The Homeland Security Department expected to be authorized by Congress this week will create a 170,000-employee organization that will pull personnel from what are now 22 separate agencies, including the Coast Guard, Customs, and the Immigration and Naturalization Service. One problem facing agency planners: How to integrate all the personnel data from those agencies into a system that can deliver a single view of workers at the new super-agency.
IT officials at some federal departments slated for absorption believe a single platform will have to be agreed upon and deployed to build a common employee database. That could be good news for HR software vendor PeopleSoft Inc., whose applications already are in use at a number of the agencies involved. "Many of the potentials for this new department are already on PeopleSoft, so that could provide the basis for a good fit," says David Swatloski, chief of the office for information technology and human resources at the Coast Guard. The Coast Guard had been moving to a hosted PeopleSoft system that Swatloski says could integrate with other agencies' systems because it's built largely on Web standards. It hopes to go live on the system in March.
Boeing seeking Software Engineer 5 in Anaheim, CA
KForce seeking Inside Sales Associate in San Diego, CA
Amalgamated Bank seeking Chief Information Officer in New York, NY
Apollo College seeking Medical Billing and Coding Instructors in Albuquerque, NM
Allstate seeking Exlusive Agent in Las Vegas, NV
For more great jobs, career-related news, features and services, please visit our Career Center.
SIFMA: Low Latency Finally Comes Into Its Own
Financial firms need their data faster than ever before, and this year consumers (not just vendors) have finally understood the importance of low latency technology, according to TowerGroup Senior Analyst Tom Price....

NOTE: Offer valid for U.S., U.S. possessions, & Canada only.