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e-Gov 20 Hot
Projects>>>>>>
Akshaya 1. As
part of Kerala’s ambitious e-literacy campaign,
Akshaya e-Centers are being set up throughout
Kerala. These centers will initially provide
e-literacy to one member from every household and
act as ICT dissemination nodes and ITeS delivery
points in every village. All Akshaya e Centres
will have Internet connectivity and will be
networked with a centralized operating center.
Implementation of the first phase of the project
is on in Malappuram district. The second phase
involves setting up of over 6,000 e-centers in all
districts, expected to be over by December 2004.
www.akshaya.net/proj.htm
Arunachal Pradesh Community Information
Center 2. On 22 August
2002, the Prime Minister dedicated to the people
of the eight North-Eastern states a new structure
of localised governance called Community
Information Centres. Each is well-equipped with
modern infrastructure, including one server, five
client systems, a VSAT, laser printer, a dot
matrix printer, modem, LAN hub, TV, webcam and two
UPS’. Each center has two CIC operators as
managers and for providing services to the public.
Basic services to be provided by CICs include
Internet access and e-mail, printing, data entry
and word processing and training for the local
populace. Most CICs charge nominal amounts from
users for services which helps them to meet
day-to-day running expenses. To ensure future
financial sustainability of this enterprise, it is
proposed to use the Community Information Centers
for e-entertainment.
Bhoomi 3.
Karnataka started Bhoomi in mid-1998 as a
major initiative to computerize land records to
ensure more secure title deeds and roll-back the
rampant cases of corruption. The existing registry
of the 20 million land records of 6.7 million land
owners in 176 taluks of Karnataka have been
computerised and organized into a database. The
government intends to sustain Bhoomi and replicate
it at many more delivery points at sub-district
levels, by positioning the land records database
as a ‘killer-application’ which will ensure kiosk
operators a minimum income of Rs 3000 a month.
Bhoomi is keen on private sector involvement and
options are being explored for partnerships with
the private sector for ‘retailing’. www.revedept-01.kar.nic.in/Bhoomi/Importance.htm
CARD 4. The
Computer-aided Administration of Registration
Department in Andhra Pradesh is designed to
eliminate the maladies affecting the conventional
registration system by introducing electronic
delivery of all registration services. CARD was
initiated to meet objectives to demystify the
registration process, bring speed, efficiency,
consistency and reliability, substantially improve
the citizen interface etc. Six months following
the launch of the CARD project, about 80% of all
land registration transactions in AP were carried
out electronically. Since 60% of the documents,
Encumbrance Certificates (ECs) and certified
copies relate to agricultural properties, the
success of the CARD project has great benefit for
the rural farming community.
Community Learning Center
Project 5. Set up
between March and July 2001, the Community
Learning Centre is a joint initiative between the
Azim Premji Foundation (APF) and the State
government of Karnataka. The government
contributes towards hardware and other related
expenses per CLC and the Foundation takes care of
management and the training of Young India fellows
(YIFs) who manage the CLCs. Each CLC is housed in
a separate room in the school and is equipped with
five to eight computers. The CLCs are used to
enhance classroom learning during school hours. In
the first phase in 2001, 35 CLCs were launched in
Bangalore, Kolar and Mandya districts. In the
second phase beginning 2002, 55 CLCs were
inaugurated across 11 districts within one month
and in the third phase, 135 CLCs are scheduled to
begin operations in 2003. www.azimpremijifoundation.org/clc.htm
Dairy Information System Kiosk 6. The DISK application targeted at
the booming dairy sector has been tested for two
milk collection societies by the Indian Institute
of Management Ahmedabad’s e-governance center. The
project consists of two basic components—an
application running at the rural milk collection
society that could be provided Internet
connectivity and a portal at the district level
serving transactional and information needs of all
members. DISK has helped in the automation of the
milk buying process at 2,500 rural milk collection
societies and has been pilot tested in two
co-operative villages of Amul dairy in Kheda
district. Software called AkashGanga has been
developed with special features to enable speedier
collection of milk and faster disbursement of
payments to dairy farmers.
Delhi Slum Computer Kiosks
Project 7. To help
improve the conditions of the Ambedkar Nagar
colony of Delhi as well as to spread computer
awareness, the Delhi government initiated in
November 2000, an unique project targeted at the
urban poor. After using the computer based
learning modules, the children’s grades in
subjects like science, math and the English
language improved remarkably. The community is now
lobbying with the Delhi government for more
content and multimedia based self-paced
educational resources. The project is also
exploring the option of providing separate access
hours for girls. delhigovt.nic.in/newdelhi/index.html
e-Seva 8.
Launched on the 25th of August 2001,
electronic seva (e-Seva) is the improved version
of the TWINS project launched in 1999, in the twin
cities of Hyderabad and Secunderabad. There are
currently 32 eSeva centres spread across the twin
cities of Hyderabad and Secunderabad, operating
from 8:00 am to 8:00 pm every day and between 9:30
am and 3:30 pm on holidays. Citizens can pay
utility bills, avail of trade licenses and
transact on government matters at these
facilities. Though the e-Seva had a very lukewarm
response from the citizens, the initiative has
picked up tremendous confidence on the way and has
so far netted a thumping collection of close to Rs
2,000 crore (February-end 2003) from a meagre
collection of Rs 43 lakh in August 2001.The
government has rolled out the project to other
parts of the state, including rural areas like the
West Godavari district. Customized services like
issuance of certificates and land records, online
mandi rates, tele-agriculture, common accounts of
SHGs are offered. http://www.esevaonline.com/;
http://www.westgodavari.org/
FRIENDS 9. Fast,
Reliable, Instant, Efficient Network for the
Disbursement of Services is part of the Kerala
State IT Mission. FRIENDS counters handle 1,000
types of payment bills originating out of various
PSUs. The payments that citizens can make include
utility payments for electricity and water,
revenue taxes, license fees, motor vehicle taxes,
university fees, etc. Firewalls safeguard data
from manipulation. The application has provisions
for adding more modules and for rolling back
incorrect entries without affecting the database
even at the user level. One important feature of
FRIENDS is a provision for adding more modules and
a queue management system.
