This is a U.S. Public Health Service position within the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO), ICE Health Service Corps (IHSC), Office of the Chief of Staff (OCoS), Taskings and Program Support Unit (TPSU). The incumbent reports to the TPSU deputy chief. This is a nonsupervisory position.
The incumbent serves as a task manager for the TPSU Task Management Program. IHSC receives hundreds of requests for information per month from internal and external government agencies, including Congress, the President and his representatives, and a variety of external sources, non-governmental organizations, legal representatives, and health care agencies. IHSC refers to requests for information as a "task" or "tasking." The Tasking Management Program is IHSC's conduit through which it submits official information and statements to the requestor and organizations external to IHSC. The task manager tracks, coordinates, manages, facilitates clearances, submits, and documents official responses to external IHSC tasks, ensuring quality communications throughout the process.
IHSC has a multi-sector, multidisciplinary workforce of more than 1,650 employees, including PHS commissioned officers, federal civil servants, and contract staff. In Fiscal Year (FY) 2025, IHSC administered and managed a health care system that provided required healthcare to more than 171,000 detained aliens housed in 17 facilities throughout the Nation, including medical, dental, mental health, preventive, and public health services, nearing 1.4 million encounters in FY 2025. IHSC also oversaw compliance with health-related standards for 266,144 detained aliens housed in 217 non-IHSC-staffed facilities, totaling 50,709 beds. IHSC also directly supports ICE field office directors on medical issues within their area of responsibility.
SUPERVISORY CONTROLS:
Incumbent reports to the TPSU deputy chief.
Tasks are usually short-term or recurring. Officer analyzes the request, plans, and organizes own work, determines sequence of actions, coordinates with IHSC staff and clearing officials, and seeks assistance from leadership only rarely. The TPSU deputy chief reviews work to ensure quality, timeliness, and overall attainment of objectives.
Special project assignments are usually of a long-term, recurring, or broadly defined in nature. Officer plans and organizes own work, determines sequence of assignments, selects and develops methods, and seeks assistance from experts, stakeholders, and leadership as needed. The TPSU deputy chief and unit chief review work to provide input and guidance and to ensure attainment of objectives.
Guidelines may be applicable to some but not all parts of assignment and may contain some inconsistencies and be partially unconfirmed. Selection and adaptation from available possibilities involving a moderate amount of modification and innovation are required. The officer uses judgment in interpreting and adapting guidelines such as PHS policies, regulations, precedents, and work direction for application to specific cases.
The officer analyzes results and recommends changes in guidelines and program policies. Innovations and modifications to accepted procedures must be approved and clearly documented. The officer keeps the supervisor informed of the status on projects and consults with him/her on any significant problems encountered.