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Government Technology/News
OIG Urges DHS to Improve Data Collection, Management
by Jane Edwards
Published on May 27, 2021
OIG Urges DHS to Improve Data Collection, Management

The Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) office of inspector general (OIG) called on DHS to improve data collection and management activities after it found that persistent data quality issues hamper the department’s daily use of some of the diverse and largest databases to support decision-making processes and mission operations.

OIG assessed 135 reports between fiscal years 2017 and 2019 and identified 70 data quality issues classified into four categories: data access, data accuracy, data completeness and relevance and data availability, according to a summary report released Monday.

The inspector general’s office also identified 82 internal control deficiencies that hindered the accuracy, confidentiality and availability of the department’s data. Those deficiencies were grouped into five categories: security and technical controls; program and operational oversight; guidelines and processes; system design and functionality; and training and resources.

According to the report, the department has enhanced its information security program and come up with strategies and plans to improve data quality and management but needs continued improvement to address internal control deficiencies associated with data quality issues.

“Only then can the Department be assured it captures reliable and accurate data to accomplish its mission responsibilities,” the report states.

Government Technology/News
Darlene Costello: DOD, Space Industry Work Together to Combat IP Theft
by Jane Edwards
Published on May 27, 2021
Darlene Costello: DOD, Space Industry Work Together to Combat IP Theft

Darlene Costello, acting assistant secretary of the U.S. Air Force for acquisition, technology and logistics, said the Department of Defense (DOD) and space companies “have their best people” working to counter China’s attempts to steal and compromise intellectual property data, SpaceNews reported Wednesday.

She told the Senate Armed Services Committee’s subpanel on strategic forces Wednesday that the Air Force is working with the space industry to implement security measures against potential breaches.

“We have gotten much better, and continue to challenge our industry partners and work with them on our cybersecurity and our intellectual property,” Costello added.

Costello noted that companies offer incentives to protect their intellectual property.

“Industry doesn’t want that going out the door either, so that’s a shared interest on our part and they are actively working it,” she said.

event banner

If you want to know more about the latest updates about the Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification, then check out Potomac Officers Club’s CMMC Forum coming up on June 16th.

CMMC Accreditation Body Chairman Karlton Johnson will serve as the keynote speaker for the Forum to provide his overview and vision of the CMMC Rollout as well as the top priorities for the board and how industry feedback will help to improve the vision behind how the organization develops for the first 100 days.

To register for this virtual forum and view other upcoming events, visit the POC Events page.

Contract Awards/Government Technology/News
Alion Awarded $87M DOD Contract For NAVSEA SEA21 Technical Analysis; Glenn Goodman Quoted
by William McCormick
Published on May 26, 2021
Alion Awarded $87M DOD Contract For NAVSEA SEA21 Technical Analysis; Glenn Goodman Quoted

Alion Science and Technology announced on Wednesday that the company has secured a five-year $87 million task order of performance to provide technical analysis for Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) Deputy Commander for Surface Warfare (SEA 21). Serco will serve as a primary subcontractor on this contract.

The contract was awarded under the Department of Defense (DOD) Information Analysis Center’s (DOD IAC) multiple-award contract (MAC) vehicle. The DOD IAC MAC task orders were awarded by the U.S. Air Force’s 774th Enterprise Sourcing Squadron.

“The Alion/Serco team has an exceptional understanding of the SEA21 program and the Integrated Data Environment (IDE) requirements. With the knowledge and experience this team brings, we are able to develop new tools and solutions that are specifically designed to increase efficiencies and drive process improvements,” commented Glenn Goodman, Alion’s senior vice president and general manager of the Live, Virtual and Constructive Solutions Group.

The contract requires Alion to provide SEA 21 with research-based technological analysis and deliverables for its weapon, HM&E, logistic, and service delivery systems onboard surface non-nuclear naval vessels to include combatant and non-combatant ships.

