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Top IT official: Low pay, ‘remote’ location turns talent away from state jobs

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Jamie Grant - FL State CIO | Load Toad Networks

Florida’s top IT officer says getting talented senior level IT staff to work for the state of Florida is an uphill battle, and he named low wages as well as living in Tallahassee, the state capital that is hundreds of miles away from the state’s major metro areas, among the top reasons.

State Chief Information Officer Jamie Grant told members of the FX Executive Steering Committee Wednesday that recruiting high-level IT staff, such as a chief information security officer, would be easier if the jobs were placed in a bigger labor market that was not as “remote.”

“You have to find a unicorn that is both talented, experienced, believes in the mission and is going to go do it for a short period of time and say, ‘Hey, I can do this and move,’” Grant said.

The FX Executive Steering Committee is charged with oversight of the redesign of the state’s Medicaid management information system from a singular platform to a modular one instead. The Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA), which is spearheading the massive IT project dubbed the Florida Health Care Connection, or FX for short, has issued three invitations to negotiate for the new IT modules.

Taken together, the contracts are worth more than $330 million over a seven-year period.

getting talented senior level IT staff to work for the state of Florida is an uphill battle

Jamie Grant, FL State Chief Information Officer

NTT Data project manager Kurt Hartmann is working with the agency on the transition between the current Medicaid management information system and the new one providing independent verification of the work being done.

He told committee members that despite some delays, the ambitious project should be done on time which he attributed to hardworking IT employees in state agencies who he said are working from 6 a.m. to midnight on the IT project.

“I’ve been doing this for 30 years. It’s very, very, rare I see state employees working from 6 a.m. to midnight,” Hartmann said. “Very, very, rare. Kudos to you. So, your team members are keeping up with the work. The challenge we are trying to point out is eventually you are going to have team members burn out. They will burn out.”

Grant, a former member of the House and the state’s first Chief Information Officer, said media and legislators don’t appreciate the pay disparity between high-level IT jobs at the state, city, private sector and university level.

Aligning the salaries across the various employers could be illustrative and put the information in context, Grant suggested.

AHCA Secretary Simone Marstiller said she wants the panel to schedule a meeting to specifically discuss the IT salaries and rates to try to get additional information that would help agencies as they request additional funding from the Legislature.

“The time has come. We are doing so much innovative work but can’t afford to hire the resources who have the skills and the talent we need to make these projects work and be successful,” said Marstiller, who made an unsuccessful push this Session to receive an additional $1.97 million to hire 12 IT staff.

Grant said he isn’t sure if it would help though.

During his two-year tenure as Chief Information Officer, Grant said he has developed a rapport with Amanda Crawford, the director of the Texas Department of Information Resources (DIR).

Grant said Crawford alleges to be envious of him because he has played a key role in the development of the state’s enterprise system called Florida Digital Service.

But he told FX panel members that he is jealous of Crawford’s location.

“She has Austin. If you just compare our two jobs, she gets to recruit in Austin. Somebody does not have to leave Austin to come work for the DIR,” he said.

When he was hiring a chief information security officer, Grant said he had to “overcome” the low salary the state was offering as well as a requirement that the position be located in the state’s Panhandle.

And while Marstiller was optimistic that the IT rate and salary information would be helpful to state agencies seeking additional funds, Grant was not sure because most lawmakers don’t live year-round in Tallahassee.

“They come to Tallahassee and leave. My job would be a lot easier in Tampa,” Grant said to Marstiller. “Your job would be a lot easier in Miami — just that talent pool that exists there versus a much smaller market that’s kind of remote.”

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