Halifax AG says municipality's website riddled with problems after 2017 launch - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Halifax AG says municipality's website riddled with problems after 2017 launch

Halifaxs auditor general has outlined several problems with the launch of the most recent iteration of the municipalitys website. She blamed insufficient testing prior to its launch.

Broken links, parking ticket payment system not fixed prior to release

Evangeline Colman-Sadd, Halifax's auditor general, criticized the launch of the municipality's new website. (CBC)

Halifax's auditor general has outlined several problems with the launch ofthe most recent iteration of the municipality's website.

Evangeline Colman-Sadd presented the report to the municipality's audit and finance standing committee on Tuesday.

She found that the website, which launched in 2017, went live before several known problems were fixed, including broken links, missing pagesand a faulty parking ticket payment system.

Colman-Sadd blamed insufficient testing on some aspects of the site prior to its launch.

"With the paid parking portion of the site, there wasn't enough testing done," she said. "It just didn't work properly."

The report said the system experienced errors in processing credit card payments and reconciling paid tickets. It also said management believed it was necessary to get public feedback by launching the site before fixing the outstanding problems.

City hall with its clock tower and three-story facade stands over grassy areas of a large square
The auditor general's report said the new website was launched before outstanding problems were fixed. (Robert Short/CBC)

Website problems were initially being fixed as complaints came in from the public.The city's information, communication, and technology division is now running software to detect and fix broken links on the site.

Colman-Sadd said a new payment system will be implemented later this year.

Part of Tuesday's presentation was made behind closed doors, but Colman-Sadd would not comment on that portion of the meeting.

"It's not a matter where there's a fraud," she said.

The report said two senior managers had not signed off on testing prior to the site's launch.