New government website goes live
A Government website that will save taxpayers up to £70 million by replacing other online public services is going live.
Users will be able to carry out a raft of tasks at GOV.UK, including applying for driving licences, finding out travel information and looking for business advice.
Directgov and Business Link will now close and the new site will eventually take in governmental department websites, saving between £50 million and £70 million "over time", according to officials.
GOV.UK, which latest figures show has cost £18.7 million to build, will be easier and faster to use than the previous versions, according to ministers.
Cabinet Office Minister Francis Maude said: "GOV.UK is focused on the needs of users, not the needs of government. It has been planned, written, organised and designed around what users need to get done, not around the ways government want them to do it - providing only the content they need and nothing superfluous.
"Not only is the result simpler, clearer and faster for users, it will also cost taxpayers up to £70 million less per year than the services it replaces. We anticipate further substantial savings as more departments and agencies move on to the GOV.UK platform.
"In the way it has been built - and will continue to be updated and improved on the basis of experience and user feedback - GOV.UK is an example of how the Civil Service should keep continuously changing and improving and remain focused on outcomes.
"The public wants services to be delivered better, and with GOV.UK we are responding with a digital platform that makes services quicker and easier to use, and produces efficiencies for government."
Quick Links
Latest News
Latest Sport
Olympic legacy for local sports clubs
- Jewish businesswoman Sam Caldicott slams anti-HS2 group for 'disgusting' video
- Stafford Hospital A&E consultant calls for 'an end to mud-slinging'
- Shoppers mourn loss of town centre "flagship" store
- Stafford MP Jeremy Lefroy calls for an end to 'hospital bitterness' after incidents mar peaceful protest
- Police aim to deliver a car crushing blow
- Volunteers sought for Stone clean up operation
Today's Features
Music
Julian Smith in Concert
Theatre
Paul Foot brings his Words to Wolverhampton
10 of the Best
10 of the Best... Japanese inspired pieces
Green Living
Is it time to charge for plastic bags?
Real Weddings
Celtic touches
