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News
Senate Bill to Grant Air Force $1.1B for Post-Disaster Projects
by Darwin McDaniel
Published on February 28, 2019
Senate Bill to Grant Air Force $1.1B for Post-Disaster Projects


Senate Bill to Grant Air Force $1.1B for Post-Disaster Projects

Up to $1.1B in funding has been allocated to the U.S. Air Force in a new Senate bill intending to help the government in disaster-relief efforts, Air Force Magazine reported Wednesday.

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The Air Force budget is part of the $13.6B government-wide funding package to address the aftermath of hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes and wildfires, among other natural disasters. The bill was introduced by Republican Sens. David Perdue and Johnny Isakson of Georgia, Marco Rubio and Rick Scott of Florida, Tim Scott of South Carolina, Thom Tillis of North Carolina, Dan Sullivan of Alaska and Alabama Democrat Doug Jones.

The over $1B budget for the Air Force would fund construction, operations and maintenance of the service’s installations affected during the 2018 hurricane season. Up to $700M would go to planning, design and construction projects for facilities damaged by Hurricane Michael, while the remaining $400M would be for emergency spending. The bill states that the funding could support the service’s construction projects through Sept. 30, 2023.

If signed into law, lawmakers intend to require Air Force officials to submit a plan for how it will spend the funds before releasing the money.

News/Wash100
Jim Garrettson, CEO of Executive Mosaic, Presents PV Puvvada, President of Unisys Federal Systems, His Fifth Wash100 Award
by William McCormick
Published on February 28, 2019
Jim Garrettson, CEO of Executive Mosaic, Presents PV Puvvada, President of Unisys Federal Systems, His Fifth Wash100 Award


Jim Garrettson, CEO of Executive Mosaic, Presents PV Puvvada, President of Unisys Federal Systems, His Fifth Wash100 Award

Jim Garrettson, founder and CEO of Executive Mosaic, presented Venkatapathi “PV” Puvvada, president of Federal Systems of Unisys, with his fifth Wash100 award on Wednesday.

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Executive Mosaic recognizes Puvvada for his leadership and his efforts advancing IT modernization, acquisition, big data and cloud computing offerings. We are honored to present the most coveted award in government contracting to Puvvada and Unisys.

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Puvvada has served Unisys for the last 12 years. Since 2006, he has been the vice president and managing partner for US Federal Civilian Agencies and became the president of Federal Systems in 2014 where he’s responsible for the company’s US Federal Business across all segments of the federal market, managing service delivery, client satisfaction and drives the company’s growth.

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He serves as the chairman of the board of directors for the Professional Services Council and  previously served as chairman for the Industry Advisory Council. Puvvada is a four-time winner of the Federal Computer Week Federal 100 Award and is a 2015 Industry Eagle Award winner as well. In 2010, he was named Government Contractor CTO Innovator of the Year. PV also holds a Master’s degree in Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology.

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

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

Government Technology/News
Air Force Accelerating F-35 Flight, Maintenance Planning Process With New App
by Jane Edwards
Published on February 27, 2019
Air Force Accelerating F-35 Flight, Maintenance Planning Process With New App


Air Force Accelerating F-35 Flight, Maintenance Planning Process With New App

A software development team within the U.S. Air Force has developed an application designed to accelerate the process of planning the weekly maintenance and flight schedule for F-35 fighter jets, Defense News reported Wednesday. The service’s Kessel Run team built the Kronos app as part of the Mad Hatter program, which launched in 2018 to address the logistics issues facing F-35 pilots and maintainers.

The Kessel Run team also partnered with developers from Lockheed Martin, Pivotal Software and the Blended Operational Lightning Technician team at Nellis Air Force Base to develop Kronos, which is set to launch in March. Will Roper, assistant secretary of the Air Force for acquisition, technology and logistics, said the service expects the Kronos app to result in updates to the Autonomic Logistics Information System.

“The goal [of Mad Hatter] is not simply to fix ALIS within the constraints that define it. It is to make the operator — the maintainer — more efficient, to make their user experience more pleasant,” Roper said.

Roper, a 2019 Wash100 winner, noted the BOLT team will test Kronos and provide feedback to the Mad Hatter team once the app’s first iteration has been deployed.

