The FASTeTEN project held a workshop on September 17 as part of the ’Raising the Game’ event, a seminar held in the town of Rotherham, Yorkshire, England, which focused on the role of identity management as a prerequisite for the evolution of new services, and the broader part that this could play in the European Union’s information society strategy, and how it might help Europe emerge from the current economic crisis.
A summary of the FASTeTEN Project Workshop has kindly been provided by the event organisers:
Aim
The overall aim of the event was to raise the profile of Identity Management and the significance placed upon this in the Communication from the Commission, ’Raising the Game’. It was argued that it would be difficult to envisage new applications emerging without a requirement to have identity management in place. The aim of the FAST Workshop was to encourage the participants to envisage a use for the FAST platform in their day-to-day activities. Participants had backgrounds ranging right across the public administration sector and from a wide breadth of disciplines within local and regional government. Attendees included representatives from a number of regional public services, local authorities, academic institutions, and European participants, such as representatives of the European Commission and e-Forum.
Groups of two people were each asked to come up with five applications utilising identity management and capable of being enhanced by utilising the FAST platform. Subsequently, these groups became four people and they were asked to select five applications from the ten they had brought forward. The outcome was that a reducing set of applications were reported and catalogued. Subsequently, an exercise took place whereby all the applications were put into categories. Below is the outcome of this working session illustrating a few examples of using the FAST service in South Yorkshire, suggested by practitioners themselves, grouped in the categories which evolved through discussions.
Applications using personal and sensitive information:
Transferring Blood Transfusion service records.
Police evidence files and witness statements.
Trans-European Data Transfer -specifically that required for European Electoral Registration purposes.
Information needed in multi-agency community support services
Key medical data such as allergies and language needs from doctors to Hospitals for emergency admissions
Public protection communications-school communications, vulnerable adults communications.
Government to Business Applications:
Invoicing as part of the public procurement process
Procurement contracts
Commercial contracts to an ISO Standard
PIN numbers for banking renewal
Applications:
Applications for jobs
Applications for school admissions
Eligibility and Legal Status:
Criminal Records Bureau checking process and access to records.
Licensing:
Certification and accreditation
Eligibility for “Blue badges” - parking for disabled
Eligibility for free school meals
Copyright/Licensing/IPR transmissions
Conclusions
In closing the event, it was put to the participants that furthering ’identity management’ capabilities should become one of the key focal activities of the EASY Connects partnership in the next work programme and this was widely encouraged and supported.