The City of Phoenix serves more than 1.6 million residents across essential services from water and public safety to aviation and public transportation. Citizens depend on Phoenix's technology infrastructure for everything from paying water bills to keeping the always-on transit fare systems for buses and Sky Harbor International Airport, one of the largest airports in the country, up and running.
Jerry Simpson, Deputy CIO for Enterprise Infrastructure Services for the City of Phoenix, leads a 40-person team responsible for keeping critical systems running 24/7 for 18,000 city employees. His career spans 25 years with Phoenix and 10 years prior with the state of Arizona, giving him a deep perspective on government technology challenges.
"From an IT standpoint, we are the ones that keep the lights on," says Simpson. "So nobody's really screaming when things are working. When they're screaming is when something goes down."
The challenge facing Phoenix was significant: supporting existing systems that have been around for up to 20 years while simultaneously adding modern systems connected to Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud Kubernetes Engine environments. This created what Simpson calls "application sprawl," where the city purchases the best solutions but ends up using only 15% of their capabilities, leading to multiple disparate systems that are difficult to integrate and manage.