Thomas G. DeLutis, Ph.D.
Dr. DeLutis has a distinguished background as a university professor, large-scale program manager, master process engineer, technical advisor, special consultant, expert witness, software forensic specialist, principal investigator and program executive in many institutions. Most notably, Tom has been the lead information architect/systems planner for information architectures or major information systems projects at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the Department of Veteran's Affairs, the Defense Advanced Research Agency, the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Army Research Office, and the U.S. Social Security Administration. Dr. DeLutis was the Program Manager and Chief Architect for KPMG's involvement in the Prime Integration Services award for the Internal Revenue Service. Dr. DeLutis received his Ph.D from Purdue University, a combined award from the School of Science (Dept. of Computer Science) and the School of Industrial Engineering
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Raymond J. Curts, PhD
Dr. Curts is an Information Technology professional with more than 30 years experience developing, implementing and maintaining Enterprise Information Architectures, Information Security Policies, and Interoperability Standards. Currently the ENX Director of Enterprise Architectures, he has completed previous assignments as the Deputy Program Manager for the Continuity Communications Enterprise Architecture (CCEA) sponsored by the Office of Science and Technology Polity (OSTP) in the Whitehouse as well as assisting in the development of Enterprise Command & Control (EC2) policy, processes, procedures and assessment methodologies through support to the U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense for Networks and Information Integration (ASD(NII)), Office of the Director of C2 Policy. Dr. Curts has worked in support of numerous DoS, DoD and DNI programs as a defense contractor and has conducted a variety of studies in the areas of Ontologies, Command and Control, C4ISR, Information Architectures, Interoperability and Information Assurance. In addition, Dr. Curts served for more than 20 years as a U.S. Navy, carrier qualified, tactical jet Aviator and instructor pilot. His final tour on active duty was at the Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command Headquarters (SPAWAR) in Washington, DC where he spent five years as the Navy's Electronic Warfare Architect. He was a primary contributor to the Navy’s Information Warfare Master Plan and Acquisition Strategy and later was responsible for a complete re-write of the U.S. State Department’s Information Assurance Policies and Procedures. Dr. Curts currently serves as an Adjunct Professor of Information Technology and Engineering at both George Mason and George Washington Universities, and is involved in standards making and investigative bodies associated with IEEE, NDIA, CCRP, ITAA, NIAP, AFCEA, and AOC among others. Dr. Curts holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering from the University of Illinois, a Master’s degree in Management and Business Administration from Webster University and a PhD in Information Technology from George Mason University.
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