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Government Technology/News
Julie Dunne Offers Updates on GSA’s E-Commerce Initiative, Alliant 2 Small Business Contract
by Jane Edwards
Published on May 4, 2020
Julie Dunne Offers Updates on GSA’s E-Commerce Initiative, Alliant 2 Small Business Contract
Julie Dunne
Julie Dunne

Julie Dunne, commissioner of the General Services Administration’s (GSA) Federal Acquisition Service, said FAS is now moving forward with the e-commerce marketplace initiative after delaying the program during the first few weeks of the coronavirus pandemic, Federal News Network reported Friday.

She provided updates on the small business track of the $15 billion Alliant 2 contract vehicle for information technology services, which was awarded in December 2017.

Dunne said Alliant 2 is in the middle of litigation and that FAS hopes to share some developments in the next couple of weeks. “GSA’s leadership is fully committed to small business and making sure they are a part of our industrial base,” she added.

She noted that the assisted acquisition services pilot as part of the Small Business Innovation Research program is now permanent and helped expedite an award within the defense sector to address a supply chain risk management requirement.

Julie Dunne Offers Updates on GSA's E-Commerce Initiative, Alliant 2 Small Business Contract

Julie Dunne of the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) will serve as a keynote speaker during Potomac Officers Club’s 2020 Procurement Forum on June 9th. Register here to join Potomac Officers Club for its 2020 Procurement Forum on June 9th.

Soraya Correa, chief procurement officer of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), will also serve as a keynote speaker during the forum. During her keynote address, she will discuss the short term and long term strategies, acquisition, workforce initiatives, tech modernization and collaboration between government and industry.

Register here to join Potomac Officers Club for its 2020 Procurement Forum on June 9th.

Executive Moves/News
Trump to Nominate Michael Walsh as Commerce Dept General Counsel, Jason Weida as HHS IG
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on May 4, 2020
Trump to Nominate Michael Walsh as Commerce Dept General Counsel, Jason Weida as HHS IG

Trump to Nominate Michael Walsh as Commerce Dept General Counsel, Jason Weida as HHS IG

President Trump intends to nominate Michael Walsh, chief of staff at the Department of Commerce, to be general counsel of the same department, the White House announced Friday. Jason Weida, an assistant U.S. attorney in Boston, is also set to receive nomination for the inspector general position at the Department of Health and Human Services.

Walsh, who has concurrently served as acting general counsel since August 2019, joined the Commerce Department early in 2018 after he worked as a partner O’Melveny & Myers, where he represented corporate clients in various legal proceedings such as internal and regulatory investigations. He is a former pro bono partner for his own firm’s office in Washington, D.C.

Weida, who has overseen multiple investigations in the health care sector, previously worked in the Department of Justice’s legal policy office. The attorney also practiced at Jones Day and at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom.

He took on pro bono cases as a litigation associate and his office was a recipient of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Certificate of Recognition for Pro Bono Service.

Earlier in his career, Weida was a law clerk at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, the Rhode Island Supreme Court and the U.S. District Court for the District of Rhode Island.

Government Technology/News
Intell Community Assesses Emerging Data on Possible COVID-19 Origin
by Jane Edwards
Published on May 1, 2020
Intell Community Assesses Emerging Data on Possible COVID-19 Origin

Intell Community Assesses Emerging Data on Possible COVID-19 Origin

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) issued a public statement Thursday saying that U.S. intelligence agencies continue to assess data on potential origins of the new coronavirus and currently agree with the “wide scientific consensus that the COVID-19 virus was not manmade or genetically modified.”

The intelligence community said its experts respond to crises by coming up with intelligence on issues that are critical to national security and the IC has been offering support to policymakers and individuals who help in response efforts to fight the COVID-19 virus, which emerged in Wuhan, China.

“The IC will continue to rigorously examine emerging information and intelligence to determine whether the outbreak began through contact with infected animals or if it was the result of an accident at a laboratory in Wuhan,” the statement reads.

The U.S. has reported more than 1M COVID-19 cases with over 62K deaths and more than 150K recoveries, according to Johns Hopkins University’s Coronavirus Resource Center.

Contract Awards/News
NSF Issues Grant to Support COVID-19 Tracking Dashboard
by Nichols Martin
Published on May 1, 2020
NSF Issues Grant to Support COVID-19 Tracking Dashboard
NSF Issues Grant to Support COVID-19 Tracking Dashboard

The National Science Foundation has selected Johns Hopkins University’s Center for Systems Science and Engineering to develop an existing web-based dashboard designed for COVID-19 tracking.

