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What exactly is he he leading? It's not like there's a technology department of the US governement. There's a couple hundred.


The US Chief Technology Officer was set up in the E-Government Act of 2002, which states the role's responsibilities as:

* To provide effective leadership of Federal Government efforts to develop and promote electronic Government services and processes by establishing an Administrator of a new Office of Electronic Government within the Office of Management and Budget.

* To promote use of the Internet and other information technologies to provide increased opportunities for citizen participation in Government.

* To promote inter-agency collaboration in providing electronic Government services, where this collaboration would improve the service to citizens by integrating related functions, and in the use of internal electronic

* Government processes, where this collaboration would improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the processes.

* To improve the ability of the Government to achieve agency missions and program performance goals. To promote the use of the Internet and emerging technologies within and across Government agencies to provide citizen-centric Government information and services.

* To reduce costs and burdens for businesses and other Government entities.

* To promote better informed decision making by policy makers.

* To promote access to high quality Government information and services across multiple channels. To make the Federal Government more transparent and accountable.

* To transform agency operations by utilizing, where appropriate, best practices from public and private sector organizations.

* To provide enhanced access to Government information and services in a manner consistent with laws regarding protection of personal privacy, national security, records retention, access for persons with disabilities, and other relevant law

( lifted from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-Government_Act_of_2002#Provis... )


Too bad the wiki doesn't give any information about what power he actually has. Does he control any budget? Get to make appointments of his own? fire people?


To hazard a guess, no on all three. I say this only because they are not specifically enumerated.

But I do not know. Agreed. These are good questions.


> It's not like there's a technology department of the US governement.

True, hundreds of IT departments. But in a central role there is now the US Digital Service (created last year):

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Digital_Service




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