Murphy Names NJ’s First Chief Innovation Officer

The Freeholder fight unites more than it delights.

Governor Phil Murphy today named New Jersey native Beth Simone Noveck as the State’s first Chief Innovation Officer (CIO). The move aims at advancing the Governor’s promise to spur and expand innovation across the Garden State and within State government.

“To reclaim our innovation economy, we must have fresh, cutting-edge ideas that will not only bring New Jersey into the 21st century but also improve the lives of our nine million residents,” said Governor Murphy. “I am pleased to have Beth Noveck join our team as New Jersey’s first Chief Innovation Officer. Beth is an experienced, high-caliber professional who will make New Jersey a leader in government effectiveness.”

“Governor Murphy is a strong champion for using technology and innovation to seize the opportunities of the future, namely to spur economic growth, educate our children, increase health and wellness, and create new jobs,” said Beth Noveck. “It is an honor to serve in his Administration and help advance these goals for everyone in my home state.

The Chief Innovation Officer’s responsibilities will include:

  • Improving the lives of New Jerseyans by designing and deploying more effective and agile government services;
  • Solving public problems through new technologies and collaborating with other governments, the private sector, and institutions of higher education; 
  • Creating a 21st century government that makes decisions by tapping high-quality data and diverse collective intelligence; and 
  • Stimulating entrepreneurship and business growth while protecting workers and consumers by crafting policies to respond to the opportunities and challenges of new technology.

Dr. Noveck is a Professor in the Technology, Culture, and Society department at the New York University Tandon School of Engineering, where she directs the Governance Lab (GovLab) and its MacArthur Research Network on Opening Governance. She served in the Obama White House as the first United States Deputy Chief Technology Officer and director of the White House Open Government Initiative. UK Prime Minister David Cameron later appointed her senior advisor for Open Government.

A graduate of Harvard University and Yale Law School, she is a member of the Scholars Council of the Library of Congress. She serves on the advisory boards of the Center for Open Science, Open Contracting Partnership, EPSRC Centre for the Mathematics of Precision Healthcare, and NHS Digital Academy.

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