GramSampark 10.
‘Gramsampark’ is a flagship ICT product of
the state of Madhya Pradesh. A complete database
of available resources, basic amenities,
beneficiaries of government programmes and public
grievances in all the 51,000 villages of Madhya
Pradesh can be obtained by accessing the website
www.mp.nic.in/gramsampark/. Gramsampark has three
sections-Gram Paridrashya (village scenario),
Samasya Nivaran (grievance redress) and Gram
Prahari (village sentinel). An eleven-point
monitoring system has been put in place whereby
programmes are monitored village-wise every month.
Four more programmes are under the monitoring
system, which includes untouchability-eradication,
women’s empowerment, water conservation and
campaigns for sanitation. www.mp.nic.in/gramsampark/
Gyandoot 11. The
Gyandoot project was initiated in January 2000 by
a committed group of civil servants in
consultation with various gram panchayats in the
Dhar district of Madhya Pradesh. Gyandoot is a low
cost, self-sustainable, and community-owned rural
Intranet system (Soochnalaya) that caters to the
specific needs of village communities in the
district. Thirty-five such centres have been
established since January 2000 and are managed by
rural youth selected and trained from amongst the
unemployed educated youth of the village. They run
the Soochanalayas (organised as Kiosks) as
entrepreneurs (Soochaks); user charges are levied
for a wide range of services that include
agricultural information, market information,
health, education, women’s issues, and
applications for services delivered by the
district administration related to land ownership,
affirmative action, and poverty alleviation.
Kiosks are connected to the Intranet through
dial-up lines, which are soon to be replaced by
wireless connections using CorDECT technology. The
Soochanalayas have been equipped with Pentium
multimedia colour computer along with dot matrix
printers. The user interface is menu based with
information presented in the local Hindi language
and the features of the Gyandoot software are
continuously being updated. http://www.gyandoot.nic.in/
Headstart 12.
Headstart provides computer-enabled
education and basic computer skills for all
students in 6000 Jan Shiksha Kendras of Madhya
Pradesh. Madhya Pradesh has 6500
Jan Shiksha Kendras (cluster resource centres)
located in Middle School premises in 48 districts.
Headstart will equip every Jan Shiksha Kendra in
the state with computer hardware and multimedia
software. It repositions the JSK as a media unit
capable of providing computer-aided education for
the children of the middle school in which the JSK
is located and familiarization to computers to all
children in primary schools through simple demos
and games to excite their imagination. Among
primary schools, EGS school children will come
first. For being able to manage this, teachers
with a Math or Science background preferably, will
be trained across the state through the
decentralised training capabilities of the Bhoj
Open University. www.bhojvirtualuniversity.com/it/headstart.htm
Lok Mitra 13. The
Lok Mitra project was formally dedicated to the
people of Hamirpur in Himachal Pradesh as a pilot
phase on the 8th of May 2001. The services offered
include information about vacancies, tenders,
market rates, matrimonial services, village
e-mail. An interesting feature is that citizens
can use the IT enabled system as a grievance
redress system. The LokMitra INTRANET set up in
the district Hamirpur consists of two
Pentium-III-based Servers (Under WindowsNT), with
4 Pentium-III-based Client systems and a Router,
set up in a LAN using HUB, in a separate room at
the Deputy Commissioner office, Hamirpur, named as
LokMitra Soochnalaya. A total of 25 panchayats
have been identified for setting up Citizen
Information Centres. The project will be extended
to cover all the districts of Himachal Pradesh. www.himachal.nic.in/lokmitra.htm
Mahiti Shakti 14.
Launched in 2001, the portal
www.mahitishakti.net operates like a single window
through which the citizens can access information
related to all aspects of the government’s
functioning, various benefit schemes and services
ranging from obtaining ration cards to getting
sanction for old age pension. Anyone who wishes to
avail the benefit has to go to his/her nearest
designated STD/ISD kiosk, submit the necessary
documents to the Info Kiosk owner and fill in the
required form online. For online submission of
application, the Info Kiosk owner charges Rs. 10
for the application form and Rs 20 for submission.
The taluks of Halol, Kalol, Santrampur,
Jambughoda, Ghogamba, Kahmpur, Lunawada, Morwa and
Shahera have such info-kiosks.
OLTP 15. Launched
in the year 2002, the project connects 16
government departments in Andhra Pradesh on a
single network. All government records and
transaction procedure details at the district will
be centrally stored and managed on a single
Oracle9i database. The project seeks to serve the
Government department users and citizens in ten
villages of Shadnagar mandal, one village each in
Bijnepally and Jadcherla Mandals, Mahaboobnagar
District. Citizens in these pilot locales will be
able to conduct government department service
transactions efficiently through specially
designed internet-enabled kiosks. These
transactions can be carried out in English as well
as Telugu interfaces. http://www.ap-it.com/
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