In 2001, Horst Bräuner, the IT director of Schwäbisch Hall, a
fairy-tale city in southern Germany, faced a situation familiar to many
local U.S. government officials. Germany was in an economic slump — the
country’s economy had been flat for several years. The gross domestic
product dropped from a 2.5 percent rate of growth in 2001 to an anemic
1.4 percent in 2002. In response, the federal government expanded the
number of tax deductions firms could take on as losses. Since local
governments in Germany depend heavily on business taxes, the change in
the country’s tax law coupled with the broader economic recession led to
a sharp decline in local tax revenue. But according to Bräuner,
Schwäbisch Hall’s problems were even worse.
Just as government budgets were cratering, Microsoft Corp. upgraded its
operating systems from Windows NT to Windows XP, forcing IT directors
like Bräuner into a difficult choice: retain an outdated operating
system without support from Microsoft, pay for the new operating system,
or find an alternative. When Schwäbisch Hall’s technological and
budgetary challenges collided, it felt to Bräuner like a slow moving
tsunami. Things would only get worse.
While most governments bit the budgetary bullet and opted for the
Microsoft upgrade, three cities in southern Germany embarked on
something radically different. Munich, Schwäbisch Hall and Treuchtlingen
adopted and implemented plans to migrate all PCs to open source
operating systems and applications.
With some notable exceptions like Garden Grove, Calif., and Largo, Fla.,
most local government officials in the United States have had little
exposure to free/open source software (FOSS). This article sheds light
on the topic by considering the experiences of these three German
cities. The focus is simple: If a local elected official or IT
administrator were interested in migrating to FOSS, what should he or
she keep in mind? Before answering the question, some background on the
cities and FOSS is needed.
Treuchtlingen, Schwäbisch Hall and Munich may represent the most
advanced migration to FOSS among local governments in the world. The
cities vary in population from 13,000 for Treuchtlingen to 1.3 million
for Munich. They also differ in the degree to which they’ve implemented
their FOSS migration policy. Treuchtlingen and Schwäbisch Hall have
completed migration, but Munich’s migration is only partially finished.
Although each city followed its own path toward FOSS, they overcame
similar organizational and personnel challenges that reveal what local
governments should take into account as they consider open source.
FOSS is a generic term for software that is nonproprietary, can be
reviewed by large numbers of users, and can be revised and shared for
free. FOSS refers to program licenses that permit users the freedom to
run the program for any purpose, to study and modify the program, and to
freely redistribute copies of the original or modified program.
The use of FOSS is widespread in the public and private sector. In April
2008, a survey of 328 IT and business executives found that 53 percent
use FOSS and an additional 10 percent planned to do so in the next 12
months. And a January 2010 survey of more than 273 million websites by
Netcraft found that Apache, a FOSS Web server, is the most widely used
Web server with 59 percent of the market share. The FOSS Web browser,
Firefox, continues to gain market share on Microsoft’s Internet
Explorer, particularly among users who have a choice of browser. And 65
percent of all active websites use open source code to run their sites.
For governments, the decision to switch to FOSS operating systems, such
as Linux, is wrought with challenges. There are technical issues of
compatibility and interoperability since many popular applications are
designed for the proprietary software operating systems: Windows and Mac
OS. And as with any new IT application or system, there are personnel
challenges associated with training, accepting and adjusting to new
systems and different ways of doing things. Also, as with any change in
technology, a switch to FOSS can be costly in the short run. Finally,
research on FOSS suggests political challenges to its adoption and
implementation. Elected officials are often skeptical of new software,
particularly nonproprietary software. Local governments may confront
external pressure from software vendors to continue with existing
(proprietary) systems.
Despite the immense challenges, Treuchtlingen, Schwäbisch Hall and
Munich opted for innovation over the status quo. The IT directors were
each asked: What suggestions would you give to a manager or IT director
in an American city considering the switch to FOSS? The following
summarizes their answers.
Political Backing and Leadership Are Essential
The adoption of new technology is difficult under any circumstances,
whether proprietary or FOSS. Studies indicate political backing is an
essential ingredient to a successful migration since IT managers need
the freedom to take risks. The experiences of the three cities confirm
this. In each case, the mayor and parliamentary majority supported the
shift to FOSS. As one IT director put it, “The political leadership must
embrace the change to FOSS in order to give the IT administrator the
freedom to make mistakes and try new things.” He added that in the case
of FOSS, one should expect criticism from private vendors and some
resistance for change from government employees.
In Munich, a high-level administration member took a leadership role to
shepherd staff through the process. In practice, this meant the
administrator did several things: made the case for adoption; took the
political heat when the migration process hit a glitch, thereby
shielding the IT staff; and consistently communicated to the Parliament
and public the rationale for the migration, thus controlling the terms
of the debate about FOSS.
Cost Arguments Should Be Secondary
Scholars note the importance of cost savings in the motivations of
local governments to consider FOSS. The experience of these three German
cities supports this view generally. However, the story is more
interesting. Each government turned to FOSS not when surplus funds
became available to try something new and innovative. Instead, FOSS
became an option for the cities when a change in the federal
government’s tax system triggered a sudden budget deficit. The federal
change served as a catalyst that directed public officials’ attention
toward the need to save money and be self-sufficient. It was in this new
environment, created by the change in federal tax law, that FOSS found
fertile ground. A lesson offered by the German cities’ experiences is
that although leadership, knowledge and expertise are important, an
unexpected event or crisis is often needed to create an opportunity to
redirect organizational attention and behavior in a new direction.
