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Government information websites to close

Summary

The Transformational Government strategy was laid out in the 2005 publication "Transformational government: enabled by technology" (Cm. 6683), outlining a six year improvement journey for public services.

This is the first Transformational Government Annual Report, covering progress across the three main themes of the strategy: customer-centric services, shared services and professionalism.

The Annual Report states that, of 951 government information websites, 90 websites have already been closed and many more are expected to follow, including Urban Summit 2002, Drinking Water Inspectorate and Civil Service Statistics.

Some websites will remain for the major government departments and the majority of government information will be fed through two "supersites" - Directgov and Business Link. The popular NHS Direct will remain live.

A saving of around £9m a year over three years will be achieved by closing government websites that do not serve a useful purpose or are out-of-date.

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Law-Making Explained

This is a Command Paper (Cm. 6970): it is the Transformational Government Annual Report 2006 from the Chief Information Officer (CIO) Council.

Find out more about Command Papers.

How does it affect me?

If you need to access government information on a regular basis, this will affect you.

The move is designed "to make access to information easier", by allowing users to access government information quickly and easily from the key “supersites” rather than having to search for the information across numerous separate official websites.

More information can be found on the CIO website.

See the full Transformational Government implementation plan.

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