Page 38 - FCW, March/April 2018
P. 38

 2018 FEDERAL 100
                                          Joseph F. Klimavicz
CIO
Department of Justice
Cloud- rst for real. Klimavicz,
who is leading DOJ’s digital trans- formation, oversaw a department- wide initiative to move to a shared, cloud-based productivity suite and successfully migrated more than 80,000 users to the shared service in just 12 months. He also spearheaded data center consolidation efforts and is on track to take the department down to three data centers by March 2019. By moving more activities to the cloud, he is allowing Justice to focus on its mission rather than data center management. In addition, Klimavicz’s efforts are saving money and fostering collaboration across the department.
Roger Krone
Chairman and CEO
Leidos
The integrator. After closing a market-altering merger in 2017, Krone spend the year successfully driving the integration of Lockheed Martin’s IT business while continuing to put agency customers’ needs  rst. Leidos’ partnership with Cerner to develop the Defense Department’s electronic health record system is also crucial. The  rst real deployments happened late in the year, but that effort, along with the Department of Veterans Affairs’ decision to embrace the same platform, put Leidos at the center of what is arguably today’s biggest fed- eral IT project.
Tanya W. Lambert
Deputy, AF Program Executive Of cer for C3I and Networks
Department of the Air Force
Champion of the cloud. As a result of Lambert’s leadership in transition- ing Air Force operations to the cloud, over 2,000 public-facing applications and three internal enterprise resource planning systems are now consoli- dated and better secured on a shared cloud service. Lambert was able to transfer the applications by building a common computing environment and creating a new development meth- odology that drew on the expertise
of industry leaders. Her innovative approach to cloud transition has led to a standard hardware stack for the ERP apps and has reduced monthly reporting speeds from hours to minutes.
Evan Lee
CTO and Director of Digital Services, Of ce of Inspector General Department of Health and Human Services
Modernizing oversight. The HHS OIG is the largest in government, providing oversight of more than $1.2 trillion in spending. To adapt to an increasingly complex environment
for  ghting fraud, waste and abuse, Lee took on the challenge of  xing existing systems and persuaded an extremely risk-averse organization to modernize. The Enterprise Dash- board he and his team developed now allows the OIG to access data and provide accurate responses to con-
gressional inquiries in real time rather than months. His work helped the OIG detect the biggest Medicaid and Medicare fraud schemes in history, which had resulted in $1.3 billion in false billing.
Naomi Lefkovitz
Senior Privacy Policy Advisor
National Institute of Standards and Technology
The privacy keeper. Lefkovitz pro- motes the development of trustwor- thy systems that protect individuals’ privacy and civil liberties. In 2017, she published a NIST Internal Report that introduces a systems engineering approach to privacy, including a novel privacy risk model. Last year, she also contributed to multiple international privacy engineering standards and orchestrated the addition of privacy guidance to NIST’s Digital Identity Guidelines. Her work will enable organizations to engineer privacy
into their systems and move beyond a check-the-box compliance exercise to a risk-based approach that paral- lels enterprise information security programs.
          Joseph F. Klimavicz
Roger Krone
Tanya W. Evan Lee Naomi Lefkovitz Lambert
34 March/April 2018
FCW.COM





































































   36   37   38   39   40