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Government Technology/News
Army-Supported MIT Research Explores How Clothing Fibers Can Transmit Data; James Burgess Quoted
by Nichols Martin
Published on June 15, 2021
Army-Supported MIT Research Explores How Clothing Fibers Can Transmit Data; James Burgess Quoted

The U.S. Army has helped the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) produce a fiber that could allow for data transmission when sewed into soldier uniforms.

MIT's Army-funded Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies (ISN) developed a fiber that can gather and process data while being worn as part of clothing, the service branch said Monday. The Army believes the fiber could allow soldier uniforms to power sensors and transmit gathered data to external entities. 

ISN researchers tested the fiber's memory capacity by storing in it a 767-kilobit video file and a 0.48-megabyte audio file. The research also found that the fiber can be washed at least 10 times.

The team stated that artificial intelligence has the potential to expand the fiber's applications. ISN tested this by setting up a neural network of 1,650 connections in the fiber, which collected 270 minutes data on a wearer's surface body temperature. The fiber used this data to determine the wearer's activity, with an accuracy rate of 96 percent.

Gabriel Loke, an MIT doctoral student, said the fiber's data collection capacity can support machine learning algorithms.

“This groundbreaking research, with other research underway at the ISN, could revolutionize Soldier uniforms,” said James Burgess, ISN's program manager at the Army Research Laboratory (ARL).

Government Technology/News
DOE Allocates $200M for Electric Vehicle Tech Development; Kelly Speakes-Backman Quoted
by Angeline Leishman
Published on June 15, 2021
DOE Allocates $200M for Electric Vehicle Tech Development; Kelly Speakes-Backman Quoted

The Department of Energy has unveiled a five-year, $200 million funding program to help national laboratories and external partners develop electric vehicle technologies such as battery and connected systems.

DOE said Monday that its vehicle technologies office will administer the investment effort, which is still subject to appropriations and seeks to encourage partnerships with the battery manufacturing industry.

“We’re focusing on the entire battery supply chain from soup to nuts – from sustainable mining and processing to manufacturing and recycling – which will translate to thousands of new jobs across the country and put more clean-running electric vehicles on the road,” said Kelly Speakes-Backman, acting assistant secretary of DOE.

The funding opportunity will be open to all 17 national laboratories and comes two months after the department announced it would invest $62 million for projects that will explore approaches to cut emissions from both on- and off-road vehicles.

DOE’s National Blueprint for Lithium Batteries 2021-2030, released on June 7th, calls for public-private collaboration to build up the domestic supply network for lithium-based batteries.

Executive Moves/News
USDA CISO Venice Goodwine Returns to Air Force as IT Director
by Carol Collins
Published on June 15, 2021
USDA CISO Venice Goodwine Returns to Air Force as IT Director

Venice Goodwine stepped down from her chief information security officer position at the Department of Agriculture and rejoined the U.S. Air Force to serve as director of enterprise information technology, FedScoop reported Monday.

In her previous capacity, Goodwine managed a $208 million annual budget for USDA-wide cybersecurity initiatives. She led the establishment of the department’s unified security operations center, the implementation of endpoint and mobile security tools and the adoption of a risk management framework from the National Institute of Standards and Technology.

Before she joined USDA in December 2018, Goodwine was a senior cybersecurity officer at the Air Force where she advised the service CISO on information security matters.

She also worked at Marine Corps Systems Command as senior program manager and oversaw multimillion-dollar IT contracts that supported networks across the service.

Earlier in her career, she managed IT projects that sought to address the Marine Corps’ garrison infrastructure, hardware, and software requirements.

Goodwine earned certified information systems security professional and project management professional designations from ISC2 and the Project Management Institute, respectively.

Government Technology/News
Pentagon Seeks to Enable ‘All-Domain Advantage’ With New Cloud Strategy; DOD CIO John Sherman Quoted
by Jane Edwards
Published on June 15, 2021
Pentagon Seeks to Enable ‘All-Domain Advantage’ With New Cloud Strategy; DOD CIO John Sherman Quoted

The Department of Defense (DOD) has released its Outside the Continental U.S. Cloud Strategy outlining its goals and vision for achieving a “dominant all-domain advantage” by providing warfighters at the tactical edge access to cloud computing.

