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Contract Awards/News
Ravenswood Receives $555M IDIQ Contract to Support Army, National Guard Training Program, Dan Donoghue Quoted
by William McCormick
Published on November 8, 2019
Ravenswood Receives $555M IDIQ Contract to Support Army, National Guard Training Program, Dan Donoghue Quoted


Ravenswood Receives $555M IDIQ Contract to Support Army, National Guard Training Program, Dan Donoghue Quoted

Army Contracting Command–Orlando has awarded Ravenswood Solutions a potential five-year, $555 million indefinite delivery/ indefinite quantity (IDIQ) contract to support the Army National Guard’s (ARNG) eXportable Combat Training Capability (XCTC) program, Ravenswood announced on Friday. Ravenswood Solutions will provide planning, operations, and sustainment for the XCTC program through October 31, 2024. 

“Ravenswood Solutions gives our all to provide best-in-class products and services to our troops,” said Dan Donoghue, President and CEO of Ravenswood Solutions. “We are honored to be chosen to continue to support this critically-important training to our nation’s Guardsmen.”

The mission of the XCTC program is to provide a highly realistic, fully instrumented, and intensive live training event for brigade combat teams, functional, and multi-functional brigades. The scope of the ARNG’s XCTC program involves training as many as three brigades simultaneously at multiple locations using a government-provided instrumentation system that tracks and records location and time-synchronized training events.

News/VA
Robert Wilkie: VA May Receive Higher Budget After 2020 Elections
by Nichols Martin
Published on November 8, 2019
Robert Wilkie: VA May Receive Higher Budget After 2020 Elections


Robert Wilkie
Robert Wilkie

Robert Wilkie, secretary of veterans affairs and a 2019 Wash100 Award recipient, said he predicts his department’s programs would win the budgetary favor of the upcoming 2020 elections, Military Times reported Thursday.

The Department of Veterans is pursuing multiple technology reform efforts, such as the electronic health record, that require a higher budget, he said. Wilkie noted that VA will also need more funds to address supply chain reforms and keep up with Congress-imposed requirements.

“I don’t see how, no matter what is in store electorally, how anyone goes back on selling VA short in terms of the budget,” he said Thursday in an interview with Military Times.

The secretary noted the department’s development over time in terms of leadership, White House support and people’s recognition of VA’s changes.

DoD/Executive Moves/News
Mark Lewis Named Research, Engineering Director at DoD
by Matthew Nelson
Published on November 8, 2019
Mark Lewis Named Research, Engineering Director at DoD


Mark Lewis
Mark Lewis

Mark Lewis, formerly chief scientist at the U.S. Air Force, has been appointed director of research and engineering for modernization at the Department of Defense, Air Force Magazine said Wednesday.

Under his new role, Lewis will work as an assistant for Mike Griffin, undersecretary for research and engineering at DoD. Lewis will also serve as a temporary assistant director for space at DoD in line with Derek Tournear’s promotion as head of the Space Development Agency.

The hypersonics, propulsion and space vehicle design expert spent four years at USAF and led the American Insitute of Aeronautics and Astronauts as president. He also spent 24 years at the University of Maryland as an instructor.

Government Technology/News
Will Roper: US Military Should Invest in Ideas to Win Innovation Battle Against China
by Jane Edwards
Published on November 8, 2019
Will Roper: US Military Should Invest in Ideas to Win Innovation Battle Against China


Will Roper
Will Roper

Will Roper, assistant secretary of the Air Force for acquisition, technology and logistics and a 2019 Wash100 Award recipient, said the U.S. military should entice the country’s venture capitalists to invest in novel defense technologies in order to keep ahead of China and “win the innovation battle,” Breaking Defense reported Thursday.

“Again, this is about innovation as a battlefield. Capital is a part of it. Companies that can’t get capital from us fast enough will find foreign investments that they gotta take to keep from going under,” he told reporters Wednesday at the Air Force Space Pitch Days in San Francisco.

Roper said the Department of Defense needs to reform its acquisition model to better engage the private sector and compete with China, which is ramping up investments in U.S. tech startups.

“It’s not enough to develop and procure systems anymore. We’ve got to get in the business of of buying ideas and generating ideas,” he added.

Government Technology/News
Lt. Gen. Robert Ashley Warns of Foreign Space Threats to US Satellites
by Jane Edwards
Published on November 8, 2019
Lt. Gen. Robert Ashley Warns of Foreign Space Threats to US Satellites


Robert Ashley
Robert Ashley

Army Lt. Gen. Robert Ashley, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency and a 2019 Wash100 Award winner, mentioned at a conference the development of foreign space and counter-space capabilities that could target U.S. satellites and ground control platforms in future conflicts, SpaceNews reported Thursday.

He said Wednesday at the CyberSat 2019 conference that Russia and China have been advancing the development of those capabilities, including lasers, surface-to-air missiles, malware, co-orbital maneuvering satellites and electronic jammers.

Ashley also cited an unclassified DIA report on foreign counter-space threats issued in February. “Part of the reason we wanted to put that out at the unclassified level is so we can start the dialogue,” he said.

He added that the move seeks to help lawmakers better inform the public of why the Pentagon needs to invest in space programs.

