Circuit

More turnover at USDA; Evans’ GPS woes; It’s not the A list; Facebook: More than a dating service

Two more officials are leaving the Agriculture Department. Late last month, , administrator of the Transportation Department’s Research and Innovative Technology Administration, sent an e-mail message to his employees informing them that would be joining the organization as deputy administrator. McQueary had served as USDA’s assistant chief information officer for information technology transformation programs. Meanwhile, , USDA’s associate CIO for cybersecurity, announced he is leaving to take a job at the Housing and Urban Development Department. These are the latest in a series of departures from USDA’s CIO organization, which has lost , and in recent weeks. March Madness will be on us soon, and many people will be tuned in to college basketball. In that spirit, we have decided that March is going to be Government Movie Madness on FCW.com. We got the idea from a book titled “The Enlightened Bracketologist: The Final Four of Everything,” edited by and . The book compiles March Madness-style brackets on just about everything. In the bracket for the best chief executive officer, beat out . There are brackets for celebrity sports couples ( and beat out and ). The item most likely to survive past the 21st century (shoelaces beat out silk) and talk show hosts ( bested ). Taking a page from that enjoyable book, FCW will host a bracket of the best government- themed movies. We will make the pairings, but you will do the voting at FCW.com. Find more information, including links to the latest FCW.com poll, the list of movies and the brackets, at FCW.com’s Download at . We will also print the list in the March 24 issue of Federal Computer Week. The initial rounds will be fast — two to three days — so visit the site often. The government IT community is famous for its breakfast meetings. So when , the Office of Management and Budget’s administrator for e-government and IT, agreed to appear for her annual post-budget presentation at AFCEA International’s Bethesda, Md., chapter breakfast, it was no small sacrifice. Evans lives in the panhandle of West Virginia, which is a healthy commute, particularly given the Washington area’s traffic. This year, however, Evans was late. She had travel problems that were so bad she joked she almost called somebody at the Transportation Department. Apparently, construction in the area caused problems for her car’s GPS device. “We all get so dependent on technology, don’t we?” Evans asked. No agency wants to find one of its IT project on OMB’s watch list, which means the project has problems and OMB has concerns about it. However, the agency seems to be concerned about one of its own projects. One of its two Exhibit 300 business cases landed on the watch list — and it’s the IT administrator’s project. Speaking to reporters after a budget briefing, Evans revealed that the project was hers, but she wouldn’t say what it was. However, Evans said she was confident that the project would be erased from the watch list by March. Getting Evans’ project off the watch list will free more time for OMB to keep an eye on other agencies’ activities. The government’s youngest workers grew up with the Internet, and now young feds are changing how agencies operate, said , the Defense Department’s deputy CIO. He made his comments at the Federal Networks 2008 conference in McLean, Va. Members of the Net Generation — those post-baby boomers who don’t know a world without the Internet — work hard and enthusiastically, Wennergren said. However, their managers must adjust to the way that generation works and lives. For example, young people rarely use e-mail. Instead, they chat with one another online, send text messages and communicate through social networks, such as Facebook. “If you think Facebook is a way to get a date, you’re wrong,” Wennergren said. The new workforce uses Second Life for real-life issues. “If you think Second Life is a game, you’re getting old,” Wennergren said.  
More turnover at USDA


Paul BrubakerCheryl McQueary



Lynn Allen

Bob SudaChris NiedermayerJerry Williams

March (government movie) Madness




Mark Reiter Richard Sandomir



Warren BuffettJack WelchJoe DiMaggioMarilyn MonroeAndre Agassi Steffi GrafJohnny CarsonOprah Winfrey



www.fcw.com/ download

Evans’ GPS woes
Karen Evans







It’s not the A list






Facebook: More than a dating service
Dave Wennergren