The office of the DOD chief information officer announced the publication of the strategy in a tweet posted Friday. The cloud strategy outlines DOD’s three goals and the first is to provide robust and resilient connectivity to the tactical edge.

For the initial goal, the Pentagon details four specific objectives: modernize in theater communications infrastructure; secure cloud connections through OCONUS cloud access points; leverage state-of-the-art technologies to connect denied, disconnected, intermittent or limited environments; and enable access to information from multiple devices and data sources.

The other two goals of the department’s OCONUS Cloud Strategy are delivering computing power that enables forces at the tactical edge and deploying talent at the point of need.

“The outcomes of the strategy align with and further the priorities of the National Defense Strategy and DoD Digital Modernization Strategy,” John Sherman, acting CIO of DOD, wrote in the document’s foreword.

Army: IT Management and Transformation Forum

If you’re interested to hear notable federal and industry leaders discuss the U.S. Army’s information technology reform efforts, strategies and priorities, then check out GovConWire’s Army: IT Management and Transformation Forum coming up on June 17th. To register for this virtual forum and view other upcoming events, visit the GCW Events page.

Government Technology/News/Wash100
U.S., Albania Sign MOU to Advance 5G Security; Antony Blinken Quoted
by Jane Edwards
Published on June 15, 2021
U.S., Albania Sign MOU to Advance 5G Security; Antony Blinken Quoted

The U.S. and Albania have agreed to facilitate the development of secure 5G and 4G networks and protect such networks from foreign adversaries. Secretary of State Antony Blinken signed the memorandum of understanding with Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama on Sunday during a meeting in Brussels.

“I think we’re setting a very strong example together here today, particularly on the need to make sure that when it comes to our most sensitive technology and networks we have, we’re working with trusted vendors,” Blinken said. Rama said the partnership marks a “very important moment.”

“[W]e have undertaken these issues on our sides this – some years, asking also the other countries in the region join, and to put all together with our effort for secure – for a very secure path of communication, and to put this path of communication, of very critical services in the hands of the people of Albania – in the hands of institutions of our security forces, and to not allow – and this may be a compromise by third actors and sometimes malign actors,” Rama added.

event banner

If you’re interested in 5G technology and 5G integration’s impact on public and private sectors, then check out Potomac Officers Club’s Fall 2021 5G Summit coming up on Sept. 16th. To register for this virtual forum and view other upcoming events, visit the POC Events page.

Government Technology/News
OMB Releases Guidance on Executive Order Implementation by Made in America Office
by Jane Edwards
Published on June 15, 2021
OMB Releases Guidance on Executive Order Implementation by Made in America Office

The Office of Management and Budget has issued initial guidance with regard to the implementation of the Made in America executive order by a newly established office at OMB.

The guidance directs agencies to appoint a senior accountable official for domestic sourcing to coordinate with the director of the Made in America Office to execute the policy in the EO, such as reducing waivers and increasing opportunities for U.S. manufacturing, Shalanda Young, acting director of OMB, wrote in the Friday memo.

In January, President Biden signed the EO that directs federal agencies to buy U.S.-made products and services to support U.S. businesses, manufacturers and workers and strengthen the enforcement of Buy American laws.

The document also addresses other areas of implementation: agency reports, agency-OMB waiver review process and waiver transparency.

In accordance with the EO, agencies should submit reports on their use of Made in America laws. Such reports should contain an analysis of current practices regarding such laws and outline measures to create opportunities for U.S. companies and workers and strengthen domestic supplier bases.

The waiver guidance contains a list of information that agencies must address and include in their proposed waivers for submission to the director of MIAO and details steps for the creation of a public website for those waivers.

“Increasing consistency and public transparency of these waivers will build confidence that Made in America laws are operating as intended while strengthening U.S. manufacturing capabilities, supporting good jobs and ensuring the future will be Made in America,” MIAO Director Celeste Drake wrote in a White House blog post published Friday.

Contract Awards/News
BAE Systems Secures Potential $104.8M Navy Contract For USS San Diego Modernization
by William McCormick
Published on June 14, 2021
BAE Systems Secures Potential $104.8M Navy Contract For USS San Diego Modernization

BAE Systems announced on Monday that the company secured a $90.2 million U.S. Navy contract for the maintenance and modernization of the amphibious transport dock USS San Diego (LPD 22). If all options are exercised, the contract could reach $104.8 million in value.

