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Year in Review 2022: State and Local Tech Chiefs on the Move

Chief information officers, security officers, data officers. States, cities, counties. All year we track the public-sector tech leadership changes across the country. Here's who went where in 2022.

Gov Tech Veteran Krista Canellakis Joins U S Digital Response

After high-level jobs for the state of California and San Francisco, Canellakis will now oversee USDR’s new Digital Service program. The group launched when tech pros volunteered to help solve pandemic-related challenges.

Amid California s Unemployment Crisis, a Tech Gold Rush

Copy Link Stacy Lira and her husband of 28 years, Armando, outside their home in Victorville on March 29, 2021. Stacy is holding a folder full of unemployment paperwork.  (Shae Hammond/CalMatters) Stacy Lira was nearly a year into her unofficial job as an unemployment-claim detective when things went from bad to worse. The 46-year-old mother of three, who lost her job managing an Inland Empire convenience store last spring, was rushed to the hospital in mid-February. She was struggling to breathe after testing positive for COVID-19. But Lira was adamant that she couldn’t leave home without one thing: She needed her carefully filed unemployment records so she could keep calling from the hospital about the nearly $20,000 she says the state owes her family.

Amid California s unemployment crisis, a tech gold rush

Amid California’s unemployment crisis, a tech gold rush The state’s unemployment agency has signed $236 million in private contracts as jobless workers await benefits. EDD says it needs the outside help. Author: Lauren Hepler (CalMatters), CALmatters Published: 5:11 PM PDT April 5, 2021 Updated: 5:11 PM PDT April 5, 2021 CALIFORNIA, USA This story was originally published by CalMatters. Lea este artículo en español.  Stacy Lira was nearly a year into her unofficial job as an unemployment detective when things went from bad to worse. The 46-year-old mother of three, who lost her job managing an Inland Empire convenience store last spring, was rushed to the hospital in mid-February. She was struggling to breathe after testing positive for COVID-19. But Lira was adamant that she couldn’t leave home without one thing: She needed her carefully filed unemployment records so she could

Private companies cash in on California unemployment crisis

In summary The state’s unemployment agency has signed $236 million in private contracts as jobless workers await benefits. EDD says it needs the outside help. Lea este artículo en español.  Stacy Lira was nearly a year into her unofficial job as an unemployment detective when things went from bad to worse. The 46-year-old mother of three, who lost her job managing an Inland Empire convenience store last spring, was rushed to the hospital in mid-February. She was struggling to breathe after testing positive for COVID-19. But Lira was adamant that she couldn’t leave home without one thing: She needed her carefully filed unemployment records so she could

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