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White House's new IT engineer is sharp, witty, and blunt

White House's new IT engineer is sharp, witty, and blunt

To attract 'creative snowflakes,' the government has to change its culture, says Google engineer

WASHINGTON -- If the White House learned one thing from the Healthcare.gov debacle, it was that the website needs clear-thinking people who can see a problem for what it is. Mikey Dickerson may just be that person.

Dickerson, a site reliability engineer at Google, was appointed by the White House as the deputy federal CIO, with a mission of helping government IT function more like the private sector. He was asked to help fix Healthcare.gov shortly after its troubled Oct. 1 launch.

The Healthcare.gov site was crippled with problems and was down more than it was up, putting the Affordable Care Act, President Obama's major legislative initiative, at risk.

Mikey Dickerson, a Google site reliability engineer, speaks at a healthcare conference on the problems with the Healthcare.gov website.

In June, Dickerson spoke at a healthcare conference, and in 18 minutes did more to explain what happened at Healthcare.gov than all the government reports and congressional hearings combined. He had the modestly sized audience laughing, all of it posted online.

Dickerson not only gave a blistering critique of Healthcare.gov, he offered advice about how to get computer engineers to take government jobs. That may be one of the reasons why Dickerson was hired by the White House.

Steven VanRoekel, the federal CIO, in announcing Dickerson's appointment, credited the private sector's help in fixing Healthcare.gov.

The Healthcare.gov effort "reminded us why the President's commitment to bringing more of the nation's top IT talent into government is so critical to delivering the best possible results," said VanRoekel, in a statement. Along with being deputy CIO, Dickerson will run a new "U.S. Digital Service," a group that will seek to improve the federal development efforts.

Dickerson's specialty, as he describes it, "is how to make big distributed systems work technically." He was one of five people, shortly after the launch of Healthcare.gov, who volunteered to help after hearing from Todd Park, the federal CTO and other White House officials.

The importance of Healthcare.gov to the administration was explained to Dickerson, who summed up "the sales pitch" this way: "The president will be basically lame ducked two years early, it will be a complete disaster, the administration will end in ruin, and nobody will attempt health care reform for another generation. That's what they said."

Dickerson broke down the website's problems in four ways:

"You don't have to think that the engineers are the creative snowflakes and rock stars that they think they are, you don't have to agree with any of that," Dickerson said. "I'm just telling you that's how they think of themselves, and if you want access to more of them, finding a way to deal with that helps a lot."

Engineers want to make a difference, Dickerson said, and he has collected the names of 146 engineers who would be willing to take unpaid leave from their jobs to work on a meaningful project. He told his audience that if they can create the right environment for engineers, "I can bring people who can help you."

Read more about healthcare it in Computerworld's Healthcare IT Topic Center.

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