“The upcoming USS San Diego project is a major event in the service life of the ship, expanding its capability to execute a wide range of naval missions for many years to come,” commented David Thomas Jr., BAE Systems San Diego Ship Repair vice president and general manager.

The docking selected restricted availability (DSRA) contract will require BAE Systems to dry-dock the 684-foot-long ship and perform work on the underwater hull, repair its system of ballast tanks and preserve its amphibious well deck area.

The company will also refurbish the living spaces for as many as 800 sailors and Marines that can be carried aboard. The work is planned to begin in September 2021 at the company’s San Diego shipyard and take over a year to complete.

USS San Diego was commissioned in May 2012 and is the fourth Navy vessel named after the southern California city. It is also the sixth ship of the San Antonio class.

“Our team of employees, subcontractors and Navy personnel look forward to ushering USS San Diego into its next phase of fleet readiness. We also recognize the unique and special opportunity to work aboard a ship named for our hometown,” added Thomas.

BAE Systems is a leading provider of ship repair, maintenance, modernization, conversion and overhaul services for the Navy. The company also has vast experience in contracting work for other Department of Defense organizations such as the U.S. Air Force.

On June 4th, BAE Systems secured a three-year $34.1 Air Force million contract for maintenance activities supporting the system Air Force operators use to create optimized, fuel-efficient flight plans.

Government Technology/News/Wash100
Ronald Moultrie: Government Should Boost Investment in Defense-Intelligence Info Sharing
by Nichols Martin
Published on June 14, 2021
Ronald Moultrie: Government Should Boost Investment in Defense-Intelligence Info Sharing

Three high-level executives from the Department of Defense (DOD) jointly testified in front of the House Armed Services Committee (HASC) regarding the collaboration between defense and intelligence communities, DOD News reported Friday.

Ronald Moultrie, the undersecretary of defense for intelligence and security, said the U.S. government must focus on improving how it facilitates defense-intelligence information sharing.

He added that the DOD has adopted a whole-of-government approach that takes classification processes into consideration. Moultrie also said the department is expanding its sharing of classified information through partnerships and alliances.

Lt. Gen. Scott Berrier, who leads the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), and Gen. Paul Nakasone, director of the National Security Agency and a five-time Wash100 Award recipient, delivered testimony alongside Moultrie in the hearing, which focused on the government's defense-intelligence pursuits for the fiscal year 2022.

"I am committed to ensuring DIA is positioned to meet these challenges by modernizing key capabilities across the top-secret IT network, our foundational military intelligence mission, and our ballistic missile technical collection architecture," Berrier stated.

Government Technology/News
VA Implements Use of Extended Reality Tech to Support Veteran Therapy
by Nichols Martin
Published on June 14, 2021
VA Implements Use of Extended Reality Tech to Support Veteran Therapy

The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is implementing technologies that would allow veterans to virtually receive therapeutic treatment. VA intends to do this through the use of extended reality, which covers virtual, augmented and mixed reality technologies altogether.

The agency will launch a pilot program to evaluate the usability of VR technology in a variety of therapeutic applications, such as neurological risk assessments and chronic pain management, said Anne Lord Bailey, who chairs the Veterans Health Administration's XR Network.

The XR Network, which launched last fall, has distributed XR technology across 50 sites for use in therapeutic treatment. Bailey said the pilot program's activities would take place at 11 VA medical centers, including sites in Virginia, Texas and California.

Government Technology/News
DHS Hosting Event to Find Next Generation of Facial Recognition Technology; Arun Vemury Quoted
by Nichols Martin
Published on June 14, 2021
DHS Hosting Event to Find Next Generation of Facial Recognition Technology; Arun Vemury Quoted

The Department of Homeland Security’s Science and Technology (DHS S&T) Directorate will host an event in September to assess commercially made facial recognition technologies, Federal News Network reported Friday.

DHS’s Biotechnology Rally will assess how these technologies from different companies perform in different environments and challenging scenarios. The event will take place at the Maryland Test Facility, where companies will exhibit their facial recognition systems.

Approximately 600 individuals have volunteered to help DHS test these products. DHS plans to share the event’s results with federal stakeholders and foreign security partners.

“We’re looking at trying to optimize the entire system, the entire process, to reduce errors and help people expeditiously get through the screening process,” said Arun Vemury, the director of S&T’s Biometric and Identity Technology Center.

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