Computerworld
Quick Menu
Search



Ads by TechWords

See your link here


Subscribe to our e-mail newsletters
For more info on a specific newsletter, click the title. Details will be displayed in a new window.
Computerworld Daily News (First Look and Wrap-Up)
Computerworld Blogs Newsletter
The Weekly Top 10
More E-Mail Newsletters 
Computerworld 2007Subscribe to Computerworld
40 years of the most authoritative source of news and information for IT leaders.

IT workers get the call

 

Sign up to receive Defense/Aerospace Resource Alerts

October 5, 2001 (Computerworld) -- WASHINGTON -- A high-tech information exchange had just gotten under way at the Capital Hilton hotel when the World Trade Center was attacked Sept.11 (see stories). Then the Pentagon was hit minutes later, prompting an evacuation of the 28 senators and speakers cloistered in a conference room at the hotel.

One of those speakers was Howard Schmidt, chief security officer at Microsoft Corp. As he drove his car from the Hilton, people were pouring out of the Pentagon and onto Interstate 395, the road that Schmidt, an Army reservist, took to report to Fort Belvoir, Va., 20 miles south.

He hasn't been home since.

As of Oct 2., 22,400 National Guard members and reservists have been called back to active duty, about half the number President Bush has been authorized to recall, according to Brian Dunbar, publisher of AmeriForce Publishing LLC in Irvine, Calif.

There's no telling how many of those reservists hail from technology jobs. But Dunbar said many military roles are technology-related, particularly intelligence and security jobs, and the military is selectively calling back a lot of people like Schmidt with specialized skills.

Schmidt has been assigned to law enforcement and counterintelligence in the computer operations unit of the Joint Task Force that monitors all of the Pentagon's global information networks.

Brian Koref, a security architect for a large insurance firm in California, hasn't been recalled to active duty yet, although he said he has wanted to serve since the day of the attacks. He's a computer crime investigator for the Air Force Reserve.

Unlike Schmidt, who continues his Microsoft work "virtually" (through e-mail and voice mail) and at full pay, Koref would potentially have to leave unfinished a number of complex projects, including a single sign-on rollout and a secure identification project. And his pay is also in question.

"My boss is supportive, but he's concerned that he'll be left without anyone to continue my work," Koref says.

If his company is unwilling to augment his pay, he would be earning about 75% less than he does now. Legally, an employer must keep open a job for someone returning to active duty. But there are no guarantees on what position the employee would return to. And employers don't have to augment salaries or continue benefits.

But according to a 1999 survey by job placement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc., 75% of companies said during the Bosnian conflict that they would make up any gap between military pay and ordinary salaries. And because the recent acts of terrorism occurred on U.S. soil, that percentage is likely to be higher this time around, according to John Challenger, CEO of the Chicago-based company.

Continued...
1 | 2 | NEXT  



Print this Story Send Us Feedback E-mail this Story Digg! Digg this Story Slashdot this Story
Microsoft feared Mac vs. Vista comparison in '05, insider e-mails show
Downed Hadron Collider faces $21M in repairs
Thanks to gamers, the desktop supercomputer arrives
More top stories...
Hosting firm takedown bags 500,000 bots
New Firefox app lets users pimp their browsers
Microsoft to launch major upgrade to NAV ERP software Dec. 1
If you're like our 7,000 survey respondents, your paycheck this year has been flattened and your bonus obliterated. We offer 12 ways to plump up your paycheck.
Microsoft's next OS might more accurately be called Windows 6.5: It's essentially a better version of Vista.
Twitter can be a valuable business tool -- if you know what you're doing. Here's how to juice it for all it's worth.
By helping Intel with loosened 'Vista Capable' requirements, Microsoft 'severely damaged' its credibility, said an HP exec in a newly unsealed Feb. 2006 e-mail.
Get the latest news, reviews and more about Microsoft's newest desktop operating system
Find wage data for 50 IT job titles.
All Zones
Business Continuity Zone
The File Data Management Zone
Security Management Zone
The SAS Zone
Business Intelligence and Analytics Zone
The Enterprise Search Zone
Software as a Service Zone
The Security Zone

Ads by TechWords

See your link here