Organization, Roles and Responsibilities of the National CIO Office Karen S. Evans Administrator, Office of E-Government and Information Technology United.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter Seven, Section Four
Advertisements

Executive Office of the President and the Cabinet
EOP (Executive Office of the President). starter Which duty of the president do you think is most important?
The Bureaucracy Chapter 15
Chapter 15 Government at Work: Bureaucracy.
Government at Work: The Bureaucracy Chapter 15 Sections 1 & 2.
The Executive Office of the President Created in 1939 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Government at Work! The Bureacracy. Bureaucracy A bureaucracy is a large, complex administrative stucture that handles the everyday business of an organization.
Presidential Advisers and Executive Agencies
Chapter 15: Government at Work: The Bureaucracy Section 2
Unit 6 Chapter 8, Section 4 The Executive Office Mr. Young American Government.
CH THE EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT ADVANCED AMERICAN GOVERNMENT.
Executive Office of the President & the Federal Bureaucracy.
U.S. Federal Enterprise Architecture World Bank Seminar November 22, 2006 Dick Burk Chief Architect and Manager, Federal Enterprise Architecture Program,
Franca R. Jones Senior Policy Analyst Chemical and Biological Countermeasures National Security and International Affairs Remarks for the Interagency Board.
The Federal Bureaucracy. The combination of people, procedures, and agencies through which the federal government operates makes up the FEDERAL BUREAUCRACY.
Selection of the Cabinet Cabinet 15 secretaries Advise the president Administrators of large bureaucracies Vice President Other top officials.
Presidency & Executive Branch President of the United States, head of the Executive Branch of the federal government, and the most important and powerful.
Organization of the Executive Branch, President as Chief Executive Unit IV: The Presidency and the Bureaucracy Lesson 2 How is the Executive Branch organized.
Federal Court System Federal Bureaucracy Executive.
President’s Office of Science and Technology Policy Deborah D. Stine Specialist in Science and Technology Policy December 3, 2008.
Chapter 15: Government at Work: The Bureaucracy Section 2
I. Structure II. Coordination III. Staff.  I. The structure of the executive branch -State Department (Sec. of State) -Dpt of the Treasury -Dpt of the.
The Executive Branch #4 Staff Quiz tomorrow! Test on Thursday! State of the Union – tomorrow night !
Executive Branch. Executive Office Advise the president on important matters White House Staff – “the President’s people” Vice President – Only job given.
Government at Work: The Bureaucracy Chapter 15. THE EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT Section 2.
The Organization of the Executive Branch
Chapter 14 Section 5 Objective: To understand the executive agencies and the role of the cabinet.
The Executive Branch: The Chief Executive Unit 6: The Executive Branch and Bureaucracy.
Chapter 13 The Presidency. The Many Roles of the President chief of state – the role of the president as the ceremonial head of government chief executive.
Presented by Eliot Christian, USGS Accessibility, usability, and preservation of government information (Section 207 of the E-Government Act) April 28,
INFO 7470 Overview of the Federal Statistical System John M. Abowd and Lars Vilhuber February 1, 2016.
“Executive Departments & Cabinet” “Independent Agencies and Regulatory Commissions.
The Executive Office The Executive Office of the President (EOP) consists of individuals and agencies that directly assist the president. POTUS: President.
CHAPTER 15 Government at Work: The Bureaucracy. What Is a Bureaucracy? Hierarchical authority. Bureaucracies are based on a pyramid structure with a chain.
Government 8.1 The President. Constitution Article I – Legislative Branch – Congress – Makes laws Article II – Executive Branch – President and stuff.
Running the Executive Branch The Executive Office of the President and the Cabinet.
Executive Office of the President
Organization of the Executive Branch
Presidential Advisers and Executive Agencies. Organization of the Executive Branch President Officials handpicked by the president Lesser officials and.
Executive Branch of the United States. The President  Leads Executive Branch  Head of State/Head of Government  Highest Political Official in the U.S.
Chapter 10 The Presidency.
Helping the President. “Executive Departments & Cabinet” “Independent Agencies and Regulatory Commissions.
Presidential Bureaucracy
Helping the President To help the president with all of his/her many tasks, the “Executive Office of the President” (“EOP”) was created in This includes.
Tuesday January, 27, 2015 Agenda Homework Executive Agencies Notes
Executive Bureaucracy
The Presidency Express Powers.
Federal Bureaucracy.
Gov Review Video #30: The Executive Office
The Executive Agencies
The Organization of the Executive Branch
What is a Bureaucracy? It isn’t just red tape waste, and delay as
B4: Bureaucracies.
The Executive Office Ch 8 sec 4.
Executive Branch Chapter 15 The Bureaucracy – Government at Work
Executive Office of the President (EOP)
“Presidential Advisers and Executive Agencies”
THE EXECUTIVE OFFICE: The Executive Office of the President (EOP) includes people and agencies in the Executive Office of the President Objective; Understand.
Helping the President To help the president with all of his/her many tasks, the “Executive Office of the President” (“EOP”) was created in This includes.
Helping the President To help the president with all of his/her many tasks, the “Executive Office of the President” (“EOP”) was created in This includes.
Helping the President To help the president with all of his/her many tasks, the “Executive Office of the President” (“EOP”) was created in This includes.
Helping the President. “Executive Departments & Cabinet” “Independent Agencies and Regulatory Commissions.
“Executive Departments & Cabinet” Chapter Six, Section Four – “Independent Agencies and Regulatory Commissions.
PRESIDENTIAL ADVISORS & INDEPENDENT AGENCIES
THE U.S. PRESIDENT.
Institutions of American Government
US Foreign Policy Making Process
15.2 The Executive Office of the President.
Chapter 15 Section 2.
Presentation transcript:

Organization, Roles and Responsibilities of the National CIO Office Karen S. Evans Administrator, Office of E-Government and Information Technology United States Office of Management and Budget North American Day 2005

Organization White House Office Office of the Vice President Council of Economic Advisors Council on Environmental Quality National Security Council Office of Administration Office of Management and Budget Presidents Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board Office of National Drug Control Policy Office of Science and Technology Policy Office of the U.S. Trade Representative

Organization Director Deputy Director Deputy Director for Management OMB Wide Support Offices Statutory Offices E-Government and Information Technology Federal Financial Management Information & Regulatory Affairs Federal Procurement Policy Resource Management Offices Natural Resource Programs Human Resource Programs General Government Programs National Security Programs

Organization Administrator Associate Administrator Portfolio Managers Chief Architect Branch Chief, Information & Regulatory Affairs Policy Analysts Detailed Federal Staff and Contract Support

Organization

Roles and Responsibilities Following is a sampling of responsibilities established for the Office of E-Government and Information Technology in the E-Government Act of 2002 –Oversight of the E-Gov Fund in support of interagency partnerships and innovation in using E-Government; –Directing the activities of the CIO Council, advising on the appointments of CIO’s, and monitoring and consulting on agency technology efforts; –Advising the Director of OMB on the performance of IT investments, as well as identifying opportunities for joint agency and government wide IT projects; –Overseeing the development of enterprise architectures within and across agencies through the Federal Enterprise Architecture –Overseeing specific IT reform initiatives, activities, and areas of shared responsibility relating to: Capital planning and investment control for IT; The development of enterprise architectures; Information security; Privacy; Access to, dissemination of, and preservation of government information; Accessibility of IT for persons with disabilities

For more information… Karen S. Evans Administrator Office of E-Government and Information Technology Office of Management and Budget (202)