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By Roberta Rampton

WASHINGTON, Nov 8 (Reuters) – The House Oversight and

Government Reform Committee issued a subpoena on Friday to

compel Todd Park, the chief technology officer at the White

House, to testify at a hearing next week about what went wrong

with the Obamacare website.

The White House called the subpoena “unfortunate and

unnecessary” and said that Park was busy fixing the website. The

White House earlier had said he was willing to appear

voluntarily in December.

“We had hoped the committee would work with us to find an

alternative date to give Todd time to focus on the immediate

task at hand: getting the website fixed,” said Rick Weiss, a

spokesman for the White House Office of Science and Technology.

“We are reviewing the subpoena and will respond as

appropriate,” Weiss said.

Darrell Issa, the California Republican who chairs the

committee, told Park that he was the only administration witness

at the Nov. 13 hearing who was “unwilling to appear voluntarily”

and noted that he had taken time out to give an interview to the

New York Times in early October.

“Millions of Americans have lost their health insurance,”

Issa wrote in a letter to Park.

“They deserve your sworn testimony before their elected

representatives about what went wrong – not simply the media

outlets that White House officials have deemed an appropriate

use of your time,” he said.

PARK: ‘NOT GOING ANYWHERE’

The HealthCare.gov website, which launched Oct. 1, was meant

to be an easy way for Americans to shop for health insurance and

see whether they were eligible for subsidies under President

Barack Obama’s signature healthcare program.

But it has been plagued by myriad technical woes, and

contractors and outside experts have been working around the

clock to try to make it work by the end of November so that

Americans have enough time to sign up for insurance before

deadlines in the law.

On Friday, Jeffrey Zients, the White House official charged

to oversee the fixes, said the website is improving but is still

“a long way from where it needs to be.”

A successful healthcare IT developer before joining the

Obama administration, Park has been part of the scramble to

repair the website.

Earlier on Friday, the White House had scolded Issa for

failing to justify why the hearing with Park could not be slated

for December.

“There will be ample time to analyze why the technology

behind the website did not perform well initially, and whether

there are any lessons learned for federal IT acquisition policy

that Congress may want to address,” said Donna Pignatelli,

assistant director for legislative affairs for the Office of

Science and Technology Policy in a letter to Issa.

“Mr. Park is not going anywhere,” Pigantelli had said.

(Additional reporting By Karey Van Hall; Editing by Ken Wills)