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Integration a challenge for new homeland security agency

February 28, 2003 12:00 PM ET

Computerworld - The official activation dates for the new Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the nation's first Terrorist Threat Integration Center (TTIC) are fast approaching. But experts warn that true enterprise integration is many months, if not years, in the future.
The new DHS will be legally activated tomorrow, marking the initial reassignment of various federal security agencies to the new organization. Likewise, by May 1, the director of Central Intelligence must have in place the TTIC, a joint information-sharing effort by the CIA, the FBI, the DHS and the State Department initiated by President George W. Bush in his State of the Union Address.
While most security and IT experts say neither of these efforts is technologically impossible, all agree that issues of policy, process, privacy and security will pose the greatest challenge to true enterprise integration.
"Everybody says this is an extraordinary task, it's a difficult task, it can't be done," Secretary of Homeland Security Tom Ridge said on Tuesday. "We understand that as we merge some of these different units together, we have to have a sensitivity as to how business was conducted in the past ... as we work together to do a better job and build even more capacity. ... But we understand that tradition, we understand that history, we understand that culture."
The central debate revolving around the integration of these critical organizations will be deciding between two competing IT architectural approaches, said William McKnight, president of McKnight Associates Inc., a Dallas-based data warehousing and customer relationship management consulting firm.
"There is an enterprise data warehouse approach [under consideration], and then there is a federated type approach," said McKnight. "I think ultimately there will have to be some combination of both in a final solution for something of this magnitude."
In an enterprise data warehouse approach, multiple databases would feed data into a single database where data would conform to a common standard and be cleansed, integrated and available in a single instance. "Sometimes, however, this approach gets a black eye," said McKnight, explaining that those who implement it often try to do too much at one time. "The first iteration proves the architecture. Then you get a solid tool set and get the processes in place. And then you add data sources over the course of time. The reality is that you never get to an end state; you keep going."
He said, however, that elements of a federated data mart approach might be useful to the homeland security effort. "There may be certain



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