The institution will use an NSF-awarded $200K grant to manage and further develop the dashboard that displays information on COVID-19 cases and recoveries across all countries containing the disease, NSF said Monday.

Awarded funds would allow CSSE to update the dashboard's data capture process and integrate new features such as data context and evaluation.

Launched in January, the dashboard collects and displays data that the public, including researchers and health institutions, may access in a GitHub platform.

Public health organizations use the dashboard to develop plans and inform public safety decisions.

Work under the contract will run through April 30, 2021.

Government Technology/News
NASA Names Mars Helicopter After Essay Entry by High School Student
by Nichols Martin
Published on May 1, 2020
NASA Names Mars Helicopter After Essay Entry by High School Student
NASA Names Mars Helicopter After Essay Entry by High School Student

Vaneeza Rupani, a high school student from Alabama, has received the honor to name NASA's Mars helicopter, a small spacecraft that would support flight studies on the red planet.

She named the helicopter "Ingenuity" in her entry to an essay contest that originally sought what to call the next Mars rover, the space agency said Wednesday.

NASA received 2.8K entries to the Mars rover essay contest that was eventually won by Alexander Mather who coined the name "Perseverance."

The space agency then decided to look at the other entries for the helicopter's name.

"The ingenuity and brilliance of people working hard to overcome the challenges of interplanetary travel are what allow us all to experience the wonders of space exploration," Rupani stated in her contest entry.

The solar-powered helicopter will demonstrate flight on the red planet. NASA has already docked the helicopter to Perseverance.

"Ingenuity encapsulates the values that our helicopter tech demo will showcase for everyone when it takes off next year as the first aircraft on another planet's surface," said Jim Bridenstine, NASA administrator, who selected Rupani's entry as the helicopter's name.

News/Press Releases
FAA to Engage Academia for UAS Workforce Dev’t; Stephen Dickson Quoted
by Nichols Martin
Published on May 1, 2020
FAA to Engage Academia for UAS Workforce Dev’t; Stephen Dickson Quoted
Stephen Dickson
Stephen Dickson

The Federal Aviation Administration has launched a partnership program to foster careers in the technology area of unmanned aircraft systems.

The UAS Collegiate Training Initiative invites academic institutions to help industry, FAA, local government entities and others build the country's UAS workforce, FAA said Thursday.

UAS-CTI aims to provide the skills that graduates would need to develop careers in the UAS industry. The program also supports requirements of the 2018 FAA Reauthorization Act.

“Providing our nation’s youth with educational opportunities is a major commitment of this administration,” said Stephen Dickson, FAA Administrator.

Applicant schools must offer UAS-related programs to be eligible for participation.

Government Technology/News
NASA Joins European, Japanese Counterparts for COVID-19 Virtual Hackathon Effort
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on May 1, 2020
NASA Joins European, Japanese Counterparts for COVID-19 Virtual Hackathon Effort
NASA Joins European, Japanese Counterparts for COVID-19 Virtual Hackathon Effort

NASA has partnered with the European Space Agency and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency to launch a “virtual hackathon” to support COVID-19 research and development efforts.

NASA said Thursday the Space Apps COVID-19 Challenge, which will take place on May 30 and 31, requires participants to leverage open-source and geospatial intelligence data for a range of research applications such as the assessment of coronavirus spread.

ESA plans to provide its artificial intelligence-based EuroDataCube platform as well as data from its Sentinel satellite missions as part of the effort.

According to NASA, the COVID-19 Challenge will focus on assessing human and economic response to the pandemic and serve as the Space Apps program’s first virtual iteration.

The space agencies will begin accepting applications for the hackathon in mid-May.

Government Technology/News
Lockheed Ships First Gallium Nitride Radar to Army
by Nichols Martin
Published on May 1, 2020
Lockheed Ships First Gallium Nitride Radar to Army
Lockheed Ships First Gallium Nitride Radar to Army

The U.S. Army has received a version of a Lockheed Martin-made radar powered by Gallium Nitride that boosts the sensor's reliability and range.

GaN technology also poses the potential for future updates such as counterfire target acquisition, Lockheed said Thursday.

“Lockheed Martin recently delivered the first Q-53 system to the U.S. Army equipped with GaN,” said Mark Mekker, director of radar programs at Lockheed.

