[ Text of section added by 2014, 165, Sec. 22 effective July 1, 2014. See 2014, 165, Sec. 291.]
Section 7. (a) The CIO, in consultation with the operational services division, shall determine and set a minimum financial threshold above which any proposed IT expenditure by a state agency shall be reviewed and approved by the office. The CIO may suspend an expenditure related to IT until approval has been granted by the office.
(b) All state agency contracts for IT shall require the approval of the CIO. The CIO may negotiate state agency IT contracts and amendments to existing contracts entered into by a state agency for information technology services in order to expand the scope of the contract, extend the term of the contract, improve delivery of services under the contract or to safeguard information from threats to cyber security. The office shall review long-term contracts for information technology services on a quarterly basis to ensure that services delivered pursuant to those contracts are provided in a timely and cost-effective manner to the commonwealth. If the CIO determines that information technology services under any such contract could be improved, the office shall consult and negotiate with each agency and contractor who is a party to the existing contract to obtain terms and conditions more favorable to the commonwealth.
(c) For IT projects that exceed $20,000,000, are self-financing or present a unique set of challenges due to interagency collaboration, federal participation or private investment, the CIO shall establish a project oversight committee that shall develop criteria and benchmarks to evaluate the project and advise the CIO as to whether the project is accomplishing its objectives. A committee established pursuant to this section may include members from the private sector; provided, however, that members shall have no financial interest in the project overseen by the committee.
[ Subsection (d) added by 2014, 257, Sec. 5 effective August 6, 2014.]
(d) The CIO shall adopt policies, standards and guidelines governing information technology procurement, development and maintenance, specifically including provisions for:
(i) ensuring effective project management and oversight configurations;
(ii) establishing strategic incentive and requirement structures;
(iii) increasing competition among information technology vendors, including, but not limited to, the undertaking of smaller, short-term information technology projects to provide improved programmatic flexibility;
(iv) utilizing commercial off-the-shelf information technology products to achieve cost savings on information technology projects;
(v) increasing technology procurement innovation using pilot programming;
(vi) identifying which information technology projects and procurements shall require the services of an independent verification and validation consultant;
(vii) creating a team of project managers to oversee and manage large information technology projects;
(viii) gathering and maintaining relevant records, documents and information related to vendor performance on ongoing and completed projects to assist in assessing prospective vendors' past performance; and
(ix) implementing other best practices which may include, but shall not be limited to, those identified in legislative reports and legislatively-required reports.
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