Doing Business With The Energy Department

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Karen Evans, chief information officer - The department fosters a secure and reliable energy system that is environmentally and economically sustainable. It is the trustee of the nation's arsenal of nuclear weapons and supports U.S. contributions to science and technology.

, Chief Information Officer Jan. 28 Philadelphia Martinsburg, W. Va. Married to Dr. Randolph Evans, a dentist inprivate practice; two children, Jacob, 11, and Samantha, 8. Evans holds a bachelor's degree in chemistry and a master's degree in business administration from West VirginiaUniversity. Mosaic tiling, woodworking and reading "From the Corner of His Eye," by Dean KoontzTo place greater emphasis on the management of the IT assets rather than the underlying technology, and to continue to develop the IT management disciplines to support the enterprise's business lines. Specific activities include enterprise architecture, capital planning and cybersecurity.Companies who will bring value, innovation and perspective while adding to the support or complementing the DoE's missions and business lines.The CIO is to provide leadership for the agency through the application of technology. Since IT is an "enabler" in order to complete the mission, it becomes core to the business of any government agency. The CIO is responsible for facilitating, implementing and operating the necessary technologies to achieve success.XXXSPLITXXX-1000 Independence Ave. SWWashington, DC 20585(800) DIAL-DOE 1977 Spencer Abraham 15,081, excluding Federal Energy Regulatory CommissionThe department fosters a secure and reliable energy system that is environmentally and economically sustainable. It is the trustee of the nation's arsenal of nuclear weapons and supports U.S. contributions to science and technology. Three field offices, eight operations offices, six regional offices, seven special purpose offices including the National Petroleum Technology Office and the River Protection Office; numerous laboratories, including eight mission-specific labs and 16 national labs.XXXSPLITXXX- $19.2 billion requested for 2002 $956 million in 2002XXXSPLITXXX-XXXSPLITXXX-XXXSPLITXXX-Telecommunications Integrator Services 2 $600 million March 2002 The department will continue outsourcing of departmentwide telecommunications integration services. EDS holds current contract.Program, Product and Project Engineering and Analysis Services 2 $320 million May 2003 The Federal Energy Technology Center has a continuing need for engineering and analysis services such as modeling and simulation, quality assurance, operations support and other professional services. Incumbent contractors are Concurrent Technologies Corp. and Energy & Environmental Solutions LLC.Site Operations and Program Support Services 2 $92 million May 2003 The Federal Energy Technology Center has a continuing need for site management support services, risk management support services and crosscutting support services at Department of Energy facilities. Incumbent contractor is EG&G Services Inc.XXXSPLITXXX-Telecommunications Integrator Service $600 million, awarded April 1997 An outsourcing contract to support telecommunications maintenance and operations, as well as standardize telecommunications services required at more than 50 sites. EDSTechnical and Analytical ManagementAdvisory and Assistance $340 million, awarded December 1998 A multiple award contract from Energy's Office of Defense Programs for technical and analytical management advisory services to support the Stockpile Stewardship Program SAIC, Dames & Moore Inc., and Tetra Tech Inc.Program, Product and Project Engineering and Analysis Services $320 million, awarded May 1999 The Federal Energy Technology Center needs services such as modeling and simulation, quality assurance, operations support and other professional services. Concurrent Technologies Corp. and Energy & Environmental Solutions LLC.

Karen Evans

Karen Evans

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Web site:cio.doe.gov

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www.energy.gov

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*Government forecast**Input forecast
2002$956 million*
2003$1.1 billion**
2004$1.2 billion**
2005$1.4 billion**
2006$1.6 billion**
Source: Input Inc.

  • Energy.gov, the agency Web site, is good for Joe Q. Public looking for general information about energy power and policy. If you want to do business with the agency, however, that is a different story. The Web site is not organized in a way that makes it easy for users to find what they're looking for. For instance, "e-Center: Business Opportunities with Energy" is buried in the "A-Z Index" under "D" for "Department of Energy." Finding basic information about the Energy Department, such as when it was founded and how many people work for it, took digging and a lot of time.


  • The Energy Department's fiscal 2002 budget has not yet been approved, as is the case with several federal agencies. In the budget, the department is going for a big cash boost for national security: $7.2 billion in 2002, an increase of $180.5 million.



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