Gov. Gavin Newsom’s appointment of Bailey-Crimmins requires Senate confirmation, and the annual compensation is $206,797.
Russ Nichols will remain deputy state CIO and chief deputy director of CDT. He had been acting CIO since Amy Tong moved from that role in December to the Government Operations Agency, where she now serves as secretary.
In interviews last year with Industry Insider — California (formerly Techwire), Bailey-Crimmins discussed her priorities, her relationships with vendors and her personal style of leadership. As the state CTO, she said, she urged other state tech executives to remember, “The goal in mind is that we want the residents of California to thank us in two, three, four years for the decisions that we make today. That’s the test.” She also addressed her priorities as a key leader in state technology governance, and she talked about her relationship with the vendor community.
In those interviews, Bailey-Crimmins also taked about her own approach to the job and, more generally, to life:
“I see myself as a continual learner. No matter where we are in our career, there are always opportunities to learn. And I also make sure that I try to balance the left and right hemispheres of my brain.
“Being a technologist, we have a tendency to be very logical-thinking, data-driven,” she added. “But I am also a painter; I paint in watercolor and oils. I’ve actually had showings. … I’m also a martial artist — 12 years being a black belt — and you learn a lot about yourself, your strengths and weaknesses.”
She also addressed a 2018 cancer diagnosis: “Through all my treatments and all my surgery, I only missed one board meeting. Work was a way for me to focus on something bigger than myself. … I tell that story because it reminds you of what’s important in life and what can motivate us and keep us going. Any time we overcome a challenge, we’re better on the other side of it. When we’re in it, obviously, it’s a little bit different feeling. …
“I’m three years past that diagnosis, so I’m on the other side of this, so my story is not everyone else’s story. But sometimes we need to think about things outside of ourselves: ‘What is our purpose in life?’ And when you find that purpose, they say, you never work a day in your life. That’s why I do what I do, and I enjoy it.”
This article was originally published by Industry Insider — California.