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California Public Sector CIO Academy Honors Innovative IT Leaders

Judges selected individuals who led effective teams, most faithfully served their organizations and constituencies, exhibited innovative thinking, and promoted information sharing and collaboration across California government.

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Before the lights went out at the 2016 California Public Sector CIO Academy at the Sheraton Grand Hotel on Feb. 25, California’s technology leaders dreamed of their names etched in Lucite. The Center for Digital Government, sister organization to Government Technology, concluded the 15th annual event with an award ceremony recognizing the most innovative and hard-working government technology workers in the state.

Along with sessions on women in leadership, future hacking technology trends and tools, and the evolving role of the CIO, to name just a few, was an award ceremony in which 38 individuals were recognized for their effective leadership, faithful service to their organizations and constituencies, innovative thinking, and promotion of information sharing and collaboration across California government.


And for the first time in the award's history, local government officials were represented. In addition to those presented IT leadership awards, eight were named CIO or CTO of the year in their respective categories.

And the Winners Are ...

The CIO of the Year award in the Large State Department or Agency category was presented to the California Highway Patrol's Scott Howland for his many achievements, and for his continued perseverance in keeping the state’s technology fresh as his agency continues to pursue new technologies and ideas, evidenced by plans for a body camera pilot program.

Howland led the statewide deployment of the California Accident Reporting System (CARS) that eliminated manually entering collision reports into the state’s database and the launch of the CHP’s public website redesign; he replaced two old systems for tracking commercial motor vehicle terminal inspections with a single modern system, and completed a statewide vendor transition from Novell to Microsoft.

“I do want to say this, it’s quite the honor," Howland said,  "but as [state CIO] Carlos [Ramos] has said before, it’s all about the team. And whenever I talk about the Highway Patrol in public, I talk about the fact that it’s a team sport. You see the black and white car on the highway providing service to the public or arresting that drunk driver, helping people that need help and making sure you get home safely, but the amazing part is the huge team behind it. And I just happen to have the pleasure and the honor to lead an amazing team of people to do IT to enable those officers to do it."

Howland added how cool it is that he has such a great staff — a great team that he said deserves all the credit for the award, "because it’s our hard work that really enables our folks on the street to save lives. They actually take a huge part in saving lives and providing service to the public."

And there were four more CIO of the Year awards presented, two in the Small or Medium Department or Agency category and two in the Local Government category.

Ron Robinette, data processing manager III and CIO for the California Department of Community Services and Development was awarded in the Small or Medium Department or Agency category for his commitment to building morale within his organization and mastery of technological leadership. Judges noted reports of increased communication, technological advancement and people-focused management strategies in their consideration. Robinette’s nomination was accompanied by a testimonial to his passion for people, technology and leadership.

Scott Christman, CIO for the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development, also was awarded in the Small or Medium Department or Agency category, and is renowned for leading the maturation of the organization’s open data portal, which now houses more than 150 health-related data sets.

His vision was acclaimed for his service to the agency’s mission and a re-engineering of the IT arm’s organizational structure. Christman led development of a business intelligence dashboard that provides executives with critical data for making decisions and replacing a two-week manual reporting process with a robust interface that is refreshed daily. It was through Christman’s diligence and under his leadership that his agency remained the only government organization to participate in a pilot from the American Health Information Management Association’s data and information governance maturity model.


Local Government CIO of the Year awards were presented to Nevada County CIO Steve Monaghan and Alameda County CIO Tim Dupuis.

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Tim Dupuis, CIO of Alameda County, accepted the CIO of the Year Award in the Local Government category at the Public CIO Academy ceremony Thursday evening in Sacramento. Photo by Eyragon Eidam

Judges were impressed by Dupuis’ commitment to citizen engagement through public hackathons branded by the county under the name Rethink AC, and employee-only hackathons called App Challenges that together generated more than 190 ideas and 10 apps that push the county’s service offerings onward. Dupuis was recognized as a people-oriented leader who promotes continuous training and growth while establishing new roles within the organization to allow the county to compete with the private sector for emerging talent. The CIO led large system upgrades that passed without major catastrophe and at relatively low cost, including a rewrite of the county’s decades-old criminal justice system.

“I do want to certainly thank the CIO Academy for honoring local government and government CIOs, Dupuis said upon accepting his award, and echoed Howland and other winners' sentiments that work done is a team effort. "And I am really, really honored to work for a tremendous leadership team and our county board of supervisors and our county administrator. But also to have a tremendous, a fantastic team of people supporting me, people in IT supporting me in some of the crazy ideas we come up with. Again, thank you for the honor of the award, and thank you for all the hard work that you do.”

Monaghan was awarded for both his achievements and his longevity, having served Nevada County for the past 16 years. During his tenure, Monaghan has led his rural county from a position of obscurity to high esteem — the Center for Digital Government has ranked the county highly in each iteration of the Digital Counties Survey for the past 12 years.

Monaghan leads a multi-county website information architecture development team used by counties across the state. He led local cable TV franchise negotiations that yielded a public-sector fiber network that today connects many county agencies. Monaghan helped build a cloud-based video streaming platform and assisted the county in securing $16 million to build a fiber-to-the home gigabit network. Judges were impressed by Monaghan’s dedication to technology, his community and the schools that his projects frequently served.

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Steve Monaghan, CIO of Nevada County, accepted the CIO of the Year Award in the Local Government category at the Public CIO Academy ceremony Thursday evening in Sacramento. Photo by Eyragon Eidam

“It is certainly an honor and privilege to be part of the program,” he said after expressing thanks for his award. “As counties, we are a legal subdivision of state government, so we can’t do what we do at our level without all the good work and hard work and innovation you do in this room. On behalf of all of California’s 58 counties, I’d just like to say thank you to all of you.”