Visit the Wash100 website, where viewers can submit 10 votes for the executives of consequence they believe will have the most significant impact in 2019.

Government Technology/News
AFRL Launches New R&D Supercomputers
by Nichols Martin
Published on February 27, 2019
AFRL Launches New R&D Supercomputers


AFRL Launches New R&D Supercomputers

The Department of Defense Supercomputing Resource Center at Air Force Research Laboratory employs four new supercomputers for research and development activities, 2 News reported Tuesday.

Wright-Patterson Air Force Base unveiled the Mustang, Shadow, Spectre and Voodoo computers during a ceremony on Tuesday. Kelly Dalton, AFRL’s technology director, said the computers will reduce work that should take years down to a matter of weeks and days.

The new computers also bring added cybersecurity for shared information in response to requirements resulting from globalization and international security risks, the report noted.

News
SBA Reports Smooth Reopening After Government Shutdown
by Darwin McDaniel
Published on February 27, 2019
SBA Reports Smooth Reopening After Government Shutdown


SBA Reports Smooth Reopening After Government Shutdown

A top official at the Small Business Administration said previous changes in processes and operations allowed the agency to resume work immediately after the 35-day government shutdown, Federal News Network reported Tuesday.

William Manger, associate administrator of SBA’s Office of Capital Access, said the process improvements placed by the agency’s head Linda McMahon “greatly enhanced” their ability to get back to business. Manger made the remarks during a meeting with House Small Business Subcommittee on Investigations, Oversight and Regulations on Tuesday.

In late 2018, the SBA reduced the time to process and approve loan applications and stopped operations of its central service system during the government shutdown to limit the loans in queue. Both efforts allowed SBA to resume operations without any backlog of loan applications after the shutdown, Manger said.

Since reopening on Jan. 28, the agency approved nearly 8,000 loans and released a total of $3.7B. SBA said it also remains on schedule to implement changes in its Office of Credit Risk Management as required in the Small Business 7(a) Lending Oversight Reform Act of 2018. The law seeks to change OCRM’s supervisory duties by June.

Government Technology/News
Navy Concludes Developmental Tests for Raytheon-Built Mine Sonar
by Matthew Nelson
Published on February 27, 2019
Navy Concludes Developmental Tests for Raytheon-Built Mine Sonar


Navy Concludes Developmental Tests for Raytheon-Built Mine Sonar

The U.S. Navy concluded the developmental testing phase for a Raytheon-built sonar tool designed for mine-hunting missions. The AN/AQS-20C sonar platform is an updated variant of the AN/AQS-20 and is slated for deployment from the Mine Countermeasures Unmanned Surface Vehicle system, Naval Sea Systems Command said Tuesday.

The AN/AQS-20C performed 12 underway missions aboard the M/V Patriot carrier in varying depths and different operational modes at four Naval Surface Warfare Center test facilities. The Navy will use the findings to conduct performance assessment prior to a final development testing report in the spring.

The sonar leverages sonar arrays to track, analyze and categorize mines and create 3D models of bottom explosives via high-definition imagery for post-mission evaluation. The MCM USV is a semi-automated, diesel-powered watercraft that accommodates mine countermeasure payloads and deploy from littoral combat ships.

News
Few Personnel, Security Clearances Slowing Down DoD’s Hiring Process
by Darwin McDaniel
Published on February 27, 2019
Few Personnel, Security Clearances Slowing Down DoD’s Hiring Process


Few Personnel, Security Clearances Slowing Down DoD’s Hiring Process

A Pentagon cyber adviser said the lack of personnel and complicated security clearance process has slowed implementation of a congressional authority for faster hiring of cyber and tech workers at the agency, FCW reported Tuesday. During a recent meeting with the Intelligence and Emerging Threats and Capabilities Subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee, Marines Corps Brig. Gen. Dennis Crall, deputy principal cyber adviser for the Department of Defense, said the agency faces delays implementing the Cyber Excepted Service program.

Congress granted DoD the CES authority to accelerate the entry of cyber and tech workers. Crall said the agency is set to enter phase 2 of the program but the same personnel and security clearance issues remain. He cited that the Pentagon needs to increase the five full-time personnel tasked with the initial rollout of CES. The official suggests hiring 10 people for the team to handle the hiring and training of thousands of cyber workers.

