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Contract Awards/Government Technology/News
MetTel To Provide Internet Protocol Services To The SEC; Robert Dapkiewicz Quoted
by William McCormick
Published on July 21, 2021
MetTel To Provide Internet Protocol Services To The SEC; Robert Dapkiewicz Quoted

MetTel announced on Wednesday that the company was selected by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commision (SEC) to provide Internet Protocol Services (IPS) under the General Services Administration (GSA) Enterprise Infrastructure Solutions (EIS) contract.

“MetTel will equip the SEC with a forward-looking IPS solution that can facilitate upgrades and enhancements as telecommunications technologies and services evolve and advance,” commented Robert Dapkiewicz, MelTel Federal Programs general manager and SVP.

“Utilizing the MetTel EIS Portal, the SEC will have access to the latest technology to monitor and report performance details in near real-time on the internet services delivered via the MetTel network. The portal will provide improved visibility into operations and service level agreement compliance,” added Dapkiewicz.

The SEC will transition its IPS service to EIS contract providers in accord with Federal Trusted Internet Connections (TIC) directives and as part of its digital transformation. The contract requires MetTel to provide 10 gigabit Ethernet IPS connectivity at the SEC’s second data center.

The selection illustrates that the company’s federal practice is growing. Since last year, MetTel has won contract awards from over a dozen federal organizations totaling over $2 billion in total contract value after all options.

During the last 18 months, MetTel announced information technology (IT) Communications projects with many city and federal agencies, including the Social Security Administration, Department of Homeland Security, General Services Administration, Department of State, and the Veteran’s Administration.

The SEC was created in 1934 during the Great Depression and is tasked with protecting investors, maintaining fair, orderly and efficient markets and facilitating capital formation. The agency comprises 11 regional offices and an IPS network that is fully converged with agency data, voice and video services.

General News/News
Chief Human Capital Officers Council Now Fully Under OPM; Director Kiran Ahuja, Katy Kale Quoted
by Nichols Martin
Published on July 21, 2021
Chief Human Capital Officers Council Now Fully Under OPM; Director Kiran Ahuja, Katy Kale Quoted

The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) will regain full authority of the Chief Human Capital Officers Council's (CHCO) functions, following the divide of the council's functions between the General Services Administration (GSA) and OPM since 2019.

This move transfers the GSA's share of CHCO Council functions back to OPM, the personnel management agency said Tuesday. 

Kiran Ahuja, OPM director and CHCO Council chair, said the move is part of OPM's commitment to refining the CHCO Council. OPM is now working to restore the council following the latter's budget reduction over the past few years.

"GSA has enjoyed working with and supporting the CHCO Council these past few years, and we are supportive of reuniting strategic and administrative functions of the CHCO Council,” said Katy Kale, deputy administrator of GSA and a 2021 Wash100 Award winner.

Margot Conrad, who formerly served with the Partnership for Public Service, has been appointed to become the CHCO Council's executive director. The CHCO Council provides advisory and coordination to support human resources functions across the federal government.

Government Technology/News
Former Defense Exec Lisa Porter: U.S. Should Not Limit Microelectronics Supply Chain
by Nichols Martin
Published on July 21, 2021
Former Defense Exec Lisa Porter: U.S. Should Not Limit Microelectronics Supply Chain

Lisa Porter, who formerly served as the deputy undersecretary of defense for research and engineering, said the U.S. government should contribute to international microelectronics standards rather than solely rely on the limited, domestic supply chain, Nextgov reported Tuesday.

Porter said at a hearing with the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence that the government should not limit its supply chain to onshore resources as this approach creates a false sense of security.

She said relying purely on U.S.-made microelectronics is not feasible and establishes a false notion that onshoring equates to security. The approach would also limit the government's access to the most modern chips, she noted.

The former defense executive suggested that the country should instead apply the zero-trust cybersecurity approach to microelectronics while not barring the supply chain from global suppliers.

