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Government Leader home > news stories
 01/08/07
 IRSs Smoter likes staying on the cutting edge
 By Sami Lais Special to Government Leader

At the Internal Revenue Service, Susan Smoter, director of Internet development services at the IRS Electronic Tax Administration, is a favorite boss. There are always people trying to get on her team, said IRS spokeswoman Nora Butler.

Shes a Level 5 leader who puts her staff and organization first, said Wilma Lanier, an IRS program analyst. She paved the way for a new mentoring program and created developmental opportunities for a dozen staffers.

Then theres todays problem: The IRS is close to meeting its e-business goalsby next year, 80 percent of returns will be filed electronically.

But what are the next things we should be doing? Smoter asked. We didnt have those answers, so I volunteered to take over mapping our e-strategy for growth. I get to set up goals for the next three years. Now, this is the kind of thing I can really get my teeth into.

The hard-driving Smoter has been on the cutting edge in government for more than 25 years. The government got me through trickery, she said. My mother was a government lifer, and I was not going there. But I applied to a blind ad in the Washington Post, and it turned out to be too good a job to turn down.

Doing computer-based training for the U.S. Senate was so creative and so much fun that I stayed there for seven years, she said.

A brief stint in the private sector followed, but the Postal Service won her back, and that started a career trek though several agencies, each stop marked by significant IT achievements.

When I started in government in 1979, there were a lot of Kennedy and Eisenhower administration people still around, she said. They taught that this was a job you did because you wanted to give back to your country. I believe in service.

Charged with developing the Postal Services Web Interactive Network of Government Services (Wings) kiosk program, Smoter looked at the obvious technology choicesand rejected them.

In 1994, kiosks relied on videodisks for data. Preparing, printing, distributing videodiskshow could you get information out to people in a timely manner? she scoffed. She opted instead for an emerging technology: the Internet.

She also found the hardware lacking. Because touch screens were heat driven, if you had a prosthetic finger, they wouldnt work, she said. So she persuaded touch-screen makers to make pressure-sensitive monitors.

Kiosk makers also got a visit from Smoter, after which they changed their designs to accommodate people using wheelchairs and walkers.

She tapped the Trace Center at the University of Wisconsin to develop new accessibility standards, which later formed the basis for the Section 508 Rehabilitation Act Amendments of 1998.

She extended Wings usability with another first: a Web gateway. The kiosk program was superseded by new technology, but Smoters vision survives as the precursor to e-government, Lanier said.

On mobility assignment at the Transportation Department, Smoter brought the department into compliance with Section 508. DOTs 13 operating groups had never agreed on anything, she said. As an outsider, I was unaware of cultural differences going on, so I just said, Heres a law thats going to kick in June 21, and heres what we have to do, and they did it.

At the Overseas Private Investment Corp., a government agency that helps U.S. businesses invest overseas, Smoter used a Web forms creation tool to develop a graphical user interface Web wrapper and provide Windows functionality to 20-year-old mainframe applications, no rewriting required.

The CEO of the software company whose tool was used said that nobody had ever used [it] in such an innovative way or gotten such results, Lanier said.

As chief technology officer for the Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency, she pulled the District of Columbias chestnuts out of the fire, developing and implementingin five monthsthe Sex Offender Registry, helping D.C. avoid a federal violation and preserving its grant status.

Next came the IRS, where, despite funding cuts, Smoter updated the irs.gov site and recently earned a five-point increase in customer satisfaction on the American Customer Satisfaction Index, the University of Michigans annual e-gov evaluation.

Some places dont offer much challenge, Smoter said, explaining her crowded resume. But its going to take longer than I have to do everything there is to do here.

Smoters influence extends beyond our shoresshes co-chair of Oasis, the Tax Extensible Markup Language technical committee for international standards group. Taxpayers working in multiple countries must file multiple tax forms, so were working on standards for data exchange and interoperability of tax data, so theyll only have to prepare their taxes once, she said.


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