Operationalizing Open UI: Governance, Conformance, and Modular Procurement
Open UI modernization is not just a technical architecture. It requires a public operating model that preserves government authority, objective compatibility, and meaningful competition.
Why General Modularity Is Not Enough
Breaking a large system into parts does not automatically reduce risk. If the boundaries are private, tests are subjective, or one vendor controls certification, modularity can become another form of lock-in.
Public Interfaces And Neutral Stewardship
A durable model needs public interface expectations, versioning rules, state-inclusive review, and neutral stewardship. DOL or another designated public authority should determine the authoritative baseline.
Executable Conformance
Conformance turns compatibility from a claim into evidence. Objective, reproducible tests allow qualified vendors, states, open-source projects, and managed-service providers to demonstrate that their capabilities satisfy the same expectations.
Incremental State Adoption
States should be able to validate one capability at a time, keep control of eligibility law and business rules, and expand only when value and readiness are demonstrated.
Integrity Evidence
UI modernization must preserve traceability, auditability, and operational oversight. Integrity profiles can define evidence requirements before a capability is relied on in production.
Modular Procurement
The Store model is intended to reduce duplicative acquisition effort while preserving applicable competition, approvals, security review, funding controls, and state procurement authority.
Controlled Technical Detail
Detailed governance materials, conformance logic, source materials, and implementation methods should remain available through controlled review rather than unrestricted publication.