Award-Winning Leadership

Program recognizes individuals who have significantly enhanced the information security workforce.

Two impressive federal information security achievements were recognized last week as part of the 2010 Government Information Security Leadership Awards program. The annual awards program, run by consulting firm (ISC)2, recognizes individuals who have significantly enhanced the information security workforce by demonstrating a leadership role in any information security workforce improvement initiative, program or project on either a government-wide or agency-specific basis.

In the workforce improvement category, the "Assuring the Information Infrastructure" group at National Defense University won the team award for rapidly deploying a virtual classroom during the 2010 snowstorms that hit the D.C. area. Under the leadership of Professor Mark Duke, the AII team is responsible for educating government officials and military officers about information assurance and critical information infrastructure protection.

Thomas Schankweiler, chief information security officer in the Office of the Secretary at the Health and Human Services Department, won the individual award for workforce improvement for developing and implementing a comprehensive information security program within the office of the secretary. During the implementation of the program, Schankweiler emphasized the importance of educating the workforce on the challenges of IT security and related privacy issues, in part by educating his co-workers on their responsibilities for protecting the sensitive information of IT systems.

For more information on the 2010 GISLA winners, click here.

Wired Workplace is a daily look at issues facing the federal information technology workforce. It is written by former Government Executive reporter Brittany Ballenstedt and published on Nextgov.com. Click here to read the latest entries.

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