Posts Tagged ‘San Diego’

Printer firm HP wins IT Outsourcing contract for the county of san diego

May 6th, 2011

Printer ink firm Hewlett-Packard (HP) announced it has been chosen by the county of San Diego, California, to manage a $700million (£426.3 million) Information Technology (IT) Outsourcing contract.

The company’s mission is to provide the area with sustainable, efficient and effective IT provisions to better serve residents and employees.

HP’s new contract will make it the prime provider for IT and telecommunications services within San Diego.

Dennis Stolkey, senior vice president and general manager of US public sector at HP Enterprise Services, said: “Local governments work hard to provide taxpayers with timely and convenient delivery of government services while being faced with significant pressures from aging technology.”

He added the new contract will help improve business transparency, accuracy and productivity with the area.

Recently, the printer firm launched the HP Strategic IT Advisory Services scheme that has been designed to help chief information officers ensure their computer technology is sufficient to allow their firms to grow and become profitable.

Source:http://www.internet-ink.co.uk/ink-news/HP/Printer-Firm-HP-Wins-IT-Outsourcing-Contract-For-The-County-Of-San-Diego-9875

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Facing Job Exodus, San Diego IT Execs Launch Council on Globalization and Competitiveness

March 25th, 2010

IT executives from some of San Diego’s better-known employers, including Amylin Pharmaceuticals, Sony Electronics, and Broadcom are banding together to find new ways to retain local IT jobs and to counter the effects of foreign outsourcing.

The formation of a new regional business group, the San Diego-based Industry Council for Competitiveness and Globalization (ICCG), comes as the Washington D.C.-based Alliance for American Manufacturing released a study that claims the U.S. lost 2.4 million jobs to China from 2001 to 2008.

The Alliance, an advocacy and lobbying organization formed in 2007 by the U.S. steel industry and its labor union, says California accounts for almost 370,000 of the job losses—including high-tech and IT jobs in data processing, computer programming, and technical support. The alliance contends that the 370,000 lost jobs represents about 2.2 percent of California’s workforce. On its website, the alliance says Massachusetts lost 72,800 jobs (or 2.2 percent of its statewide workforce) and the state of Washington lost 44,000 jobs (or 1.4 percent of its workforce) over the same period.

Alliance spokesman David Roscow tells me the group issued the report as part of its continuing effort to focus the attention of U.S. policymakers on China’s trade subsidies, currency policies, and other practices that have adverse effects on the U.S. economy, and amount to “cheating,” according to the Alliance.

The formation of the new business group in San Diego also comes as many local technology and life sciences companies—especially the biotech startups—are turning to low-cost contract research organizations in China, Russia, and elsewhere as a less costly way to conduct pre-clinical drug development research. The ultra-lean drug development strategy also has become attractive here because of the evaporation of San Diego-based venture capital firms and questions surrounding the validity of the VC business model for funding startups in general—and life sciences startups in particular.

“Globalization is a two-way street,” says Steve Kovsky, who is serving as executive director of the recently formed ICCG, which was launched in San Diego at a March 11 meeting. “On the one hand, it’s a cheap source of technical labor that undercuts the technical labor market here in San Diego. On the other hand, every single one of the companies here is relying on that [offshore] labor pool to remain competitive.”

Kovsky says the ICCG was formed to meet the challenges of competing against an educated workforce in China and India, and to address the recruiting needs for highly qualified information technology professionals in Southern California. “We don’t have the same ingredients that they have in Silicon Valley, or even in Seattle,” Kovsky says. “It’s a lot harder to get a new company or a new technology off the ground here.”

Like the two-way street of globalization, Kovsky says the trend toward foreign outsourcing is having sometimes-contradictory effects. For example, in San Diego County, where the unemployment rate hit 11 percent in January, Kovsky says it’s difficult to find and recruit IT workers with highly specific technical skills even though a lot of people are out of work.

“One of the initiatives we’re discussing is funding a study of the impact of global outsourcing on the local economy,” Kovsky says. “What kind of jobs are most likely to be affected? Can we identify degrees or skill sets that are sustainable and have more longevity? Can we influence students who are going into some of these IT fields to pursue fields that are more likely to have jobs?”

Kovsky says the discussion at the ICCG’s organizational meeting was driven largely by a local group of influential Chief Information Officers, including Drew Martin of Sony Electronics; Herman Nell of Petco; Steve Phillpott of Amylin Pharmaceuticals; and Ken Venner of Broadcom, the chipmaker based in Irvine, CA. At least 36 CIOs and IT executives attended, including P.K. Agarwal, chief technology officer for the state of California. Kovsky, a business development executive for San Diego custom software developer Cosmic Bridge, says the gathering was sponsored by Cosmic Bridge, Information Week magazine, and the Interop technology conference.

Source:http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2010/mar/24/wwwxconomycom70034/

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San Diego’s Plan To Outsource IT Support Services Jobs Moves Forward

March 11th, 2010

A plan to outsource San Diego’s information technology support services to a private company based in Los Angeles County was advanced today by a committee to the full City Council, but there was little support for the idea championed by Mayor Jerry Sanders as a way to save money.

The Rules, Open Government and Intergovernmental Relations Committee voted 3-1 to forward the proposed contract with Gardena-based En Pointe to take over computer help desk and desktop support services from the city-controlled San Diego Data Processing Corp.

The panel declined to endorse the contract, but agreed to move it on to the City Council so that it can be further vetted.

Council President Ben Hueso cast the dissenting vote, who argued against outsourcing city jobs. He said the work should go to Data Processing Corp. and the city should look for efficiencies within the nonprofit, quasi-city agency to save money.

“It’s just really sad we are here,” Hueso said. “I would have preferred we would have followed a different process to come to efficiencies. I don’t support doing this.”

Council members Todd Gloria and Donna Frye also had reservations.

Data Processing Corp. has managed San Diego’s information technology services for the past three decades. The agency employs more than 250 people, about 26 of whom would lose their jobs if the computer help desk contract goes to En Pointe.

En Pointe was selected by the mayor’s office over eight other companies, including Data Processing Corp., for the contract.

At a news conference last month, Sanders said the city would save money and get better service from En Pointe.

Under the terms of the proposed contract, the city would pay En Pointe about $1.2 million annually, compared to the $2.7 million the city will pay Data Processing Corp. for the same services this year.

Data Processing Corp. is charged with maintaining thousands of city desktop computers, laptops and telephones, providing technical support and operating San Diego’s Web and database needs. The agency’s overall budget is about $42 million.

Sanders has indicated that he plans to seek bids from private companies over the coming months to potentially take over all of the services provided by Data Processing Corp.

During today’s hearing, more than a dozen Data Processing Corp. staffers urged the City Council to reject the contract.

“All of these individuals and their families will be financially impacted one way or the other,” Linda Berns, a Data Processing Corp. employee, told the committee. “I urge you to really think about your vote today and the domino effect it will have on the people, the families and friends and San

Diego.”

The possible outsourcing of the Data Processing Corp. is seen as a bellwether for San Diego’s voter-approved managed competition program, which allows private companies to compete for work now performed by city employees.

Because Data Processing Corp. is a separate entity from the city, it is not technically covered under the managed competition program, but it is the first municipal entity in San Diego that the mayor’s office has sought to outsource.

Managed competition was approved by voters in 2006, but has not yet been realized due to disagreements between the mayor’s office and the city’s labor unions over how it should be implemented. A majority on the council are also viewed as union friendly and unlikely to support privatizing city services.

Source:http://www.kpbs.org/news/2010/mar/10/san-diegos-plan-outsource-it-support-services-jobs/

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