Government Technology/News
Adm. Michael Gilday: FY 2022 Budget Proposal Aligns With Navy’s Future Fleet Vision
by Jane Edwards
Published on July 21, 2021
Adm. Michael Gilday: FY 2022 Budget Proposal Aligns With Navy’s Future Fleet Vision

Adm. Michael Gilday, chief of naval operations, said he believes the proposed budget for fiscal year 2022 supports the U.S. Navy’s plans for its future fleet design, Defense News reported Tuesday.

The Navy conducted the Future Naval Force Study in 2020 and Gilday said the analysis enabled the service and the U.S. Marine Corps to get a clear view of the assets they should deploy to deter a future fight.

“The analysis really gave us a sense, beyond the numbers, what the composition of the fleet needs to be in order to effectively deter and fight, and that really comes down to joint capabilities that the Navy would contribute to a joint fight,” he said.

Although the law requires the Navy to achieve a fleet of 355 ships, Gilday said the service can afford approximately 300 ships given its current budget.

“So that includes the manning, the training, the equipping, the supply parts, the ammunition, the training days, the flying hours, all of that that yields a fleet that’s ready to go to sea today and deter a China, deter a Russia from any malign activity,” he added.

Gilday noted that the proposed budget compelled him to prioritize readiness and training over increased capacity and modernization to deploy new capabilities.

He said the Navy expects the delivery of Block III and IV Virginia-class attack submarines by 2025. Other fleet improvements Gilday expects to see in the short term are the availability of Flight III Arleigh Burke-class destroyers and a Zumwalt-class destroyer equipped with a hypersonic weapon.

Contract Awards/Government Technology/News
DOE Awards $127M in Grants to 110 Small Businesses for Clean Energy R&D Projects; Secretary Jennifer Granholm Quoted
by Angeline Leishman
Published on July 21, 2021
DOE Awards $127M in Grants to 110 Small Businesses for Clean Energy R&D Projects; Secretary Jennifer Granholm Quoted

The Department of Energy has awarded a total of $127 million in funding to small businesses across 26 states working on clean energy technologies. The 110 projects cover various technological areas such as renewable and fusion energy, carbon management and cybersecurity, DOE said Tuesday.

Emissol from Washington state received $1.65 million, the highest share among all awardees, to research a low-cost pathway that would reduce carbon dioxide capture cost.

Creative Power Solutions from Arizona and Susteon from North Carolina each received the second-highest funding for developing an ammonia gas turbine combustor technology and a dual functional materials-enabled carbon dioxide capturing method, respectively.

Other funded projects will focus on lithium-ion battery recycling, lightning-protected wind turbine blade coating, oil and geothermal wastewater reuse and other clean energy technologies.

"These funding awards will help small businesses take their work to the next level, expand their operations and create new jobs, and be part of the fight against the existential crisis of our time – climate change," said Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm.

The DOE Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and Small Business Technology Transfer (SBTT) programs administered the awards, with funding coming from the agency's science, energy, nuclear and environmental offices.

Government Technology/News
FedRAMP Issues Updated Guides for Developing Machine-Readable Authorization Packages
by Jane Edwards
Published on July 21, 2021
FedRAMP Issues Updated Guides for Developing Machine-Readable Authorization Packages

The Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program (FedRAMP) has released updated resources and conversion tools meant to help vendors and other stakeholders advance the digitization of FedRAMP authorization packages for commercial cloud services using a common machine-readable language. 

The move came a month after FedRAMP and the National Institute of Standards and Technology released Version 1.0.0 of the Open Security Controls Assessment Language (OSCAL) that seeks to expedite the preparation, authorization and reuse of cloud offerings for the government sector, according to a blog post published Tuesday.

The revised resources are available on the FedRAMP Automation GitHub Repository and include updated guides to OSCAL-based system security plans, security assessment reports and plans, and plan of action and milestones.

“OSCAL is not currently a requirement, but we expect the benefits to spur adoption and FedRAMP is ready to start receiving information in OSCAL as a pilot,” the post reads.

FedRAMP is also requesting comments on the machine-readable formats and guidance.

