More On IT Shakeup At Social Security
From Information Week Government:
After a shakeup in the Social Security  Administration's IT organization, the agency's CIO [Chief Information Officer], Frank Baitman, has  abruptly resigned. His departure follows a decision by commissioner  Michael Astrue to shift most of the agency CIO's responsibilities to  deputy commissioner for systems, Kelly Croft....
 Baitman's departure brings to a close a nine-year experiment with the  agency's CIO's office that, according to some observers and former  officials, never resolved the fractured line of authority between IT  spending and operations that separated the CIO and the office of  systems. 
 According to Feig, who left the agency in June, one of the primary  reasons for the break-up of Social Security's IT [Information Technology] department was Astrue's  perception that Baitman failed to advance the agency's strategic plan.  In an interview with InformationWeek, Feig said there was a  split on IT vision at the agency, with Baitman's office pushing an  aggressive agenda to transform its IT systems while saving money over  the long-term, and Croft sticking with the agency's old but proven  mainframe systems, most of which still run the decades-old Cobol  programming language. 
Feig's downfall came after the Office of Management and Budget sought  input on the strategic direction of Social Security's IT systems, and  Feig, who joined the agency last year from the private sector, responded  with a version of the strategy he was brought in to develop. Feig's  strategy is described in a document titled, "SSA-2020: Vision and  Strategy." However, the commissioner didn't endorse the vision's  sweeping nature, and Feig said he was asked to leave for engaging the  White House without authority to do so. ... 
And Social Security's inspector general is  working on an audit of the agency's software environment. The audit will  address the agency's plans to evolve away from Cobol, its continued use  of Cobol in an era of Web-based apps, its ability to hire and retain  staff trained in Cobol, and the work involved in re-engineering the  agency's Cobol code in modern programming languages.  
 
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
4 comments:
Okay, let me get this straight. We've got two former IBM guys (Baitman and Feig), the latter of whom is an IEEE Fellow and holds 27 patents (See http://www.thecloudcomputing.org/2009/2/panels.html) versus Kelly Croft, who started as a service representative with Social Security 30 years ago (See http://www.informationweek.com/news/government/leadership/231002084). I'm sorry. I would have gone with the IBM folks.
It's funny, I have been saying that if a private sector computer expert came in and looked at what kinds of systems and software SSA uses to try to do its work, they would spend the first week laughing their butts off. So it seems to be.
@ anon 2...are you sure they would stop laughing after a week?
Kelly Croft is well-respected and has proven himself as a company man -- very loyal to the head honchos. Interesting that Astrue has chopped off the heads of several of Obama's choices. I'm surprised Astrue still has his job. Baitman was the right guy but the timing was off. He would have had more of a blank check, and agency loyalty would not have been an issue, had Baitman entered under an Obama-chosen Commissioner.
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