Kansans seek IT that is practical and efficient
Don Heiman, chief information technology officer (CITO) of Kansas and director of the Information Systems and Communications Division (DISC), received a bachelor's degree in business from Rockhurst University in Kansas City, Mo., in 1969, a master's in business and a master's of public administration from the University of Kansas at Lawrence, and a master's in pastoral studies from Loyola University in New Orleans. He also has professional certifications as a government financial manager and an information systems controller.

Chief information technology officer Don Heiman says people in Kansas want government information technology to be practical and cost-effective.
Don Heiman, chief information technology officer (CITO) of Kansas and director of the Information Systems and Communications Division (DISC), received a bachelor's degree in business from Rockhurst University in Kansas City, Mo., in 1969, a master's in business and a master's of public administration from the University of Kansas at Lawrence, and a master's in pastoral studies from Loyola University in New Orleans. He also has professional certifications as a government financial manager and an information systems controller.
|
Heiman has worked for the Kansas government since 1976, when he was director of performance audits. He has been director of DISC since 1995; in 1998 he was appointed CITO. In his DISC role, Heiman manages an organization of 220 people and a network of 40,000 telephones and 18,000 computers.
| MAJOR PROGRAMS |
Information Network of Kansas'The state's electronic government portal can be accessed at www.ink.org. The Legislature established INK in 1990.
Welfare Reform System'The $10 million project includes the Vision card, a benefits debit card.
|
Pass the bread
MAJOR DIVISIONS |
Kansas Wide Area Information Network'The voice, video and data network connects 18,000 computers. KANWin runs on a high-speed backbone. Kansas Agency Network'Kans-A-N is the voice component of KANWin. It operates at 100 percent uptime. The network also has a video component used for telemedicine.
|
NEXT STORY: SSA takes benefit calculation program online