Government Technology/News
House Bill to Form Tech-Focused Executive Branch Agency, Increase Public R&D Funding; Rep. Ro Khanna Quoted
by Jane Edwards
Published on July 21, 2021
House Bill to Form Tech-Focused Executive Branch Agency, Increase Public R&D Funding; Rep. Ro Khanna Quoted

Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., has introduced a bill that would establish an independent agency focused on technology within the executive branch and increase U.S. government funding for tech-related research and development efforts to 1 percent of the country’s gross domestic product, Nextgov reported Tuesday.

The proposed measure would create the Federal Institute of Technology (FIT) and under this independent agency, up to 30 “local boards” would be formed in areas lacking major tech centers, according to a copy of the bill obtained by the publication.

FIT would help distribute funds across federal, local and state agencies to advance research into artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, telecommunications, blockchain, biotechnology and other tech areas.

“Various agencies focus on these topics tangentially but this new agency would have the sole focus on promoting emerging technologies, innovation jobs and research funding,” Khanna told the publication in an email.

Other provisions of the bill are tax incentives for organizations that hire through FIT programs and support for educational programs aimed at advancing science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

Reps. Suzan DelBene, D-Wash., Nanette Diaz Barragan, D-Calif., and Dwight Evans, D-Pa., co-sponsored the proposed legislation.

News/Space/Wash100
Christopher Scolese: Commercial Systems Part of NRO’s Space Architecture
by Angeline Leishman
Published on July 21, 2021
Christopher Scolese: Commercial Systems Part of NRO’s Space Architecture

Christopher Scolese, director of the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) and a 2021 Wash100 Award recipient, said he expects commercial technology to play an important role in the agency's future space architecture as the threat landscape continues to evolve, SpaceNews reported Tuesday.

“We're making architectural changes to improve resiliency, increase capacity and capabilities, and ensure the delivery of NRO mission-essential functions," Scolese told the audience at a Washington Space Business Roundtable event.

He noted that the office could procure and adapt commercial systems for its own purposes and there are circumstances where vendors provide technologies that replace traditional capabilities at the agency.

On June 28th, NRO opened the registration for its annual program that seeks high-risk and low-maturity technology concepts from agencies, companies and academic institutions to transform the office's space mission.

Interested parties have until Aug. 11th to submit proposals for the Director’s Innovation Initiative.

Executive Moves/News
President Biden Picks Jonathan Kanter for DOJ Antitrust Division’s Assistant Attorney General
by Angeline Leishman
Published on July 21, 2021
President Biden Picks Jonathan Kanter for DOJ Antitrust Division’s Assistant Attorney General

Jonathan Kanter, a more than two-decade legal professional, will be nominated by President Biden to serve as assistant attorney general for the Department of Justice's antitrust division.

Kanter is a founding partner of Washington, D.C.-based Kanter Law Group and is known for advocating the enforcement of federal and state antitrust laws in the technology industry, the White House said Tuesday.

He previously served as co-chair of the antitrust practice at New York City-based law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton and Garrison and worked in the federal government as an attorney for the Bureau of Competition within the Federal Trade Commission.

According to a Bloomberg report, Kanter once represented Yelp and Microsoft and other complainants that have accused Google of anti-competitive behavior. The antitrust lawyer earned his juris doctorate from Washington University in St. Louis.

Government Technology/News
DISA Completes Joint Ops Center Upgrade; Capt. Rick Larson Quoted
by Carol Collins
Published on July 21, 2021
DISA Completes Joint Ops Center Upgrade; Capt. Rick Larson Quoted

The Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) has completed a $1.2 million project to modernize the watch floor of its Joint Operations Center (JOC).

DISA said Tuesday the 18-month effort included architectural refurbishment and equipment upgrade at the facility where personnel help operates and secures the Department of Defense Information Network.

The agency uses the watch floor to also manage situational awareness across joint operations and inform senior leaders about enterprise activities.

“Before the upgrade watchstanders were using monitors that were more than 10 years old, several of which no longer worked," said Capt. Rick Larson, director of the DISA Joint Operations Center.

Larson noted that the command-and-control space now features 11 large display monitors for the battle captain and other personnel to monitor the agency's operational areas.

DISA plans to conduct a regular evaluation of the display layout in an effort to sustain the availability of critical information at agency-operated watch centers.

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