The CTO of the Year award in the large department or agency category was jointly awarded to Kem Musgrove and Marlene White of the California Franchise Tax Board for co-managing its Enterprise Data to Revenue (EDR) project, the largest tax project in the agency’s history. Musgrove and White met 10 major releases on time, generating more than $2 billion for the state.

The leadership of programs like EDR allows the state to provide citizens a higher level of service and transparency, while reducing the tax gap that has for years put a burden on the state. Without their leadership, the Center for Digital Government was told that such phenomenal progress on such an important project would not have been possible.

The CTO of the Year award also was presented to the California Natural Resources Agency's Tony Morshed, who is credited with championing a new style of IT within his agency that promotes the use of technologies that foster efficiency and innovation. Morshed knocked down silos and increased agency agility, and is responsible for modernizing the agency’s technology to the tune of 5,500 virtual servers, 11 petabytes of data storage, 2,600 applications and 1,254 networked sites. Under his leadership, 33 of his agency’s organizations were given the support needed to transform their businesses and serve the citizens, all to meet the agency’s mission of protecting California’s natural, historical and cultural resources.




Below is the full list award honorees from the 2016 California Public Sector CIO Academy:


CIO of the Year Small or Medium State Department or Agency

Scott Christman, Chief Information Officer, Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development, State of California

CIO of the Year Small or Medium State Department or Agency

Ron Robinette, Data Processing Manager III/ Chief Information Officer, Department of Community Services and Development, State of California

CIO of the Year Large State Department or Agency

Scott Howland, Chief Information Officer, California Highway Patrol, State of California

CIO of the Year Local Government

Tim Dupuis, Chief Information Officer, Alameda County, State of California

CIO of the Year Local Government

Steve Monaghan, Chief Information Officer, County of Nevada, State of California

CTO of the Year Large State Department or Agency

Kem Musgrove, Chief Technologist, Run, Franchise Tax Board, State of California

Marlene White, Chief Technologist, Plan, Franchise Tax Board, State of California

CTO of the Year Large State Department or Agency

Tony Morshed, Chief Technology Officer, California Natural Resources Agency, State of California

IT Leadership Award

Catherine Bae, Data Processing Manager II, Department of Industrial Relations, Office of Information Services, State of California

Clyde Blaisdell, Chief of Enterprise Development and Data Services, Department of Water Resources, State of California

Manveer Bola, DPM IV, Department of Technology, Policy Office, State of California

Alex Bonnifield, Information Security Officer, California High Speed Rail Authority, State of California

Nanny Bosch, MS, PMP, Project Management Group Manager/DPM II, California Department of Motor Vehicles, State of California

Jim Brockett, Chief Information Officer, California Tahoe Conservancy, State of California

Tim Brown, Application Development Manager, CalPERS, Information Technology Services Branch (ITSB), Enterprise Solutions Development Division (ESDD), State of California

Barbara Brumbaugh, Agency Information Technology Customer Relationship Manager, California Natural Resources Agency, State of California

Mary Calleja, CNRA Project Management Office Chief, California Natural Resources Agency, State of California

Ramiro Carrazco, Section Chief, Enterprise Service Management, CalPERS, Information Technology Services Branch (ITSB), Information Technology Performance & Accountability Division (IPAD), State of California

Jigme Chhimi, Web Design and Support Supervisor, CA Department of Transportation, State of California

Susanna Chung, Manager, Database Support Section, Franchise Tax Board, State of California

Patrick Dennis, DPM IV, Department of Technology, Information Technology Service Division, State of California

James Eidson, Systems Software Specialist II (Acting Supervisor), California Department of Transportation (Caltrans), State of California

Tamiko Epps, Senior ISA Supervisor, Department of Conservation, State of California

Alex Fakhreddine, Staff Information Systems Analyst (Supervisor), California Highway Patrol, State of California

Jamie Gillette, Manager, Personal Income Tax Testing and Support Section Franchise Tax Board, State of California

Lela Kruger, Program Manager/Senior ISA Supervisor, California Department of Motor Vehicles, State of California

Theresa LaClaire, Data Processing Manager III, California Department of Insurance, State of California

Dave Madrigal, Information Technology Services Chief, Sierra Nevada Conservancy, State of California

Cindy Maloney, Section Chief, Server & Infrastructure Management, CalPERS, Information Technology Services Branch (ITSB), Data Center Management Division (DCMD), State of California

Suzie McBride, Manager, Enterprise Operational Data Section, Franchise Tax Board, State of California

Michael Muth, FI$Cal Communications Manager, FI$Cal, State of California

Christie Nakatsuka, Supervisor Service Desk Management Unit, CalPERS Information Technology Services Branch (ITSB) Customer Technology Support Division (CTSD), State of California

Reza Namin, Senior Cloud Engineer, Department of Water Resources, State of California

Michael Todd, Marketing Manager, California Department of Technology, External Affairs & Communications Division, State of California

Ivan Vida, SSSIII, Department of Conservation, State of California

Sonja Ward, Test Group 2 Manager/Senior ISA Supervisor, California Department of Motor Vehicles, State of California

Lynn Weydert, DPMIII, Department of Conservation, State of California

Joyce Yerby, System Software Specialist II (Supervisor), California Department of Transportation (Caltrans), State of California





This story was originally published on Government Technology.

 

Colin has been writing for Government Technology since 2010. He lives in Seattle with his wife and their dog. He can be reached at cwood@govtech.com and on Google+.