Mekker said the GaN upgrade will allow the Army to constantly tailor the system in response to changing requirements.

Q-53 is designed to identify and track enemies for the protection of deployed troops. Operators may use the radar in either 360- or 90-degree modes.

Lockheed delivered the GaN radars under a contract issued in 2018.

Executive Moves/News
Report: George Nesterczuk Named OPM Senior Adviser
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on May 1, 2020
Report: George Nesterczuk Named OPM Senior Adviser
George Nesterczuk
George Nesterczuk

An Office of Personnel Management (OPM) spokesperson has confirmed that George Nesterczuk, a more than four-decade government and industry professional, will serve as senior adviser to the OPM director, Federal News Network reported Thursday.

Nesterczuk, the owner and president of consulting firm Nesterczuk and Associates, previously held the same role from 2004 to 2006 under the George W. Bush administration. During his tenure, Nesterczuk led the creation of the National Security Personnel System for the Department of Defense.

Before that, he spent time in leadership positions at the House of Representatives, OPM, DoD and Department of Transportation. He also held VP and lead scientist roles at Global USA, EG&G and Atlantic Science throughout his industry career.

In 2017, Nesterczuk withdrew his nomination for OPM director three months after President Trump selected him for the post.

News/Press Releases
Maxar Joins Dynetics to Design HLS for NASA’s Artemis Program; Megan Fitzgerald, Kim Doering Quoted
by Sarah Sybert
Published on May 1, 2020
Maxar Joins Dynetics to Design HLS for NASA’s Artemis Program; Megan Fitzgerald, Kim Doering Quoted
Maxar Joins Dynetics to Design HLS for NASA’s Artemis Program; Megan Fitzgerald, Kim Doering Quoted

Maxar Technologies has been selected to support Dynetics, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Leidos, in designing and building a Human Landing System (HLS) for NASA’s Artemis program, the company announced on Friday. 

“Maxar is tremendously proud to contribute to these critical pieces of NASA’s Artemis program,” said Megan Fitzgerald, Maxar’s Senior Vice President and General Manager of Space Infrastructure. “By partnering with U.S. industry and leveraging innovative, flight-proven commercial technologies, NASA is accelerating this new era of American leadership in space.”

Maxar will deliver a variety of support services and hardware solutions that will enable power, control, communications, robotic manipulation and thermal optimization for the HLS. Maxar will also provide engineering and mission operations support. Dynetics’ HLS will deliver two astronauts from lunar orbit to the lunar surface and back, including surface habitation for approximately one week.

With Maxar’s work on the HLS, Dynetics will expand its contributions to NASA’s Artemis program. Maxar will develop the Power and Propulsion Element for the lunar Gateway to enable a sustainable human deep-space presence in collaboration with international partners. 

Maxar will also contribute a robotic arm called SAMPLR for Masten Space Systems’ XL-1 unmanned lunar lander that will deliver nine technology demonstration experiments to the lunar south pole in 2022.

"Dynetics is excited to lead this expert team of subcontractors that will return Americans to the lunar surface," said Kim Doering, Vice President of Space Systems at Dynetics. "This team has a proven history of technical excellence, and their contributions will greatly benefit the future of space exploration."

The Artemis mission company selection in May 2020. Blue Origin, Dynetics and SpaceX have won 10-month contracts worth $967 million combined to design and build human landing systems for NASA’s Artemis moon mission in 2024.

NASA said that all three contractors will further develop HLS concepts through February 2021as part of the Next Space Technologies for Exploration Partnerships initiative before the agency NASA selects which developers will move into the maturation

About Maxar

Maxar is a trusted partner and innovator in Earth Intelligence and Space Infrastructure. We deliver disruptive value to government and commercial customers to help them monitor, understand and navigate our changing planet; deliver global broadband communications; and explore and advance the use of space. 

Our unique approach combines decades of deep mission understanding and a proven commercial and defense foundation to deploy solutions and deliver insights with unrivaled speed, scale and cost effectiveness. Maxar’s 4,000 team members in 30 global locations are inspired to harness the potential of space to help our customers create a better world.

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ExecutiveGov, published by Executive Mosaic, is a site dedicated to the news and headlines in the federal government. ExecutiveGov serves as a news source for the hot topics and issues facing federal government departments and agencies such as Gov 2.0, cybersecurity policy, health IT, green IT and national security. We also aim to spotlight various federal government employees and interview key government executives whose impact resonates beyond their agency.

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