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Crall also called on other defense leaders to address security clearance concerns that are affecting CES. “The onboarding process can be very frustrating” and the long process could lead workers to “potentially lose interest,” he said.

News
GAO: Energy Department Gives Contractors High Ratings Despite Lack of Performance Data
by Darwin McDaniel
Published on February 27, 2019
GAO: Energy Department Gives Contractors High Ratings Despite Lack of Performance Data


GAO: Energy Department Gives Contractors High Ratings Despite Lack of Performance Data

A new government watchdog report shows that the Department of Energy remains on the government’s High Risk List for inadequate contractor management and oversight despite spending $200B on awards over the past decade and contracting changes. The Government Accountability Office issued the report on Tuesday highlighting the lack of proper reporting by DOE on the performance of its contractors.

The agency relies on the industry and academia for the management and operations of its facilities, particularly federal nuclear weapons laboratories, GAO said. However, DOE has been found providing less information on contractors’ cost performance in its Performance Evaluation Reports for fiscal year 2016. GAO said the PERs were not detailed, did not indicate significance of performance and applied only to specific activities.

“A key reason PERs did not include more cost performance information is that the DOE offices’ policies do not require specific assessments of cost performance or discuss how to ensure cost information is useful for future acquisition decision-making,” GAO said. 

Despite the lack of information, DOE still provided its contractors high performance ratings and more than 90 percent of performance incentives, the watchdog said. To improve data reporting, GAO recommends that DOE update its policies to require that PERs include quality information for overall assessment of contractor cost performance. 

News
Crystal Philcox: GSA Advances New Contract-Writing System, Catalog Project Under ‘Federal Marketplace’ Strategy
by Jane Edwards
Published on February 27, 2019
Crystal Philcox: GSA Advances New Contract-Writing System, Catalog Project Under ‘Federal Marketplace’ Strategy


Crystal Philcox: GSA Advances New Contract-Writing System, Catalog Project Under ‘Federal Marketplace’ Strategy

Crystal Philcox, assistant commissioner of enterprise strategy management at the General Services Administration’s Federal Acquisition Service, said GSA has begun streamlining the acquisition process for buyers and suppliers as part of the Federal Marketplace strategy, FedScoop reported Tuesday.

Philcox said at an ACT-IAC event on Tuesday that the strategy involves several projects including an update to the contract-writing systems, development of product catalogs, e-commerce portals and schedules consolidation. She noted that teams have started working on business process maps for the acquisition lifecycle and expect to define the scope for the contract-writing system by this summer. GSA is looking at potential data sets to meet the requirements for the catalog project, Philcox added.

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Philcox said agency officials also expect to submit a report to Congress by the end of March to provide update on the e-commerce portal program’s implementation.
 

Government Technology/News
Dana Deasy Talks DoD’s Cloud, Cyber, AI Strategies at House Hearing
by Jane Edwards
Published on February 27, 2019
Dana Deasy Talks DoD’s Cloud, Cyber, AI Strategies at House Hearing


Dana Deasy Talks DoD’s Cloud, Cyber, AI Strategies at House Hearing

Dana Deasy, chief information officer for the Department of Defense, testified before the House Armed Services Committee’s intelligence, emerging threats and capabilities subpanel on the Pentagon’s ongoing digital modernization efforts, the DoD website reported Tuesday.“DOD will remain a multicloud environment, with both general-purpose and fit-for-purpose clouds as part of our long-term strategy,” Deasy said on Tuesday. 

He mentioned the Pentagon’s artificial intelligence strategy and the need to modernize its command, control and communications systems. Deasy, a 2019 Wash100 winner, also noted the department’s cyber strategy and how his office protects the defense industrial base. “The Cyber Top 10 focuses on remediation strategies for a complex cyber landscape with components ranging from information networks to our cyber workforce and supply chain, risk management and beyond,” he said.

Lisa Hershman, DOD’s acting chief management officer, also appeared before the House subcommittee to discuss the department’s information technology reform efforts.

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Visit the Wash100 website, where viewers can submit 10 votes for the executives of consequence they believe will have the most significant impact in 2019.

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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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