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News
FCC Opens New Office With Economics, Analytics Focus; Ajit Pai Quoted
by Nichols Martin
Published on December 12, 2018
FCC Opens New Office With Economics, Analytics Focus; Ajit Pai Quoted


FCC Opens New Office With Economics, Analytics Focus; Ajit Pai Quoted

The Federal Communications Commission established a new office to apply economic and data analysis on policy formation activities.

The agency said Tuesday, its new Office of Economics and Analytics will consist of commission economists, as well as former staff of the now-defunct Office of Strategic Planning and Policy Analysis, OEA’s predecessor. OEA will feature four divisions to focus on economic analysis, industry analysis, auctions and data. Ajit Pai, FCC commissioner, proposed the new office in April 2017.

“This will be a single office to bring together the great economic and data work already being done by FCC staff,” said Pai.

Government Technology/News
Report: HHS Obtains Authority to Operate AI, Blockchain-Based Acquisition Tool
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on December 12, 2018
Report: HHS Obtains Authority to Operate AI, Blockchain-Based Acquisition Tool


Report: HHS Obtains Authority to Operate AI, Blockchain-Based Acquisition Tool

The Department of Health and Human Services received a full “authority to operate” certification for its ReImagine HHS Accelerate initiative that seeks to improve the department’s acquisition procedures, Fedscoop.com reported Tuesday.

The HHS tested the platform with static acquisition data sets to assess its capability to use automation, artificial intelligence and blockchain technology to develop microservices that cut acquisition times, create better-designed contracts and reduce costs.

During the Red Hat OPEN FIRST Road Tour in September, Jose Arrieta, HHS associate deputy assistant secretary for acquisition, said the department aims to reduce the acquisition lifecycle from 200 days to 90 and provide enterprise-wide transparency in spending processes. He said the Department of Commerce, U.S. Agency for International Development, U.S. Air Force and U.S. Army have all expressed interest in the effort.

News
USMC to Implement Information-Focused Expeditionary Groups
by Nichols Martin
Published on December 12, 2018
USMC to Implement Information-Focused Expeditionary Groups


USMC to Implement Information-Focused Expeditionary Groups

The U.S. Marine Corps plans to integrate units focusing on cyber, signals, electronic and information warfare into the service’s forces, C4ISRnet reported Tuesday.

The service will implement marine expeditionary force information groups in traditional formations. Lt. Gen. Lori Reynolds, the deputy commandant for information, will oversee all groups. Kenneth Bible, USMC’s C4 directorate deputy director and deputy chief information officer, said at the Charleston Defense Contractors Association Defense Summit that MIGs forces would work to aid information support operations, psychological operations and military deception efforts.

Bible added the service is in the process of figuring out how MIGs can further support marine expeditionary forces. Reynolds has instructed the MIGs’ advisory group to formulate exercises for more joint engagements.

The commandant cited NATO’s Trident Juncture exercise as an example of testing limited assets with commanders.

News
GAO Finds DoD, HHS, DHS Misreporting Noncompetitive Contracts
by Darwin McDaniel
Published on December 12, 2018
GAO Finds DoD, HHS, DHS Misreporting Noncompetitive Contracts


GAO Finds DoD, HHS, DHS Misreporting Noncompetitive Contracts

The Government Accountability Office called on the departments of Defense and Health and Human Services to review their records of contract awards due to misreported noncompetitive contracts. 

Contracting officials at the DoD and HHS found misreporting competitive and noncompetitive between fiscal years 2013 and 2017, GAO said in a report posted Tuesday. 

“Federal data estimates 30 percent of IT spending is noncompetitive—or about $15B annually. However, this estimate may not be accurate,” the watchdog report stated.   

