The Situation Report: VA’s Culture War and CCX Brainstorm Takes Washington

On Tuesday, May 5, 2015, the United States Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs held hearings on pending nominations of Dr. David J. Shulkin, Nominee to be Under Secretary for Health, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, and LaVerne H. Council, Nominee to be Assistant Secretary of Veterans Affairs for Information and Technology, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. (VA Photo/Robert Turtil)

This is a special Tuesday Situation Report, as your humble correspondent will be traveling for the rest of the week. So for those of you who are used to reading your inside baseball on Thursdays, I apologize. But this is not one you would want to miss.

Brainstorm–June 15

The November election may be playing havoc with agency appointments and senior leadership positions, but there are two things that aren’t going away any time soon: cloud computing and the Federal Information 2016-CCX-Brainstorm-Website-Header_800x450Technology Acquisition Reform Act (FITARA).

That’s not to say that things related to cloud and FITARA aren’t changing–because changing they are, and fast! But MeriTalk is hosting some of the biggest names in government IT on June 15 at the annual Cloud Computing Brainstorm. Even better, we’re opening the day with a FITARA breakfast session featuring OMB, members of Congress, and a keynote presentation from U.S. Chief Information Officer Tony Scott.

We’ll be exploring everything from cloud migration strategies and security, to agency cloud collaboration and the value of open source, and open standards.

Register Here

VA’s Culture War

It’s fair to say that you have to give Bob McDonald credit for trying to turn those lemons at the Department of Veterans Affairs into lemonade. Sure, he’s had his missteps along the way, but McDonald has surely tried and has made some solid progress in reforming one of the most broken of all government bureaucracies.

But my reporting during the last two weeks has uncovered a disturbing trend–even after the ouster of former VA Secretary Eric Shinseki and the many early retirements of more than a few bad apples (retirements that should not have been allowed), there remains a major undercurrent of distrust and genuine dislike for many senior VA leaders. VA is losing the people battle. This has been particularly true in the Office of Information & Technology.

When LaVerne Council replaced Stephen Warren as VA chief information officer last July, technology newsrooms around Washington, D.C., filled with a sense of hope–an outsider was coming in to replace a career Federal employee whose management style had not won many hearts and minds.

Council squandered the opportunity. Upon her arrival, the mentality at OI&T quickly shifted in the wrong direction. “Transparency has a different meaning there. The prevailing attitude there now is that what is good for the assistant secretary is what’s good for the organization, not the other way around,” said a longtime OI&T insider, known to The Situation Report.

Those who knew Steph Warren almost long for the days when they would be left trying to figure out his social awkwardness. People just “didn’t get Steph,” said one of his former close advisers. “He has a unique personality that if you don’t know him can seem aggressive or condescending. But that was more social awkwardness. I actually thought he was an incredibly good leader and he had the best of the organization at heart. He was a good person and he worked with the best intentions.”

What about Council? The situation there is less clear. Even as recently as April, the MyVA Advisory Committee–a group of about a dozen of the most senior officials in VA, as well as Secretary McDonald and Deputy Secretary Sloan Gibson–made a point to advise Council to “embed sustainability” within her own organization rather than to complain about her staff’s lack of skills or the tendency of components to deploy “shadow IT.”

“Council is all about Council,” said a former VA official who worked for both Warren and Council. “She was personally very nice to me. But her style is management by territory building and aggressive behavior that borders on bullying. She surrounds herself with sycophants and is not open to debate.”

Some also have serious questions about the technical qualifications that Council and others, like Brian Burns—the former VA chief information security officer that The Situation Report believes may be only days away from becoming the first Federal CISO. According to some, neither Council nor Burns have an in-depth grasp of the technological aspects of their jobs.

The bottom line is this: VA’s reputation has been destroyed. It can’t fill the 43,000 job vacancies it currently has, and it can’t find senior leaders willing to join from outside the government. This has happened not because government is inept, but because this one agency allowed itself to become the place where third stringers could get ahead by jumping from one gig to the next, and where kingdom builders can get away with it as long as they have cover from the top.

McDonald can’t change this by November. After that, it’s anyone’s guess how long it will take to win the VA culture war.

See you next week.

Got a Situation Report you want to share? Send in confidence to dverton@meritalk.com