Retiring Microsoft Office Vice President Kurt DelBene is going to be heading
up the revamp of the troubled HealthCare.gov site.
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Kurt DelBene |
Politico reported the news on Tuesday. The US Department of Health and Human
Services confirmed it shortly thereafter.
Microsoft announced in July 2013 that DelBene, a 20-year Microsoft veteran,
would be retiring as Microsoft reorganized itself along more
device/services-focused lines. DelBene's last day at Microsoft was Monday, a
Microsoft spokesperson confirmed.
Kathleen Sebelius, US Secretary of Health and Human Services, announced
DelBene's appointment in a press release today. From that release:
"Today, I am pleased to announce Kurt DelBene as my senior advisor and
successor to Jeff Zients. Jeff did an outstanding job working with our team to
provide management advice and counsel on the HealthCare.gov project. Today, the
site is night and day from what it was when it launched on October 1. I am very
grateful for his service and leadership. His role leading the management of the
site proved critical and today we are announcing his successor: Kurt DelBene.
Kurt, who most recently served as president of the Microsoft Office Division,
will lead and manage HealthCare.gov starting this Wednesday."
Back in 2011, Ballmer appointed DelBene as president of the Office
division in a move some saw as signifying CEO Steve Ballmer's decision to bring
more engineering-savvy talent into Microsoft's senior leadership circles."
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The Obama administration's Healthcare.gov initiative has been plagued with
problems since it launched in October 2013. While some front-facing parts are
now in better shape than they were in the first few months of its operation, the
back-end is still a mess, according to some accounts.
According to Sebelius' announcement, DelBene has agreed to oversee the
Healthcare.gov project for "at least the first half of next year." He will be
providing management expertise, operations oversight, advice on additional
enrollment channels, field operations, marketing and communications. He will
work alongside CMS Administrator Marilyn Tavenner and in partnership with
general contractor on the project, QSSI.
As Politico noted, DelBene's wife is freshman Rep. Suzan DelBene (D-Wash.),
who also formerly served as a vice president in Microsoft's mobile
communications business.
Update: DelBene isn't the first Microsoft exec to move into a high-profile
government job, post-Microsoft. Former Windows Server Director Steven Van Roekel
was appointed the US Chief of Information Technology in 2011.
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