While a decline in tax revenue created an opportunity to adopt FOSS,
each of the IT administrators echoed findings in much of the FOSS
literature, namely that its adoption and implementation is costly. As
with any new technology, FOSS requires a significant investment in
training, implementation service and maintenance to succeed. The IT
administrators also acknowledged that it’s easy to manipulate the total
cost of operation of any type of technology. Although cost savings are
important, they say IT directors must also make the case for FOSS on
other grounds, including better cooperation among governments; greater
independence from monopolistic software providers; more flexibility and
security; and increased local economic development. Thus, the two
takeaway lessons from the three cities are: to be successful, FOSS is
likely to be expensive in the short run; and while cost savings are
important, officials should strive to make the case for FOSS on other
grounds.
Take Incremental Steps, but With an Overall Strategy
The three IT directors said it was unusual for a municipality to
completely switch to FOSS in a single step, particularly if the
governments have little experience with FOSS. The directors suggested
taking incremental steps or a “soft migration.” They recommended
beginning with common software applications like the Firefox browser,
Thunderbird e-mail program and OpenOffice suite (an equivalent to
Microsoft Office). In Schwäbisch Hall and Treuchtlingen, city employees
were given free programs on a single disk and encouraged to install and
use the software on their home computers. As mentioned, such steps
reduced the anxiety of city employees to the new software. A second step
is for the city to develop macros, templates and forms in the
OpenDocument format, and set up pilot desktop stations in each
department that run on the Linux-based operating system.
While the IT directors suggested an incremental approach, they also
stressed the need for an overall strategy. “You have to know where you
are going,” said one director.
“Incrementalism is fine, but there needs to be a clear idea of the end
goal. Otherwise you could find yourself going nowhere or in the wrong
direction.”
Practical experience trumps theory
Interviews with the IT directors underscored the importance of
experience over theory. Just knowing about FOSS wasn’t enough, they
argued. Instead, the IT directors suggested that any local government
considering FOSS migration to spend time in a government that uses it,
learn firsthand what that government isdoing and collect information
from line employees who are using FOSS. One IT director also suggested
that local governments consider hiring a college intern with computer
science training and no bureaucratic experience. He noted, “It’s
important to get someone with the latest technical knowledge. But you
also want someone who has not been infected by the ‘bureaucratic virus.’
You want someone who will look at a problem with eyes unencumbered by
the bureaucratic culture. A university student is often a good
resource.”
Organization Matters
IT administrators said organizational structure is important. IT
infrastructure is often decentralized so that each department has its
own IT person. Officials in the three German cities stressed that a
change as fundamental as migrating to FOSS is easiest with a centralized
IT department. Based on their experience with migration, the directors
reported that a decentralized IT structure creates cultural and
structural barriers in the organization that make it difficult to adopt a
governmentwide strategy.
In Munich, for example, before migration to FOSS, IT was highly
decentralized. More than 850 IT professionals were scattered across 17
departments. The departments did not resist change per se. Instead, when
migration to FOSS was proposed, the city departments were reluctant to
give up what they perceived as their IT professional(s) or expertise.
This significantly slowed the migration process since migrating to FOSS
required taking stock of the government’s entire IT infrastructure,
identifying FOSS alternatives, and then standardizing the government’s
operating systems and software. Such a change is made easier by a
centralized IT structure, regardless of the city’s organizational
culture. IT directors in all three cities argue that a centralized
structure improved migration to FOSS.
The cities’ experiences with migration to FOSS also demonstrate a more
complex relationship between organizational and technological change
than what appears in scholarly literature. While technological change is
often viewed as the product of organizational characteristics, the
three case studies point to an inverse relationship: New technology
changes the organization.
Respondents in each city explained that migrating to FOSS led to virtual
and physical organizational changes. Virtual organizational change
refers to how the cities managed their computer software systems. The
policy to migrate to FOSS forced each city to take stock of its IT
hardware and software because without such an assessment it wouldn’t
have been possible to implement the migration policy. In some cases,
cities conducted the assessments on their own. In other cases, cities
relied on assistance from private-sector partners such as IBM and
Novell. As cities addressed their virtual organizations, several also
made changes to their physical organizations. Cities took stock of their
IT staffs, identified redundancies and moved toward a more centralized
IT support structure.
Finally, respondents in the three cities reported that the switch to
FOSS improved their internal capacity and increased employees’
willingness to innovate. Because the benefits from FOSS derive from
working with computer code, the advantages of open source increase as
the IT staff’s expertise increase. While Schwäbisch Hall and Munich
relied on contractors to aid the implementation process, all three
cities were and are committed to doing as much of the IT work in-house
as possible. And as the skill level of the IT professionals increased,
so did the motivation to innovated. Each city reported developing new
programs and applications, which were shared with other cities, as well
as the broader open source community. Schwäbisch Hall, for example,
recently developed a new council information application to provide
materials and minutes to city parliamentarians. Munich and Treuchtlingen
also have developed dozens of new applications. And Munich was
recognized with the European E-Learning Award in 2007 for the learning
platform the city developed to teach staff how to use open source
software.
In sum, the German cities’ experiences suggest that the decision to
switch from proprietary to open source software is neither easy nor
obvious. It depends on a range of factors — administrative capacity,
political backing and organizational structure. Yet, the experiences of
the three cities underscores that while FOSS may not be appropriate for
every circumstance, it should at least be considered by U.S. local
government officials as a viable, perhaps even superior, alternative to
its proprietary counterpart. ¨
Mark K. Cassell is an associate professor of political science at
Kent State University. He specializes in public-sector transformations.
His writing includes How Governments Privatize: The Politics of Divestment in the United States and Germany and Mission Expansion in the Federal Home Loan Bank System.
Published by govtech.com
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