GAO said DoD, HHS and the Department of Homeland Security provided inaccurate competition data in the Federal Procurement Data System-Next Generation. The errors were found in 22 of the 41 contracts reviewed. The watchdog also discovered that 7 percent of noncompetitive IT contracts and orders released by the three agencies in the past fiscal years were used to support outdated or obsolete legacy IT systems. GAO warned that misreporting contracts could lead to competition data being inaccurately recorded and misguides federal agencies in planning and achieving objectives.

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DHS has already identified issues that caused the errors and took corrective action. The DoD and HHS have yet to respond to GAO’s recommendations to determine the reasons behind the high rate of miscoding for contracts and to improve the reliability of the competition data.

Financial Reports/News
DoD Saves $4.3B in FY18, Sets $6B Goal for FY19
by Darwin McDaniel
Published on December 12, 2018
DoD Saves $4.3B in FY18, Sets $6B Goal for FY19


DoD Saves $4.3B in FY18, Sets $6B Goal for FY19

The Department of Defense saved $4.3B in their fiscal year 2018 and another $1.7B for fiscal 2019, all attributed to the agency’s small projects, reduced stored goods and a review of defense business systems, Defense News reported Tuesday. 

Lisa Hershman, acting chief management officer for DoD, said 114 projects contributed to the FY18 savings while a reduction in redundant defense systems saved the budget for early FY19. The report said DoD already freed up inventory space five times the size of the agency’s central courtyard. Hershman hopes to see more than $6B in savings over the current fiscal year. Her office plans to focus on information technology, health care, the supply chain and the “fourth estate” agencies to help cut the Pentagon’s spending. 

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Between FY19 and FY23, DoD projects to see $46B in total savings.

News
GAO: Reported Spending Authority, Permanent Appropriations Rose 88% From FY 1994-2015
by Jane Edwards
Published on December 12, 2018
GAO: Reported Spending Authority, Permanent Appropriations Rose 88% From FY 1994-2015


GAO: Reported Spending Authority, Permanent Appropriations Rose 88% From FY 1994-2015The Government Accountability Office has found that federal agencies reported $3.2T in total spending authority and permanent appropriations for fiscal year 2015, reflecting an 88 percent rise from FY 1994.

GAO said in a report published Tuesday that such inflation-adjusted growth was primarily driven by the use of permanent appropriations authority, which supports federal entitlement initiatives such as Medicare and the Old-Age, Survivors and Disability Insurance program.

The Social Security Administration and the departments of Health and Human Services and Treasury are the three agencies that comprised 75 percent of the total spending authority and permanent appropriations in FY 2015.

Offsetting collections reached a total of $421B in FY 2015, making it the second largest reported type of budget authority.

The report noted that the amount of spending authority and permanent appropriations that were not subjected to sequestration rose from 37 percent in FY 1994 to 57 percent in FY 2015.
 
 

News
Mark Esper OKs New Army Intellectual Property Mgmt Policy
by Jane Edwards
Published on December 12, 2018
Mark Esper OKs New Army Intellectual Property Mgmt Policy


Mark Esper OKs New Army Intellectual Property Mgmt PolicyArmy Secretary Mark Esper has cleared a new policy that aims to provide the service with a strategy to advance innovation and modernization and sustain readiness through intellectual property management, the Army News Service reported Tuesday.

Esper approved the IP management policy Friday to facilitate acquisition and modernization reforms that seek to accelerate the delivery of new capabilities to warfighters amid emerging threats posed by adversaries.

Alexis Ross, deputy assistant secretary of the Army for strategy and acquisition reform, said the new IP policy focuses on long-term weapons systems sustainment and has four core tenets.

Those four principles are the need to create long-term IP requirements that address the lifecycle; collaboration with industry for custom IP rights; negotiation of prices for licensing rights; and communication with industry to meet the service branch’s needs.
 

