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Air Force Sets New Investment Strategy for Maintenance of Facilities
by Darwin McDaniel
Published on March 19, 2019
Air Force Sets New Investment Strategy for Maintenance of Facilities


Air Force Sets New Investment Strategy for Maintenance of Facilities

The U.S. Air Force unveiled a new investment strategy that outlines how the service will address its current $33 billion maintenance deficit worldwide, a figure that is expected to triple over the next 30 years, Federal News Network reported Monday.

The service plans to request an annual funding increase for infrastructure maintenance and change how it designs and repairs facilities to reduce project costs in its 180 installations worldwide.

“What this installations investment strategy does is have us look at what we need to do to ensure these installations are capable now and 20 years into the future,” said Richard Hartley, the Air Force principal deputy assistant secretary for installations, environment and energy.

The strategy includes a two percent annual increase in funding for infrastructure maintenance. Hartley said the increase could give the Air Force another $1 billion dollars per year.

“A key component of this strategy is sufficient and stable funding,” he said. “I would say that’s critical seed money to make this strategy successful.”

The Air Force also plans to invest in data analytics to maintain and modernize facilities. Officials want to install sensors in buildings to predict when maintenance is needed. The investment strategy includes reducing total facility square footage by five percent during the next 20 years through divestment, demolition, conversion and consolidation.

News
New Mexico Legislators Make Push to Host New Space Agency
by Nichols Martin
Published on March 19, 2019
New Mexico Legislators Make Push to Host New Space Agency


New Mexico Legislators Make Push to Host New Space Agency

Legislators from New Mexico sent a letter to Patrick Shanahan, the acting defense secretary, regarding the state’s interest in hosting the new Space Development Agency, Space News reported Monday.

The lawmakers are attempting to persuade Shanahan to select New Mexico as the new agency’s location. The department could work with the existing volume of space researchers in the state, the report noted.

“As you stand up the SDA, we urge you and other senior leaders to look to the state of New Mexico as a host for co-locating the agency headquarters and to be your lead entities for implementing the space research and development policies you directed,” the letter stated.

Sens. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., Tom Udall D-N.M., and Rep. Xochitl Torres Small D-N.M., are among those who signed the letter. Space research and technology organizations located in New Mexico include Spaceport America, SpaceBooster and Lunar Transportation Systems.

Executive Moves/News
John Edwards Named CIA Deputy COO
by Matthew Nelson
Published on March 19, 2019
John Edwards Named CIA Deputy COO


John Edwards Named CIA Deputy COO

John Edwards, formerly chief information officer and director of information technology enterprise at the CIA, has been promoted to the position of deputy chief operating officer.

Edwards is scheduled to make his first appearance in the role at the Cipher Brief Threat Conference in Sea Island, Ga., the agency said Monday.

Prior to his appointment, Edwards served as the chief of staff to the CIA’s executive director and led its analytic support team, action and operation centers as well as the Critical Mission Assurance initiative as executive secretary.

He spent 14 years as a communications and technical operations officer at the Department of Homeland Security science and technology directorate and worked at two startup companies from 2003 to 2015.

News
Marine Corps Seeks MUX Drone Funding for FY20
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on March 19, 2019
Marine Corps Seeks MUX Drone Funding for FY20


Marine Corps Seeks MUX Drone Funding for FY20

The U.S. Marine Corps is requesting $21.6 million to acquire MUX sea drones for fiscal year 2020, Marine Corps Times reported Tuesday.

Capt. Christopher Harrison, a spokesman for the service branch, noted that the funding will support technical concept maturation and experimentation efforts for the amphibious ship-launched drones ahead of an operational capability certification in FY26.

Other MUX initiatives covered by the funding include system architecture development and rapid prototyping of major components to serve as a basis for future production initiatives. Harrison added that the MUX can also serve as a cargo resupply vehicle and an airborne escort for other existing platforms.

Lawmakers previously pointed to USMC’s potential lack of capacity to operate larger drones, resulting in the MUX funding being reduced from $25 million. The Marine Corps has also requested for three MQ-9 Reaper drones in 2020 and an additional three for the following year.

