Cloud Computing.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) within the United States Department of Commerce defined "cloud computing" in a September 2011 publication as "a model for enabling ubiquitous, convenient, on-demand network access to a shared pool of configurable computing resources (e.g., networks, servers, storage, applications, and services) that can be rapidly provisioned and released with minimal management effort or service provider interaction." There are five essential characteristics to cloud computing:
Consolidated Technology Services Agency.
The Consolidated Technology Services agency, also known as Washington Technology Solutions (WaTech), supports state agencies as a centralized provider and procurer of certain information technology (IT) services. Agencies are encouraged to rely on WaTech for services with a business case of broad use, uniformity, scalability, and price sensitivity to aggregation and volume.
Washington Technology Solutions is responsible for: (1) establishing rates and fees for services provided; (2) developing a business plan for services or activities to be contracted; (3) developing plans for the agency's achievement of statewide goals and objectives; and (4) enabling the standardization and consolidation of IT infrastructure across all state agencies to support enterprise-based system development, and improve and maintain service delivery.
Services. Agencies are required to use WaTech to house agency servers or use cloud-based services. The Office of the Chief Information Officer (OCIO) is also required to develop a migration strategy plan to ensure that all state agencies are moving towards WaTech as their central services provider for all utility-based infrastructure services. Utility-based infrastructure services include personal computer and portable device support, servers and server administration, security administration, network administration, telephony, electronic mail (e-mail), and other IT services commonly used by state agencies. Washington Technology Solutions also hosts agency systems on its mainframe.
Cloud Readiness. On January 4, 2021, the OCIO published the Washington State Cloud Readiness Report, which documented the state's existing IT assets, determined agencies' readiness to move assets to the cloud, and calculated the costs and benefits of doing so. The report found that while some agencies have already shifted to cloud-based systems, approximately 90 percent of the state's major business applications are stored on on-premise servers. The OCIO concluded that most agency applications (up to 91 percent) appear to be good candidates for migration to cloud services. The report also highlighted potential challenges, recommended projects and implementation models, and outlined a State Cloud Migration Plan.
State Data Center.
The State Data Center (SDC) was completed in 2011, and includes four halls, two of which are operating as data centers. State agencies must locate all existing and new servers in the SDC. State agencies with a service requirement that requires servers to be located outside the SDC must receive a waiver from the OCIO.
State agencies may locate new and existing information or telecommunications investments within third-party, commercial cloud computing services, rather than in the state data center.
A task force is established, chaired by the Chief Information Officer, to review the impact on labor of transitioning to third-party cloud computing services and the needs for retraining that would accompany such a shift. Task force membership consists of:
The task force must provide a report of its findings and recommendations to the Governor and the appropriate committees of the Legislature by November 30, 2021.
(In support) Moving to the cloud will improve security, performance, and reliability. It will also save money; this bill is estimated to save up to $100 million in five years. Using the cloud, state agencies will be able to scale services with demand and respond more effectively to constituent demand. This bill is not privatization. The savings occur from not needing to purchase or use hardware. Money is saved without reducing staffing levels, and in fact in Seattle and King County switching to the cloud has increased staffing. There is better security using third-party cloud services because companies such as Microsoft have a large staff working to protect against security threats. Many state and local governments have needed to use the cloud to work remotely during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the benefits have been great. This bill is necessary to modernize Washington agencies.
(Opposed) This bill is good in theory but there are concerns about implementation. The manner in which the state transitions to the cloud must ensure that state employees will not lose their jobs.
(Other) Moving to the cloud is a smart move and is consistent with nationwide trends. But the state should be wary of artificial deadlines, and the deadlines in this bill are shorter than those recommended in Washington Technology Solution's cloud assessment report. The transition is not as easy as flipping a switch or as inexpensive as buying storage. There is no loss of jobs with a transition to the cloud.
(In support) This bill changes current state policy to allow agencies to opt into the cloud, rather than the State Data Center. A third party conducted an analysis of the state's cloud readiness and found that around 9,000 servers were good candidates for transition to the cloud. The third party estimated that the state could achieve $96 million in savings over five years if the state pursued cloud transition. Cloud services are more secure, scalable, reliable, and resilient. The task force would identify best practices for retraining the state's workforce.
(Opposed) None.