Office of the Chief Information Officer (Department of Transportation)
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Office of the Chief Information Officer (Department of Transportation) (OCIO) is responsible for managing the IT resources and strategy for the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT), ensuring technology supports the Department's goals in enhancing transportation safety, efficiency, and innovation.
Mission
The mission of DOT's OCIO is to lead the Department in the strategic use of information technology to achieve its goals in transportation. This includes overseeing IT policy, managing the IT portfolio, enhancing cybersecurity, and providing innovative IT solutions that support transportation safety, efficiency, and sustainability.
Parent organization
The OCIO is part of the U.S. Department of Transportation, serving as its technology arm.
Legislation
While there isn't a specific act creating the OCIO, its role is derived from broader mandates like the [E-Government Act of 2002](https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/PLAW-107publ347/html/PLAW-107publ347.htm) and the [Federal Information Technology Acquisition Reform Act (FITARA)](https://www.congress.gov/bill/113th-congress/house-bill/1232), which enhance IT management within federal agencies.
Partners
- Other federal agencies for IT interoperability and shared services. - Private sector IT service providers for technical support and innovation.
Number of employees
The OCIO and related IT services within DOT employ over 1,000 people.
Organization structure
- Office of the CIO provides strategic leadership.
- Infrastructure and Operations manages the IT infrastructure across DOT.
- Cybersecurity Division ensures IT security across all transportation sectors.
List of programs
- DOT IT Modernization
- Cybersecurity Framework Implementation
- Enterprise Data Management
Last total enacted budget
The OCIO oversees a $3.5 billion annual IT portfolio for the Department of Transportation.
Leader
Cordell Schachter serves as the Chief Information Officer for the Department of Transportation.
Services provided
The OCIO provides strategic IT planning, cybersecurity protection, data management, and IT infrastructure services to support all DOT operating administrations. This includes managing networks, data centers, applications, and leading IT innovation to improve public transportation services, safety, and efficiency.
Regulations overseen
While not directly overseeing regulations, the OCIO ensures compliance with federal IT policies, including FISMA, FITARA, and NIST guidelines, influencing how DOT manages its IT assets and data security.
Headquarters address
1200 New Jersey Ave SE, Washington, DC 20590
Website
https://www.transportation.gov/ocio
Wikipedia article
There is no dedicated Wikipedia article for the Office of the Chief Information Officer at the Department of Transportation.
<references> [1] <ref>https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/PLAW-107publ347/html/PLAW-107publ...