AT&T looks to expand Hawaii work
State is prime example of company's attempts to broaden services governmentwide
As homeland security capabilities continue to dominate the requirements
of information technology projects across all levels of government, AT&T
Government Solutions is looking for opportunities at the federal, state
and local levels to provide "comprehensive solutions," according to the
company's president.
Hawaii is a prime example of AT&T's attempts to
broaden its services governmentwide, said Chris Rooney, a former Marine
Corps lieutenant colonel who became president of AT&T Government Solutions
on Feb. 14. Rooney said that he has been working to make sure the company
lives up to its name.
"We want to provide to users more than just connectivity,"
Rooney told Federal Computer Week during a Nov. 19 interview at AFCEA International's
TechNet Asia-Pacific 2002 Conference and Exposition in Honolulu. "We want
to provide a completely integrated solution."
In 1997, the Defense Information Systems Agency awarded the company
the 10-year Hawaii Information Transfer System (HITS), which provides dedicated
telecommunications services to all military bases across the island. AT&T
officials are talking to state officials about extending those capabilities
— through AT&T's own resources — to support state and local homeland
security requirements, Rooney said.
AT&T has about 200 employees dedicated
to HITS work, and Rooney said he views Hawaii as a way to expand the company's
resources in support of Defense Department personnel deployed in the western
Pacific.
Rooney said he would be meeting this week with Hawaii's adjutant
general and lieutenant governor about extending the HITS network capabilities,
as well as working on plans for a separate project that would extend the
company's fiber network to the University of Hawaii, passing through state
office buildings.
"That's critical so the university can have broadband connectivity for
things like research and development," he said.
Elsewhere, AT&T is working with Raytheon Co., DynCorp and other
team members on a solution in response to the Immigration and Naturalization
Service's request for information on an entry/exit system, Rooney said.
He said that AT&T is serving as the prime contractor on that effort,
but serves as a subcontractor on numerous other government programs.
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