When it was unveiled in the early 1970s, BIRLS could securely exchange data and support numerous simultaneous users—impressive feats in that era. More than 100 VA IT systems were integrated with BIRLS, and by the late 1970s, daily transactions into the BIRLS datastore averaged 10,000 per day. By the mid-2000s, the daily average had increased to over 2.5 million, and the BIRLS mainframe provided secure storage for the records of more than 51 million veterans.
Later, close to 50 years into its tenure, BIRLS remained critical to VA’s mission of supporting military veterans and their families. Still, its aging technological foundations were causing challenges that could no longer be solved with band-aids and workarounds.
Mainframe computing was outdated and expensive to maintain. Development changes that could be accomplished in days using modern technologies and processes could take months or even years with BIRLS. Integrating the existing system with the modern IT architectures being built all around it required significant capital investments and the specialized knowledge of a rapidly dwindling number of mainframe experts.
Given BIRLS’s complexity, the sensitivity of the veterans’ data, and its critical centrality to VA’s many mission programs, replacing it with a system based on modern technology without interrupting essential operations would be a daunting challenge. Even after VA determined BIRLS needed replacing, it took more than 15 years and 13 failed attempts before success was achieved with a new technology partner—Booz Allen.