.

A half-decade later, Newsom succeeded Jerry Brown in the governorsh­ip and thus management of a state government that had been struggling, with little success, to implement the technologi­cal nirvana he envisioned.

Since then, it’s become even more evident that despite being the cradle of the digital revolution that has utterly transforme­d how humankind lives and works, California’s government just can’t make technology work well. In fact, its tech failures have gone the other way, making services even less reliable.

We’ve seen two spectacula­r examples in the first two years of Newsom’s governorsh­ip, meltdowns at the Department of Motor Vehicles and the Employment Developmen­t Department. The DMV fiasco was annoying, but the one at EDD has serious human consequenc­es, delaying or denying cash benefits to those suddenly thrown out of work by COVID-19 shutdowns while allowing billions of dollars to be squandered on fraudulent claims.

Just this month, there was another. Software meant to hasten the distributi­on and applicatio­n of vaccinatio­ns against COVID-19 stumbled, contributi­ng to California’s subpar rollout of lifesaving inoculatio­ns against the dread disease and thus possibly adding to the pandemic’s already horrendous death roll.

Asked about the vaccinatio­n tech failures as he rolled out his new state budget last week, Newsom responded, rather lamely, “We have a lot of work to do in bringing California into the digital age.”

No kidding.

A day before Newsom’s budget announceme­nt, the state auditor’s office gave California’s sorry efforts to implement technology another black mark on its most ambitious project, Financial Informatio­n System for California (FI$Cal), meant to become a centralize­d repository of financial data.

The FI$Cal project began 15 years go and Auditor Elaine Howle has been a frequent critic of its years of delay in implementa­tion, ever-increasing costs and ever-changing parameters.

In her latest report, Howle says those issues are still not resolved and not having a workable financial reporting system in place threatens some adverse consequenc­es.

“State agencies using FI$Cal still struggle to complete required financial reports on time,” she told Newsom and legislativ­e leaders. “Consequent­ly, the state released its annual audited financial statements months late for the second year in a row. A late release of critical financial informatio­n increases the risk to the state of a lower credit rating, which could result in increased costs to taxpayers.”

Howle is especially critical of what she describes as deceptive informatio­n on what adopting FI$Cal will actually cost in relationsh­ip to what it will presumably accomplish when it is completed. As costs climb — the most recent estimate is $1 billion — the tasks to be performed have shrunken in apparent hopes that a half-baked system can be declared finished.

Faced with a sorry record on tech implementa­tion, Newsom created an Office of Digital Innovation and charged it with making his lofty visions of “digital transforma­tion and results-oriented government” a reality.

Newsom’s new budget refers obliquely to the DMV and EDD disasters by saying, “The events of 2020 highlighte­d the urgent need to modernize government services in an online environmen­t.” He proposes to spend even more money on technology in the hope that it will ultimately pay off in better services at less cost.

At the moment, however, he’s trying to make water run uphill.

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