NICHOLSON OPPOSES MAKING VA CIO AN UNDERSECRETARY
--
"The title you give someone, that's not going to
fix anything."

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http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/0706/072006p1.htm
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VA chief opposes making CIO an undersecretary
By Daniel Pulliam
dpulliam@govexec.com
Veterans Affairs Department Secretary James Nicholson said Thursday it is
unnecessary to elevate the agency's chief information officer to the
undersecretary level, as proposed in legislation moving quickly through the
House.
At a hearing, Nicholson told the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee that
information technology and information security are "staff functions" and
that policy directives recently issued in response to the department's early
May data breach have sufficiently empowered the CIO at the assistant
secretary level.
Nicholson said the VA functions effectively with the existing three
undersecretaries - for health, benefits, and burial and memorial affairs --
each with operational responsibility over their respective components.
"The title you give someone, that's not going to fix anything," Nicholson
said. "Underlying all of this is leadership, commitment and sound
management... It's how it's implemented. It's the cultural change."
The House legislation (H.R. 5835), proposed by House Veterans Affairs'
Committee Chairman Steve Buyer, R-Ind., would create a new undersecretary of
information services within the VA who would also serve as CIO. The bill
also would establish requirements for notification of data breaches.
In addition, it would create three deputy undersecretary positions beneath
the CIO: information security, operations and management, and policy and
planning.
Proponents of granting the CIO undersecretary status argue that, at that
level, the CIO would be able to go directly to the secretary on policy
matters and participate in executive level decision-making.
Former VA CIOs John Gauss and Robert McFarland voiced support for the move
in a House Veterans' Committee hearing Tuesday, stating that it is important
for the CIO to be involved in decision-making.
"I watched the CIO try to lead the change process, and at every forum that
he would call, the principal deputies would show up and [the change] was
prevented," Gauss said.
At a markup of the House legislation Thursday, Veterans' Affairs Committee
members quickly approved Buyer's legislation. It could go to the House floor
as soon as the Congressional Budget Office produces a cost estimate.
Buyer said he expects the legislation to move to the full House in
September, despite talk of moving the bill before the August recess. There
is no companion bill in the Senate.
Buyer's attempt last year to centralize IT security was stymied by Senate
Veterans' Affairs Committee Chairman Larry Craig, R-Idaho, who said in an
interview with Government Executive Thursday he does not know whether he
would accept the House provision elevating the CIO to the undersecretary
level, should the bill move to the Senate.
Craig said he wants to avoid legislating changes in the executive branch
because he does not believe Congress can "design the perfect system."
But Craig said he will speak with Buyer and see that some changes are made,
"whether it is under this secretary's design, or whether it's under what
Chairman Buyer wants to do in the House."
"We're not going to tolerate this any longer," Craig said. "There is not
going to be another IG report coming to the Congress that [says] 'Once again
warned and nothing happened.' "
Congressional sources said while it is unlikely the provision elevating the
CIO to an undersecretary will be enacted, it will be difficult for the
Senate to ignore the House bill as it did last year, because of the
publicity surrounding the May data breach.
---------------
Larry Scott
(go
back to VA Watchdog dot Org Home Page)
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