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California Department of Conservation

The department’s Geologic Energy Management Division is looking to enhance its drone-related responses to incidents within its oversight, including spills and emergencies.
IT leaders who participated this year in Industry Insider — California’s One-on-One question-and-answer series offered many essential ideas around government technology. Several are presented below.
Overall, more than 3 million people across California and Oregon received some kind of alert, the U.S. Geological Survey said.
The open positions are in the departments of Aging, Conservation and Transportation and in the Office of the Secretary of State.
The positions are within the California Department of Conservation and the California Department of Technology.
Notable positions in recruitment include chief roles as well as several in the area of application development.
Wendy Weaver, chief information officer for the California Department of Conservation, says her team is in the infancy of a sprawling undertaking to transform how data is captured, stored, governed and shared.
State entities with active recruitments include the Department of Conservation, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Community Services and Development.
Positions with open recruitments include chief information officer, change management senior analyst, DevOps engineer and application developer.
In an Invitation for Bid, the California Department of Technology is seeking technology to assist the California Department of Conservation in enhancing how earthquake data is generated and reported.
“The state technology community holds Pam in high regard,” state Chief Information Officer Amy Tong told Techwire via email. “Throughout her career, she has taken on many difficult roles to advance California’s technology efforts. We welcome her appointment and look forward to her success.”