Government Technology/News
House Panel: 11 Federal Agencies Show Progress in Latest FITARA Scorecard
by Jane Edwards
Published on December 11, 2018
House Panel: 11 Federal Agencies Show Progress in Latest FITARA Scorecard


House Panel: 11 Federal Agencies Show Progress in Latest FITARA ScorecardThe House Oversight and Government Reform Committee has issued the seventh iteration of its Federal Information Technology Acquisition Reform Act scorecard, which shows that 11 agencies saw improvement in their letter grades.

Thirteen federal agencies maintained their scores, according to the biannual scorecard released by the House panel.

The agencies that showed progress in their letter grades are the departments of Defense, Energy, Homeland Security, Labor, Health and Human Services, Veterans Affairs, Small Business Administration, U.S. Agency for International Development, Social Security Administration, NASA and the State Department.

“Much of this growth is due to agencies’ improvements in the software licensing area,” the committee said in the report.

“In particular, since the committee included software licensing area on the Scorecard in June 2017, 16 agencies have implemented a comprehensive, regularly-updated inventory of software licenses; and also used their inventory to make cost-effective decisions.”

The scorecard shows that 11 agencies got B scores, while seven agencies received Cs and the remaining agencies secured Ds.

The House panel released the FITARA scorecard ahead of the Wednesday hearing of the IT and government operations subcommittees.
 

News
DARPA Explores Potential Defense Applications of Commercial Electronics
by Darwin McDaniel
Published on December 11, 2018
DARPA Explores Potential Defense Applications of Commercial Electronics


DARPA Explores Potential Defense Applications of Commercial ElectronicsThe Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency aims to increase industry engagement in its five-year, $1.5B initiative to seek advanced electronics that will support U.S. defense systems and platforms for national security.

The agency said Monday it will host a proposers day on Dec. 19 to discuss with companies the opportunities with its ongoing Electronics Resurgence Initiative.

DARPA program managers will share ideas on how the government would utilize various technologies to build national defense hardware, such as artificial intelligence, large-scale emulation, cybersecurity, space applications, cognitive electronic warfare, and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance.

“The success of ERI relies on cooperation with the commercial sector to address shared problems,” said William Chappell, director of DARPA’s Microsystems Technology Office.

“DARPA seeks to procure the expertise and transition support of industry and the defense community to help accelerate the delivery of ERI-derived innovations for national security needs,” he added.

The agency said it also hopes to create a broad agency announcement at the event at Hilton Arlington in Virginia to seek proposals to develop, demonstrate and apply ERI electronic technologies.

DARPA announced in November the ERI Phase II that focuses on commercial and manufacturing services of the electronics industry.

News
Trump OKs National Strategy Against Terrorist Use of Weapons of Mass Destruction
by Darwin McDaniel
Published on December 11, 2018
Trump OKs National Strategy Against Terrorist Use of Weapons of Mass Destruction


Trump OKs National Strategy Against Terrorist Use of Weapons of Mass Destruction

President Trump approved a new national strategy to counter the use of weapons of mass destruction by terrorist groups.

The National Strategy for Countering WMD Terrorism details how the federal government will launch global efforts to prevent insurgents from using chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear weapons to strengthen the security of the U.S. and its allies, the White House said Monday. The document also shows the need to increase burden sharing with other nations to pressure and counter WMD-capable terrorist groups.

“The United States will draw on the full range of our nation’s and partner nations’ capabilities to place WMD and associated materials and expertise beyond the reach of terrorists,” the White House said. 

The new strategy sets the following objectives to deter extremist groups and individuals in using such weapons:

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  • The agents, precursors and materials needed to acquire WMD are placed beyond the reach of terrorists and other malicious non-state actors and the global quantity of WMD and related materials is reduced.
  • States and individuals are deterred from providing support to would-be WMD terrorists.
  • An effective architecture is in place to detect and defeat terrorist WMD networks.
  • U.S. defenses against WMD terrorism are strengthened, and state, local, tribal and territorial preparedness to contend with WMD threats is enhanced.
  • The U.S. is able to identify and respond to technological trends that may enable terrorist development, acquisition or use of WMD.

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