Jim Flyzik joined the federal government during one of its darker modern moments, signing up as a computer programmer for the Secret Service during the Watergate scandal. He rose through the ranks of the Treasury Department to become its CIO seven years ago. Then, seven months ago, he got a call from Homeland Security director Tom Ridge, who wanted Flyzik to be his special adviser on IT. That put his retirement thoughts on hold. "Clearly," he says, "I wanted to be part of that." In that role, he's mentored Homeland Security CIO Steve Cooper, who brought in a wealth of technology knowledge from his role as a Corning CIO but little background on how agencies were using IT. Flyzik has been involved in developing a system, due to be implemented by year's end, to integrate 55 terrorist watch lists so that information is shared more broadly. Beyond fighting terrorism, Since 1997, Flyzik's been vice chairman of the federal CIO Council, a group setting broad IT policy that's chaired by Mark Forman, the Bush administration's point man for E-government. After 28 years, Flyzik is retiring from government on Dec. 17; he says he doesn't know what kind of private-sector work he might pursue.
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