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December 01, 2005 09:00 AM UTC

Not Another Broken Computer System

  • 10 Comments
  • by: Colorado Pols

Democrats are shaping up for a major confrontation with Governor Bill Owens over a series of boondoggle computer integration contracts.

The allocation and awarding of federally-funded homeland security grants has been shrouded in secrecy imposed from the Governor’s office, which has infuriated Democrats intent on second-guessing his decisions. Recent audits which determined these funds are poorly managed are only exacerbating the tension.

The Colorado Benefits Management System, a $200 million database intended to streamline the processing and awarding of various entitlement benefits, is still not running perfectly after more than a year of operation. This has been a sore point between Democrats and Owens since the moment they retook the legislature, and many of them aren’t satisfied.

And the latest row involves two contracts awarded to Accenture Corporation for new central databases at the Department of Labor and the Secretary of State’s office.

Colorado officials on Wednesday canceled a contract to build a new computer system to track voter registration and have threatened to cancel a second contract with the same company to rework the system the state Labor Department uses to track unemployment benefits.

Both contracts, worth a combined $50 million, are with the global technology giant Accenture. Both involve the creation of massive new computer systems that would create more centralized databases that, in theory, would streamline the work of state government.

Efforts to implement both, state officials say, have been fraught with problems, including missed deadlines and serious programming flaws.

We noted previously what seems to be a suspicious relationship between certain high level employees at Labor and State (that is, the same high-level employees) and the awarding of these two contracts to Accenture Corporation. Democrats are adamant that they’ve been kept in the dark while progress on the two projects  essentially ground to a halt. Whatever damage this may do non-lame-duck Republicans (because you know that’s where the Dems want this headed) will depend on what they can prove. It’s possible that Owens, fresh from the alienation of a large segment of his own party, may find himself with very few friends once the full story is told.

From the rhetoric we’re hearing, you’d think the Democrats had just stumbled across Al Capone’s Vaults. We’ll be watching this one closely to see if they do better than Geraldo did.

Comments

10 thoughts on “Not Another Broken Computer System

  1. This will be like a lot of flashlight in to the dark closet looks by Democrats once the repubs are tossed out of office.  There should be a lot of dirty business deals showing up.  My only hope is for very few Democrats with dirty hands.

  2. Hey, as far as I’m concerned, this is a fight between Dimocrats.  I don’t know why you all differentiate between the Gov. and the Dims.. 

    The government is theirs to run with.

    good luck

  3. I guess you didn’t read the unity statement that was adopted at the Colorado State Republican Party meeting a couple weks ago.  It says we pledge our support the the governor.

  4. ChristmasTime,

    The position of governor was coopted by Jon Caldera.  Though I support him, he wasn’t elected.

    Owens is a Dimocrat.  When Republicans start supporting Dimocrats (Owens), conservatives stop supporting Republicans.

  5. HAVA and Genesys are not the only disaster projects that will have links back to Holtzman.  The 2003 JBC staff notes for the Gov’s Office budget hearing, back when the Repubs owned it all, recommended that OIT be abolished as a failure.  This was during the time when Owens was saying Marc was such a standup guy he should run CSU. 

    Can anyone say New Century Colorado?  If the local media wasn’t such a bunch of mutts they could run stories on the incompetence of the last five years for the next five.

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