De-Materializing Local Public Administration Processes Giancarlo Ballauco1 , Paolo Ceravolo2 , Ernesto Damiani3 , Fulvio Frati2 , and Francesco Zavatarelli2 1 I-Conn, Trento, Italy giancarlo.ballauco@nitidaimmagine.it 2 Computer Science Department, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy {paolo.ceravolo, fulvio.frati, francesco.zavatarelli}@unimi.it 3 Etisalat British Telecom Innovation Center/Khalifa University, Abu Dhabi, UAE ernesto.damiani@kustar.ac.ae Abstract. We describe a framework for the de-materialization of local public administration processes that provides remote assistance by hu- man operators when needed. Our framework is in an advanced state of development and will be tested in several municipalities of the province of Trento (Italy). Like many European countries, Italy is merging little municipalities into districts in order to streamline local services, re-organize staff, and reduce indirect costs [4]. As local services get relocated to municipalities chosen as district leaders, citizens face longer trips and increased inconvenience in accessing services. This situation has triggered research [1, 2] on technologies able to de-materialize Local Public Administration (LPA) processes, providing remote access to them via smartphones or special-purpose access points located in schools, shopping malls, and shops. Experience has shown that citizens used to face-to-face interactions find hard to access LPA processes via Web sites. Whenever processes involve choices that may generate a penalty (for instance, paying a local tax) users require the assistance of a human [3, 4]. Our solution relies on a platform that executes all LPA process steps re- motely, calling in a human operator when necessary. The level of assistance is context-dependent, i.e. takes into account the task at hand, the logistics of the point of access, the age, hearing and eyesight capabilities of the user as well as the current state of the Internet connection and access devices. If the user looks uncertain or confused, the remote assistance gets activated automatically without waiting for the specific request. In our system, LPA processes are described using BPMN. The standard BPMN palette has been extended with specific elements associate to proprietary scripts capable to detect and activate the right assistance level and send direct commands to I/O devices (printer, scanner, . . . ). We defined a set of heuris- tic rules [5] that evaluate the context (for instance ConnectionQualityLevel 312 PNSE’15 – Petri Nets and Software Engineering > 3) and decide the action to deal with it, e.g. StartAudioCall. Our rules are written as annotations to the BPMN diagram. Fig. 1 shows an extended BPMN diagram, where icons in the upper left corner of each activity determine the type of rule implemented in the activity. Fig. 1. Example of enriched BPMN diagram. Conclusions and Future Work Our solution for de-materializing LPA processes preserves human assistance to users. Our BPMN extension expresses the interaction types that can be activated for each activity. References 1. S. Armenia, D. Canini, and N. Casalino. A System Dynamics Approach to the Paper Dematerialization Process in the Italian Public Administration. Interdisciplinary Aspects of Information Systems Studies, Springer, 2008. 2. N. Mirabella, L. Rigamonti, and S. Scalbi. Life cycle assessment of Information and Communication Technology application: a case study of dematerialization in the Italian Public Administration. Journal of Cleaner Production, vol. 44, pp. 115-122, 2013. 3. J. Becker, B. Niehaves, P. Bergener, and M. Raeckers. Digital Divide in eGovern- ment: The eInclusion Gap Model. Electronic Government Lecture Notes in Com- puter Science, vol. 5184, pp. 231-242, 2008. 4. M.J. Goldsmith, E.C. Page, eds. Changing Government Relations in Europe. From Localism to Intergovernmentalism. Oxon, Routledge, 2010. 5. Y. Sakurai, K. Takada, M. Anisetti, V. Bellandi, P. Ceravolo, E. Damiani, and S. Tsuruta. Toward sensor-based context aware systems. Sensors 12:1, pp. 632-649, 2012.