With Singleton’s departure, he will leave behind a laundry list of accomplishments. In April 2009, Singleton helped consolidateall of New York’s state and county IT security contracts with McAfee Inc. into one contract.
Not only did the consolidation save the state money, but it also helped compliance with mobile device encryption requirements from the New York State Office of Cyber Security and Critical Infrastructure Coordination.
The following September, Singleton worked to improve New York state’s IT security while saving the state $30 million by setting up an enterprise license agreement with Mark Rutledge, director of government strategies for McAfee.
The agreement included 11 products that secure state IT resources end-to-end, including mobile devices. The agreement cost the state $2 million, and allows it to offer unlimited licenses to its agencies.
Singleton created a lot of buzz in June 2009 when he helped launch Empire 2.0, a social networking strategy to encourage New York state agencies to use “Web 2.0, new media, and social collaborative tools and technologies.”
According to the Baltimore Business Journal, the city’s mayor, Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, announced Singleton’s appointment Nov. 19. Singleton will begin his tenure in Baltimore Dec. 15.