Proprietary Software Vendors Demand Changes To Issa’s IT Reform Bill
Joseph Marks | Nextgov | November 30, 2012
A coalition of technology vendors demanded changes on Friday to proposed legislation that would overhaul the way agencies purchase information technology, saying they will not endorse the bill in its current form. The groups criticized the Federal Information Technology Reform Act, proposed by Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., for creating a new Commodity IT Acquisition Center tasked with overseeing large, governmentwide information technology contracts.That new center might “create more confusion for government procurement officials and could hamper the acquisition process, not simplify it,” a spokeswoman for one of the industry groups, TechAmerica, said in an email announcing the letter...
Friday’s letter also criticized Issa’s legislation for urging agencies to use open source software, which is often cheaper than proprietary software and sometimes easier to update and maintain. That suggestion “strays from the core principle that statutes should be technology neutral,” the organizations said...
- Tags:
- 1996 Clinger Cohen Act
- 2002 E-Government Act
- A.R. “Trey” Hodgkins III
- Andy Halataei
- Business Software Alliance (BSA)
- Coalition for Government Procurement (CGP)
- Commodity IT Acquisition Center
- Darrell Issa
- Federal Information Technology Acquisition Reform Act (FITARA)
- General Services Administration (GSA)
- George Washington University Law School
- Gerry Connolly
- House Oversight and Government Reform Committee
- Information Technology Industry Council (ITI)
- IT acquisition policies
- Katherine McGuire
- Nextgov Prime
- Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
- open source software (OSS)
- Richard Beutel
- Roger Baker
- Roger Waldron
- Steven VanRoekel
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