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The government will scrap its
flagship department for IT next spring, replacing
it with a head of e-government.
Andrew Pinder, the current e-Envoy,
is set to leave the post next April when his contract
expires. He will not be replaced.
Instead, a new head of e-government
will oversee public sector reforms, such as making
services available online.
"Their task will be to focus on
ensuring that IT supports the business transformation
of government itself," said Cabinet Office minister
Douglas Alexander in a statement.
Pinder, a former director of the Inland
Revenue's IT division, took the £130K a year
job in January 2001, after a few months in temporary
charge.
He replaced the first e-Envoy, Alex
Allen, who departed unexpectedly because of family
illness.
The e-Envoy was initially envisaged
to be the person responsible for driving the adoption
of e-business throughout the UK.
In recent times, however, the position
has been saddled with the near impossible task of ensuring
that public sector bodies make their services accessible
via the internet by 2005.
Pinder has also seen a reduction in
the influence of his department, and has suffered budget
cuts of 20 per cent as the government sought to put
funding into projects with a greater chance of success.
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