Government Technology/News
Federal CIO Suzette Kent on Technology Modernization Fund
by Jane Edwards
Published on November 8, 2019
Federal CIO Suzette Kent on Technology Modernization Fund


Suzette Kent
Suzette Kent

Suzette Kent, federal chief information officer and a 2019 Wash100 Award recipient, discussed at a conference the Technology Modernization Fund and how the federal government funds information technology transformation initiatives through TMF, Federal News Network reported Thursday.

“Coming in from the private sector, one of the very interesting things [in government] was the concept of talking about transformation, but getting that done with one-year money,” she said at Pegasystems’ Government Empowered Conference. “Those things don’t work really well together. A broad and bold vision for transformation in many agencies, whether it’s a micro-journey or something bigger than that, often takes more time.”

Chief data officers, chief financial officers and other C-suite officials at federal agencies identified “common learnings” from IT projects funded through TMF and Kent said agencies can apply those lessons in future initiatives.

“Every one of the initiatives had some element that was an all-of-government benefit,” Kent said. “What that means is a playbook came out of it, a tool for reuse, or it was a particular type of initiative where one agency started and others contributed.”

Government Technology/News
Federal CIO Suzette Kent on Technology Modernization Fund
by Jane Edwards
Published on November 8, 2019
Federal CIO Suzette Kent on Technology Modernization Fund


Suzette Kent
Suzette Kent

Suzette Kent, federal chief information officer and a 2019 Wash100 Award recipient, discussed at a conference the Technology Modernization Fund and how the federal government funds information technology transformation initiatives through TMF, Federal News Network reported Thursday.

“Coming in from the private sector, one of the very interesting things [in government] was the concept of talking about transformation, but getting that done with one-year money,” she said at Pegasystems’ Government Empowered Conference. “Those things don’t work really well together. A broad and bold vision for transformation in many agencies, whether it’s a micro-journey or something bigger than that, often takes more time.”

Chief data officers, chief financial officers and other C-suite officials at federal agencies identified “common learnings” from IT projects funded through TMF and Kent said agencies can apply those lessons in future initiatives.

“Every one of the initiatives had some element that was an all-of-government benefit,” Kent said. “What that means is a playbook came out of it, a tool for reuse, or it was a particular type of initiative where one agency started and others contributed.”

Government Technology/News
Defense Innovation Unit Reviews Proposals for GPS Alternative Device
by Nichols Martin
Published on November 7, 2019
Defense Innovation Unit Reviews Proposals for GPS Alternative Device


Defense Innovation Unit Reviews Proposals for GPS Alternative Device

The Defense Innovation Unit is evaluating proposed projects on non-GPS navigation devices for the U.S. Army, Space News reported Wednesday.

DIU’s Boston-based office is looking at 25 proposals for the Dismounted Assured Positioning, Navigation and Timing System or DAPS. The future handheld device would work to help soldiers navigate through GPS-denied environments.

The solicitation ran through Oct. 28 and sought available technologies that don’t require a large amount of further development. Col. Jeff Sheehan, DIU program manager, said the proposals included optical, inertial and radio frequency navigation.

Cybersecurity/Government Technology/News
Army Needs Tools to Understand the Cyber Battlespace
by Nichols Martin
Published on November 7, 2019
Army Needs Tools to Understand the Cyber Battlespace


Army Needs Tools to Understand the Cyber Battlespace

The U.S. Army seeks firms willing to demonstrate technologies that would help commanders visualize the cyber domain of a battlefield, Fifth Domain reported Wednesday.

The service branch is searching for these technologies under the Cyber Situational Understanding or SU program. Companies would self-fund their own demonstrations that would take place in realistic environments.

The Army expects to issue a contract for the program in March 2020.

Brigade teams usually rely on a manual process that uses input from multiple experts. Timothy Coen, Cyber SU project lead, said the Army lacks a single, unified analysis tool that correlates data from all cyber systems in battle.

SU’s first phase will aim to allow self-visualization for units and commanders and is scheduled to enter limited deployment this fiscal year. The program’s first and second capability drops will occur in fiscal years 2022 and 2024, respectively.

News
Military Leaders Talk Establishing Standalone Electromagnetic Warfare Domain
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on November 7, 2019
Military Leaders Talk Establishing Standalone Electromagnetic Warfare Domain


Military Leaders Talk Establishing Standalone Electromagnetic Warfare Domain

U.S. military officials are yet to decide if electromagnetic warfare should be established as a separate domain along with land, air, sea, cyber and space, C4ISRnet reported Wednesday.

Brig. Gen. David Gaedecke, director of electromagnetic spectrum superiority under the U.S. Air Force’s deputy chief of staff for strategy, integration and requirements, said at an Association of Old Crows event that while the electromagnetic spectrum has physical properties, establishing it as a standalone domain would pose logistical challenges for large organizations like the Department of Defense.

Laurence Mixon, a special assistant at the Army’s Program Executive Office for Intelligence, Electronic Warfare and Sensors, noted that EMS encompasses all warfare domains and will enable forces to coordinate effectively.

“EMS is definitely an aspect of the operational environment that every tactician has to be aware of, understand and leverage,” he said. “And on the acquisition side we have to consider EMS when we are developing every one of our systems. I think since EMS crosses all of the domains that we currently have today that we identify and use in the joint parlance–I don’t think the Army is ready to call it a domain.”

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