Some state CIOs hope President-Elect Barack Obama's stimulus package will treat IT upgrades the same as other infrastructure-renewal projects With President-Elect Barack Obama proposing to spend billions of dollars on road and bridge projects as part of his economic stimulus plan, some state CIOs are hoping that their aging IT infrastructures might also qualify for makeovers.There’s a lot that needs to be updated. In an online survey of state CIOs conducted last summer by the National Association of State Chief Information Officers, nearly two-thirds of the 29 respondents said that between 40 and 80 percent of their IT setups consisted of legacy systems. And many reported that they were still running code written 20 or more years ago.[ See how old technology has already impacted one state’s budget in “California’s Cobol conundrum” | Your source for the latest in government IT news and issues: Subscribe to InfoWorld’s Government IT newsletter. ] Kyle Schafer, West Virginia’s chief technology officer and co-chairman of a NASCIO working group that wrote a report based on the survey results, plans to replace 92 long-used applications with an ERP system at an estimated cost of $40 million to $60 million.One of the selling points was lower operating costs. Schafer said that based on benchmarking done by a consulting firm, it costs West Virginia $33 to process an invoice, while states with modern ERP systems have an average processing cost of about $8.West Virginia has a budget surplus, but many other states are facing deficits. Schafer said he hopes that as part of any stimulus package, the Obama administration treats IT upgrades the same way as other infrastructure-renewal projects. This version of the story originally appeared in Computerworld ‘s print edition.Got something to add? Let us know in the article comments.Computerworld is an InfoWorld affiliate. Technology Industry