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Dec. 15, 2004 Issue of CIO Magazine | In this section....

GOVERNMENT

What It's Like To....
Be The First CIO Of The U.S. Senate

BY J. GREG HANSON | assistant sergeant at arms and cio for the u.s. senate.



What It's Like To...
Introduction
Achieve 100% Uptime
Send People into Danger
Survive Charley
Take Your Application Source Code Out of Escrow
Bear Witness To IT History
Walk In Your Customers' Shoes
Move a Company to Open Source
Work For A 24/7 Entrepreneur
Be The Last Man Standing
Bond On Mt. Fuji
Be An Early Adopter
Lose Your Job
Save Four Lives
Pull The Plug On A Multimillion-Dollar Project
Brief The President
Testify Before Congress
Be The First CIO Of The U.S. Senate
Walk Into An IT Disaster
Get The Job
Not Get The Job
Build The World's Most Powerful Supercomputer
Be The Fall Guy
Live In A Two-CIO Family
Move To A New Industry
Survive The Pentagon Attack
Take A Real Vacation
Be Treated Like A Rock Star
Be An American Abroad
Catch A Killer
Be Different
Work In Iraq
Be A Man In A Woman's World
Be Hired By The FBI
Start Your Own Company
Save $55,000
Fire Half Your Staff
Downshift Your Life
Go From CIO To CEO
 
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I was CTO of a high-tech firm in Northern Virginia, and then one day in early 2003 I got a call from Bill Pickle, the sergeant at arms for the U.S. Senate. He told me that the Senate was interested in raising its level of technological sophistication and wanted to know if I would be interested in being its first CIO. I thought about it for maybe a nanosecond.

Contrary to some perceptions, the technology I found in the Senate is actually quite good. I'm responsible for technology vision, leadership and the general information infrastructure. I work with everyone from the network administrators at the 137 Senate offices to the senators themselves to make sure that everything is running the way it should. (Each of the 100 senators and 37 Senate committees and leadership offices are responsible for their own LANs.) It's like running a mall in the sense that the stores have their own systems, but I need to provide the water and the electricity. The senators are very tech savvy. They have BlackBerrys and PDAs, and a couple of times a year I organize emerging technology conferences where vendors and industry leaders come to talk about technology trends and products.

I'm interested in politics and I'm interested in history, but what attracted me to the job had more to do with the opportunity to serve. What I love about my job is the sense of honor and responsibility that comes with it. Sometimes I have to serve late-night duty and I get to walk around the Capitol at 9 or 10 when there's nobody else here. During President Reagan's funeral I escorted former President Bush and Mrs. Bush through the Capitol rotunda. These are special moments.

—As told to Ben Worthen


 Walk Into An IT Disaster




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In the Dec. 15, 2004 Issue of CIO:

http://www.cio.com/CIO

CIO Magazine - December 15, 2004
© 2004 CXO Media Inc.


http://www.cio.com/archive/121504/cio_government.html




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