The
Department of Work and Pensions is to put
IT services contracts worth £3bn out to tender.
The contracts will be open to competition over the coming years
with existing contracts being replaced up until 2015,
Department of Work and Pensions (DWP) CIO Joe Harley said.
"We are reviewing our plans for our major IT services contracts
as our principle existing contracts expire during 2010-11.
"We will be managing a series of competitions to replace
existing contracts progressively by 2015."
The first is a contract to provide desktop services across the
department from 2010. The department wants the desktop contract to
"help drive innovation and further bring down IT costs."
The £3bn figure will also cover contracts for hosting services,
voice and data networks, application maintenance and support, data
centres, and integration services.
DWP said some existing contracts may be extended on an interim
basis. Its contract with EDS, proving data centres, has already
been extended.
The announcement came shortly after ex-Logica boss Michael Read
was drafted in by the government
to review public sector IT projects.
Harley said, "We are committed to ensuring that future IT
services continue to be provided in a way which delivers the best
service to the citizen and maximum value for the taxpayer."
DWP loses cash on benefit-fraud detection systems>>