Munich's IT transition: open-source is the default for the new coalition
10 hours ago
- #municipal IT
- #digital sovereignty
- #open-source
- Munich's new 'Mango Coalition' (Greens/Rosa List, SPD, FDP/Free Voters) sets Open Source as the standard for municipal software procurement from 2026 to 2032.
- The coalition emphasizes digital sovereignty, adopting the 'Public Money, Public Code' principle to make taxpayer-funded software publicly available.
- The Open-Source Program Office (OSPO) will be upgraded to coordinate projects, engage with communities, and reduce legal hurdles for publishing municipal developments.
- The FDP/Free Voters faction will lead the new Digital Department, aiming to reshape Munich's IT architecture to reduce dependency on large software corporations.
- Open Source is viewed as an economic necessity to save costs on license fees, avoid vendor lock-ins, and address budget constraints requiring annual savings of half a billion euros.
- Digitalization efforts will focus on media-break-free processes, the Once-Only Principle for data collection, and AI to boost efficiency amid staff declines in administration.
- The coalition commits to privacy by design, data economy, and user control over personal information in municipal identity systems.
- Strategic continuity is maintained by keeping Alexander Dietrich from the CSU as Municipal Director, indicating collegial cooperation during financial challenges.
- The agreement provides planning security for the IT and Open-Source community, with a strengthened OSPO and clear political responsibilities to prevent past internal resistance.
- Munich aims to regain its status as a digital pioneer by embedding digital sovereignty in its administration, with success depending on overcoming inertia in the next six years.