“Alion will continue to provide uninterrupted technical services to NAVSEA 21 to support Navy ship maintenance and modernization for in-service ships throughout their lifecycle for continued warfighting capability to the Fleet,” added Goodman.

Government Technology/News
Navy Now Ready to Use New Precision Landing System on Aircraft Carriers
by Nichols Martin
Published on May 26, 2021
Navy Now Ready to Use New Precision Landing System on Aircraft Carriers

The U.S. Navy has declared the initial operational capability of a Raytheon Technologies-made system designed to guide aircraft landing on naval carriers and amphibious assault ships.

The Joint Precision Approach and Landing System (JPALS) achieved IOC on May 4 and is now ready to facilitate aircraft landings on naval ships, Naval Air Systems Command said May 18th.

“JPALS has reached a historic milestone, which supports our requirement to deliver, operate and maintain a Navy with a focus on our core roles of sea control and power projection,” said Cmdr. Jeff Dugard, who leads the Naval Airspace and Air Traffic Control Standards and Evaluation Agency.

The system's IOC declaration results from a long series of developmental work that commenced in 2008 and comes almost a year earlier than scheduled.

JPALS can now help F-35C units land on nuclear aircraft carriers in any weather condition. The system has been used on amphibious assault ships since 2016 under an early operational capability.

Government Technology/News
Air Force Department to Decide on How to Handle Data Sharing; Taylor Flaxington Quoted
by Nichols Martin
Published on May 26, 2021
Air Force Department to Decide on How to Handle Data Sharing; Taylor Flaxington Quoted

The Department of the Air Force came up with four options to guide the data-sharing activities of both the U.S. Air Force and U.S. Space Force, Breaking Defense reported Tuesday.

The department developed these options based on the results of the Data and Infrastructure Architecture Summit, which commenced in March and ran for two weeks.

Leaders of the Air Force Department will assess the options and decide in June 2021 on which to execute. The department's Chief Architect Integration Office will then develop a minimum viable product based on what Air Force leadership decides on.

“The main premise behind all courses of action is to develop an enterprise data platform,” said Taylor Flaxington, lead design engineer for the Air Force Department.

Government Technology/News
Booz Allen, Databricks Partner To Drive AI Development; SVP John Larson Quoted
by William McCormick
Published on May 26, 2021
Booz Allen, Databricks Partner To Drive AI Development; SVP John Larson Quoted

Booz Allen Hamilton announced on Wednesday that it is partnering with Databricks to drive business value by unifying data and artificial intelligence (AI) to meet federal agencies’ data challenges and advance their missions.

“Combining Booz Allen’s deep technical expertise and mission knowledge with Databricks’ rich Lakehouse Platform will deliver truly powerful AI insights and outcomes for defense, federal civilian and intelligence agencies as they face the most urgent national data challenges,” commented John Larson, senior vice president with Booz Allen Hamilton.

“The accelerated collaboration, scale and data-driven insights that this partnership brings will add tremendous value for our federal clients as they leverage these advanced capabilities to serve our national priorities,” added Larson.

The partnership between Booz Allen and Databricks will create three critical applications that are vital resources for data-driven insights and decision-making. Including scalable enterprise AI operations, fraud, waste and abuse detection and mitigation and genomics data processing.

Booz Allen will deliver scalable machine learning workflows to accelerate AI initiatives beyond the lab to deploy them to the enterprise and enable trusted, machine-led insights in real-time. The partnership will leverage AI as a powerful tool for detecting patterns and anomalies in massive amounts of data, such as those processed by healthcare and financial organizations.

As to the genomics data processing application, the companies will use AI to bring develop computing power to help agencies unlock value from data to improve insights.

“The ability to uncover actionable insights from data has never been more important as enterprises look to adapt, innovate and better prepare for the future in an uncertain world,” said Howard Levenson, general manager of Databricks Federal.

“We’re excited to be working with Booz Allen as they leverage the power of Databricks’ Lakehouse Platform to help organizations solve their toughest problems with data. We look forward to seeing the value this partnership delivers for our joint customers,” Levenson added.