News
Navy Looking to Retire Largest Combatants to Buy More Missiles
by Darwin McDaniel
Published on March 19, 2019
Navy Looking to Retire Largest Combatants to Buy More Missiles


Navy Looking to Retire Largest Combatants to Buy More Missiles

Defense officials said the U.S. Navy is considering a plan to cancel the proposed service-life extensions for its oldest cruisers, the largest combatants in its naval fleet, Defense News reported Monday. The service wants to save money to procure more missiles and address the growing threats from Chinese and Russian anti-ship missiles.

The Navy eyes decommissioning the cruisers Bunker Hill, Mobile Bay, Antietam, Leyte Gulf, San Jacinto and Lake Champlain in 2021 and 2022, which officials said are difficult to maintain due to aging components. All the six ships will reach or be near the end of their 35-year service lives over the next three years.

However, the Navy would lack six ships to support its fleet of largest surface combatants if its ends the services of those cruisers by 2022. The Navy planned to buy a replacement large surface combatant first before retiring some of its aging cruisers, but the service branch previously decided to delay the acquisition until 2025.

“We’re early in the discussion of requirements on the large surface combatant. I’ve got to tell you, given kind of the discussion that’s happened already, the first question that we have to do is prove to ourselves that we need a large surface combatant,” said Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John Richardson.

The Navy intends to issue its updated 30-year shipbuilding plan in the coming days, which will include details on the future of the cruisers.

News
GAO: DoD Should Provide Guidance on User Involvement in Software Dev’t for Space Systems
by Jane Edwards
Published on March 19, 2019
GAO: DoD Should Provide Guidance on User Involvement in Software Dev’t for Space Systems


GAO: DoD Should Provide Guidance on User Involvement in Software Dev’t for Space Systems

The Government Accountability Office evaluated four software-intensive space programs of the Department of Defense and found the initiatives are struggling to involve end users in software development efforts. The reviewed programs are the Air Force’s Joint Space Operations Center Mission System Increment 2, the Navy’s Mobile User Objective System, Space-Based Infrared System and the Next Generation Operational Control System, according to a GAO report published Monday. 

Aside from the lack of early and continual involvement of users in software development, the reviewed space programs failed to give end users opportunities to provide feedback and integrate user feedback into subsequent development. “This was due, in part, to the lack of specific guidance on user involvement and feedback,” GAO said in the report.

GAO called on the Pentagon to ensure that its software development guidance offers direction on how and when to engage system users as well as ways to document and communicate feedback to stakeholders during the development process.

News
Kirstjen Nielsen: Feds Doing ‘Too Little’ to Build a Cyber Secure US
by Darwin McDaniel
Published on March 19, 2019
Kirstjen Nielsen: Feds Doing ‘Too Little’ to Build a Cyber Secure US


Kirstjen Nielsen: Feds Doing ‘Too Little’ to Build a Cyber Secure US

Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said the federal government should increase efforts to protect agencies, industry, academia and the public from hackers supported by other countries since the U.S. today “is not prepared” for a foreign cyber attack, The Hill reported Monday.

“It’s not just U.S. troops and government agents on the frontlines anymore. It’s U.S. companies. It’s our schools and gathering places. It’s ordinary Americans,” Nielsen said during a speech at the George Washington University.

The call comes after other federal officials warned that hackers backed by countries like Russia, China and North Korea pose major threats to the U.S. Despite the growing threats, Nielsen said that the U.S. government did “far too little” to boost cybersecurity. The Department of Homeland Security is working with the Department of Defense to address cyber threats targeting the government and the local supply chain.

“Let me just send one last message to our cyber adversaries,” Nielsen said. “We are watching you. And no matter what malware you develop, I promise you, the engines of our democracy are far stronger and far more resilient than any code you can write.”

News
President’s FY 2020 Budget Request Includes $88B for IT Spending at Civilian Agencies, DoD
by Jane Edwards
Published on March 19, 2019
President’s FY 2020 Budget Request Includes $88B for IT Spending at Civilian Agencies, DoD


President’s FY 2020 Budget Request Includes $88B for IT Spending at Civilian Agencies, DoD

The Department of Defense and civilian agencies would receive $87.8 billion in combined funds for information technology spending under President Trump’s budget request for fiscal year 2020. Civilian agencies would get $51 billion in IT budget for fiscal 2020 and DoD would also receive $36.7 billion, according to supplemental budget information in the White House’s Analytical Perspectives report. 

