Chief information officer Paul J. Cosgrave, like other recent additions to the IRS staff, came to his first government job after a successful career in the private sector. More than anything else, he said, he was looking for a challenge. The IRS, under a congressional mandate to modernize and beset by the immutable deadline to prepare its systems for 2000, offered challenge in excess.
Cosgrave joined the IRS in July as an expert consultant and became CIO in August. He left a consulting start-up in New York to join the IRS. Before that, he was chairman and chief executive officer of Claremont Technology Group Inc., a systems integrator in Beaverton, Ore.
Cosgrave has bachelors and masters degrees in industrial engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
Cosgrave spoke with GCN about the IRS modernization effort.
COSGRAVE: The goal for electronic filing of tax returns, stated in the IRS Restructuring and Reform Act, is 80 percent by 2007. Today electronic filing runs at about 23 to 24 percent.
The goal is to get halfway home by 2002 to 2003. That is not as hard-and-fast as 80 percent by 2007, but we want to make orderly movement in that direction.
This is not simply having people file their taxes electronically. It is the whole ability to communicate with tax preparers electronically. Today we dont do that as it relates to taxpayer data because we do not have a secure enough e-mail capability over the Internet. We hope to have that capability up and running in a year or two, if not sooner.
Another area is tax payment. We are already processing the vast majority of money electronically. We are about 80 percent there, but we would like to get as close to 100 percent as possible.
We would like to let taxpayers access their account data over the Internet. We dont have a secure enough environment to do that, either, and that would be another major initiative. So it is quite a comprehensive set of activities that needs to be done, not just simply filing tax returns.
In October we announced the decision to go to a standard e-mail system. We have 17 of them today and our intent is to be there by summer.
What we are rolling out is essentially internal e-mail, but the environment we selected, Microsoft Exchange, has the ability to handle secure e-mail as well.
It is our intent to take that environment and expand that outward to third parties, preparersanyone who wants to communicate with us.
One of the first things [prime contractor Computer Sciences Corp.] will work with us on is to deploy the exchange solution and handle secure e-mail. The infrastructure we are going to put in place for that hasnt been determined yet.
Y2K is the major effort and, although we are starting modernization, we are not going to take any resources away from Y2K or in any way, shape or form jeopardize the progress we are making there. That is the No. 1 priority for the service.
In terms of the original plan from two years ago, we are going at a slower pace in modernizing. We have operated on an old packet-switching network that we have been rapidly replacing over the past two or three years with a TCP/IP network. We are almost 90 percent done on that.
We are moving from a Novell Inc. system to all Microsoft Windows NT. We are about halfway there today.
For the systems that we have not converted to NT by this month, we will patch them with the Y2K patch that we got from Novell and then move to NT after the filing season. By July we should be a full NT and Exchange environment.
Paul J. Cosgrave Chief Information Officer
John D. LaFaver Deputy Commissioner for Modernization
Bob Wenzel Deputy Commissioner for Operations
Robert Albicker Deputy CIO for Systems
Toni L. Zimmerman Deputy CIO for Operations
Greg Rothwell Assistant Commissioner for Procurement
Robert E. Barr Assistant Commissioner for Electronic Tax Administration
Albert E. Mazei Assistant Commissioner for Program Management and Engineering
John Yost Director of the Century Date Change Project Office
Fred Martin Director of Tax Systems Acquisition
TOTAL $292.5
ModernizationIn the latest chapter of the decade-long effort to overhaul its tax processing systems, the IRS last month awarded a 15-year, $5 billion contract to Computer Sciences Corp. to manage the day-to-day modernization effort, with the IRS providing oversight. Early projects targeted for the next two years include designing new front-end systems for IRS workers, providing a secure e-mail system to let taxpayers communicate electronically with the service and expanding electronic filing and payment options.
ReorganizationLast year, the IRS came up with a three-phase plan to reorganize its work by taxpayer type rather than geographic region. Employees will be assigned to one of four business units and specialize in one type of taxpayer. During Phase 1, Booz, Allen & Hamilton Inc. of McLean, Va., did an initial study on the reorganization. During Phase 2, which will end by spring, 12 employee teams are detailing the new design. During Phase 3, the IRS will implement personnel and management changes.
Electronic Tax FilingCongress mandated last year that by 2007 the IRS receive 80 percent of taxpayers returns electronically. The Office of Electronic Tax Administration is leading the effort, with oversight by the 17-member Electronic Tax Administration Advisory Committee. The IRS has two pilots set for the coming tax season that will use personal identification numbers in lieu of digital signatures. The IRS has its own interim goal: to receive all returns prepared on computer electronically by 2001.
Year 2000 TestingThe IRS will test its mission-critical systems using an offline test bed at its Memphis, Tenn., computing center. TRW Inc. is building the test bed on which tests for the main tax-gathering and processing systems as well as other administrative and support systems will run. The service will test hardware, operating systems, applications software, databases and internal and external communications links.
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