Shifting needs drive data center decisions
Connecting state and local government leaders
Agencies have been working for years to shrink the number of data centers they run and their optimize operations. But whether to close facilities or streamline existing ones depends on the agency.
Since the Data Center Consolidation Initiative of 2010, agencies have been working to shrink the number of data centers they run and optimize operations. But whether to close facilities or streamline existing ones depends on the agency.
"We have bought our last set of hardware," U.S. Marshals Service CIO Karl Mathias said he told his staff. Speaking at FCW's Aug. 14 cloud event, he said his agency has no data centers of its own. "I'm located in two FBI data centers, with some hardware that I don't intend to refresh."
The Department of Justice as a whole is also moving aggressively to shutter its data centers. Deputy CIO Melinda Rogers, who also spoke at the event, said DOJ has closed 95 facilities to date and plans to close 12 more by the end of 2020. But three "core enterprise facilities" remain central to the department's IT infrastructure, along with a suite of commercial cloud solutions.
The State Department is taking a similar approach. "There are places where [cloud] just isn't feasible," Cloud Program Management Office Deputy Director Brian Merrick said. "There are some things that will stay on-prem for the foreseeable future."
That's partly due to the security and connectivity challenges that come with State's globe-spanning operations, Merrick said, but it also reflects the decentralized ownership of the department's IT. The business unit leaders own many of the applications and the funding behind them, he said. "They're the drivers for it. So we're not telling them which ones to do first -- we're enabling them to pick what they want to do and make better decisions around that."
And at Department of Homeland Security, "we're committed to hybrid IT," said Kshemendra Paul, DHS' cloud action officer and deputy director for strategy and mission. "We'll always have a data center."
However, DHS is working to close one of its two central data centers (DC2) when the contract expires in 2020, Paul said, and is ensuring that the recompete for the other (DC1) will reflect component agencies' shifting needs. That solicitation is expected in "late fall or early winter," he added, joking: "So just about the time you're ready to go on Christmas vacation."
Cloud's share of the workload is increasing, he noted -- nearly 300 of DHS' 661 FISMA systems are headed to cloud, and 67 are already operational there. But "components are leading the way," Paul said, and different missions move at difference paces, so "we're not trying to implement a centralized approach."
This article was first posted to FCW, a sibling site to GCN.