Government Technology/News
Federal CIO Clare Martorana: Government to Prioritize Cybersecurity in TMF Funding Boost
by Nichols Martin
Published on May 26, 2021
Federal CIO Clare Martorana: Government to Prioritize Cybersecurity in TMF Funding Boost

Clare Martorana, the new federal chief information officer, said the government is looking to update its digital services and cybersecurity through allocations of a $1 billion fund, FCW reported Tuesday. These digital transformation efforts would use the Technology Modernization Fund's (TMF) boost mandated by the American Rescue Plan Act.

The American Council for Technology and Industry Advisory Council (ACT-IAC) hosted a conference where Martorana talked about how the new TMF funds can help agencies bolster cybersecurity and adopt modern technologies.

“Making data shareable, adopting common standards and improving data management is just going to be mission-critical for many years to come,” Martorana stated. Agencies interested in using the funds may submit proposals through June 2nd.

Government Technology/News
Comtech Telecommunications Corp. Awarded $1.6 Million Contract for High-Power Solid-State Amplifiers
by William McCormick
Published on May 26, 2021
Comtech Telecommunications Corp. Awarded $1.6 Million Contract for High-Power Solid-State Amplifiers

Comtech Telecommunications Corp. (NASDAQ: CMTL), a world leader in secure wireless communications technologies, announced today that during its third quarter of fiscal 2021, its New York-based subsidiary, Comtech PST Corp., which is part of Comtech’s Government Solutions segment, was awarded an additional $1.6 million contract for RF microwave solid-state amplifiers from a major domestic prime contractor, adding to an initial $1.7 million contract awarded earlier this fiscal year.

Government Technology/News
Stephen Volz on NOAA’s Portfolio Approach to Earth-Observation Mission
by Christine Thropp
Published on May 26, 2021
Stephen Volz on NOAA’s Portfolio Approach to Earth-Observation Mission

Stephen Volz, assistant administrator for National Environmental Satellite, Data and Information Service at NOAA, said NESDIS is adopting an approach where a satellite is built while taking into account other satellite constellations and how the systems work together, SpaceNews reported Tuesday.

Speaking at a Space Foundation webinar, Volz explained that a portfolio approach to Earth-observation mission is aimed at helping the agency "have the best mix and match of instruments and observations in the coming years."

NOAA also prepares for a possible change in its data-gathering approach and considers the use of low Earth orbit observations from the systems of the agency's partners, including the U.S. Space Force, NASA, Eumetsat, European Space Agency (ESA) and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.

Volz said some of NOAA's partners studying the difference between data gathered by large satellites and constellations of small satellites. According to him, small satellite constellations have more coverage than "the old approach" and enable flexibilities in instrumentation.

“We’re working with our partners to see what they’re learning, but also potentially to use that same approach for our low Earth orbit satellites in the next generation,” he added.

Government Technology/News
Rima Kasia Oueid: DOE, Industry Should Collaborate to Develop Quantum-Based Grid Management Tech
by Carol Collins
Published on May 26, 2021
Rima Kasia Oueid: DOE, Industry Should Collaborate to Develop Quantum-Based Grid Management Tech

Rima Kasia Oueid, commercialization executive in the Department of Energy's (DOE) technology transitions office, said collaboration with the private sector could help DOE to further quantum information science (QIS) research work and apply the emerging computing technology to modernize power grid infrastructure, FedScoop reported Tuesday.

She gave her perspective on the potential of quantum-based algorithms for power grid management during a virtual forum hosted by the American Council for Technology-Industry Advisory Council.

Kasia Queid told event attendees that industry has shown interest in the combinatorial optimization concept and she believes integrating classical and quantum algorithms could support optimization use cases.

DOE has invested more than $1 billion in QIS projects in the past few years, according to the publication.

Congress established the department's Office of Technology Transitions in 2015 to encourage public-private partnerships in research and development projects such as quantum computing work.

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