The report says the president’s proposed FY 2020 budget includes funds for more than 7,600 IT investments at agencies supporting IT security, infrastructure and management, mission delivery and administrative services and mission support. The Department of Homeland Security would get $7.1 billion, or 14 percent, of the proposed total IT budget for civilian agencies.

The president’s budget would allocate $6.1 billion for IT programs at the Department of Veterans Affairs and $5.6 billion at the Department of Health and Human Services.

The State Department and NASA would respectively get $2.3 billion and $2.15 billion in IT funds, while the General Services Administration would receive $648 million for FY 2020, according to the report.
 

News/Wash100
Jim Garrettson, CEO of Executive Mosaic, Presents Mark Gray, President & CEO of ASRC Federal, His Fifth Wash100 Award
by William McCormick
Published on March 18, 2019
Jim Garrettson, CEO of Executive Mosaic, Presents Mark Gray, President & CEO of ASRC Federal, His Fifth Wash100 Award


Jim Garrettson, CEO of Executive Mosaic, Presents Mark Gray, President & CEO of ASRC Federal, His Fifth Wash100 Award

Jim Garrettson, founder and CEO of Executive Mosaic, presented Mark Gray, president and CEO of ASRC Federal, with his fifth Wash100 Award on Wednesday.

Executive Mosaic recognizes Gray for driving organic growth and delivering exceptional services to ASRC Federal’s clients. We are honored to present the most coveted award in government contracting to Mark Gray of ASRC Federal.

Gray joined ASRC Federal in June 2014 as the president and CEO of the company. In this role, he has driven the corporate strategy, realizing notable organic growth, successfully integrating acquisitions, and expanding ASRC Federal’s capabilities and customer base, while also improving customer service delivery.

“It is an honor to be recognized and a reflection of the emphasis and commitment our employees place on delivering exceptional services in support of our customers’ missions,” said Mark Gray.

Previously, Gray served as vice president and general manager at URS Corporation from 2008 to May 2014. He was the COO for INDUS Corporation from 2006 to 2008 and a senior vice president at Anteon/GDIT from 1997 to 2006.

In 2018, serving as the Chair of the American Heart Association’s Greater Washington Heart Walk, Gray’s efforts helped raise a record $2.458 million for the organization. Gray also serves on the Professional Services Council Board of Directors and other community organizations. He graduated from the University of Notre Dame with a bachelor of science degree in Aerospace Engineering and a MBA from Georgetown University – The McDonough School of Business.

The Wash100 award, now in its sixth year, recognizes the most influential executives in the GovCon industry as selected by the Executive Mosaic team in tandem with online nominations from the GovCon community. Representing the best of the private and public sector, the winners demonstrate superior leadership, innovation, reliability, achievement and vision.

Visit the Wash100 site to learn about the other 99 winners of the 2019 Wash100 Award. On the site, you can submit your 10 votes for the GovCon executives of consequence that you believe will have the most significant impact in 2019.

News
GAO: Interior, SBA Should Improve Reporting on Political Appointee Data, Ethics Training
by Darwin McDaniel
Published on March 18, 2019
GAO: Interior, SBA Should Improve Reporting on Political Appointee Data, Ethics Training


GAO: Interior, SBA Should Improve Reporting on Political Appointee Data, Ethics Training

The Government Accountability Office called on the Department of the Interior and the Small Business Administration to improve federal ethics training programs and report on the performance of political appointees in the executive branch.

A report issued Friday revealed the lack of a single source of publicly available, comprehensive and timely data on appointees at the two departments. 

“The public has an interest in knowing the political appointees serving and this information would facilitate congressional oversight and hold leaders accountable,” the report said.

SBA was also cited for not providing written procedures for initial ethics training to new political appointees. The GAO added the Interior is facing human capital and retention challenges in its ethics programs. There are full-time positions still vacant that support such programs.

“Federal ethics programs seek to safeguard the integrity of governmental decision-making,” the report said.

The government watchdog recommended that Congress consider a bill that would require the publication of political appointees serving in the executive branch as well as improvement in ethics program policies and procedures.

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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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