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News/Press Releases
USDA Extends Deadline of Proposals for New ERS, NIFA Headquarters; Sonny Perdue Quoted
by Monica Jackson
Published on September 10, 2018
USDA Extends Deadline of Proposals for New ERS, NIFA Headquarters; Sonny Perdue Quoted


USDA Extends Deadline of Proposals for New ERS, NIFA Headquarters; Sonny Perdue QuotedThe Department of Agriculture has provided a 30-day extension for organizations interested in housing the Economic Research Services and National Institute of Food and Agriculture, which will both be relocated in late 2019.

Stakeholders such as universities and local governments asked USDA to extend the deadline to further prepare and submit proposals, the department said Friday.

Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue noted that some stakeholders will not be able to deliver their proposals on time because their employees have gone on summer vacation and their plans need to be reviewed by different authorities.

“An extra 30 days will give everyone time to get organized and will not interfere with our timeline,” Perdue added.

The department rescheduled the deadline of proposals from Sept. 14 to Oct. 15.

USDA started seeking new ERS and NIFA headquarters after Perdue announced in August that the agencies will be relocated outside the National Capital Region. The move is meant to attract more highly-trained agriculture staff, expand the reach of USDA resources and provide greater savings to the American taxpayer.

News
Vicki Hildebrand: Transportation Dept Eyes Crowdsourced Bug-Hunting Through ‘Cleansing Program’
by Jane Edwards
Published on September 10, 2018
Vicki Hildebrand: Transportation Dept Eyes Crowdsourced Bug-Hunting Through ‘Cleansing Program’


Vicki Hildebrand: Transportation Dept Eyes Crowdsourced Bug-Hunting Through ‘Cleansing Program’Vicki Hildebrand, chief information officer at the Department of Transportation, has said DOT has started to design a new “cleansing program” to facilitate crowdsourced cyber vulnerability hunting activities at component agencies, Nextgov reported Friday.

Plans for the cleansing program came after bug hunting services provider Synack identified vulnerabilities in computer systems at the department’s headquarters.

“We started with software we thought was rock solid,” she told reporters at the Billington Cybersecurity Summit.

“There were vulnerabilities we didn’t realize.”

FedScoop reported that Hildebrand aims to speed up cyber threat detection at the department through crowdsourcing methods.

“It goes back to being proactive. I don’t want to wait for a bad actor to tell me I’ve got a vulnerability,” she added.
 

Government Technology/News
DoD IG Reviews Army Missile Defense System Development Plans
by Nichols Martin
Published on September 10, 2018
DoD IG Reviews Army Missile Defense System Development Plans


DoD IG Reviews Army Missile Defense System Development PlansThe Defense Department is conducting an audit on the U.S. Army in a move to identify the service branch’s plans to develop an integrated air and missile defense system, Defense News reported Friday.

Theresa Hull, assistant IG for acquisition, contracting and sustainment, wrote in a memo released last month the review will cover the capability requirements and cost of the proposed IAMD effort.

The Army also seeks to develop a command-and-control technology for the Integrated Air and Missile Defense Battle Command System that would combine tactical sensors and shooters to generate a single picture of the battlefield.

This program, in partnership with Northrop Grumman, has been delayed for years due to increasing requirements, the report noted.

Prior to the IBCS, the Army invested in the Lockheed Martin-built Medium Extended Air Defense System that launches anti-air missiles at a 70-degree angle.

The DoD then withdrew from the MEADS development program in 2011, leaving the system to Italy and Germany.

These efforts compose the Army’s attempts to replace its old Raytheon-made Patriot IAMDS with a new system that would detect and destroy air and missile threats within a 360-degree coverage.

The end date of the audit remains unknown.

News
Rep. Mike Coffman Urges Air Force to Procure Light Attack Aircraft
by Joey Harris
Published on September 10, 2018
Rep. Mike Coffman Urges Air Force to Procure Light Attack Aircraft


Rep. Mike Coffman Urges Air Force to Procure Light Attack AircraftRep. Mike Coffman, R.-Colo., has said the U.S. Air Force should expand its current fleet by procuring a light attack platform that can support strike missions.

He wrote in an opinion piece published Sunday on Air Force Times that such vehicle has the potential to target hostile adversaries who do not employ anti-aircraft tools and mechanisms.

Coffman, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran, proposed a measure for inclusion in the fiscal 2019 National Defense Authorization Act that would help the service branch pursue light attack aircraft procurement and deployment efforts.

He added the aircraft should include a system designed to deliver rockets and bombs, an airframe built to withstand small-arms fire and a capability to operate from an unimproved airfield or an austere location.

News
State Dept’s Andrea Thompson: Dialogue Over International Norms of Behavior in Space Needed
by Jane Edwards
Published on September 10, 2018
State Dept’s Andrea Thompson: Dialogue Over International Norms of Behavior in Space Needed


State Dept’s Andrea Thompson: Dialogue Over International Norms of Behavior in Space NeededAndrea Thompson, undersecretary for arms control and international security at the State Department, has said she believes there should be discussions about acceptable norms of behavior and rules in space for nation states, SpaceNews reported Saturday.

Thompson told reporters Friday that space security has become a regular topic at National Space Council meetings and that she looks forward to hearing the outcome of the United Nations’ inaugural conference on space policy and law in Moscow.

She noted that the State Department will need to strengthen its expertise once space becomes a diplomatic priority.

“We need to start bringing in folks now,” said Thompson.

“We will need a team in place working space policy years from now.”
 

News
John Zangardi: DHS Will Modernize IT Systems Through $50B EIS Contract
by Monica Jackson
Published on September 7, 2018
John Zangardi: DHS Will Modernize IT Systems Through $50B EIS Contract


John Zangardi: DHS Will Modernize IT Systems Through $50B EIS ContractJohn Zangardi, chief information officer of the Department of Homeland Security, believes the General Services Administration’s $50B Enterprise Infrastructure Services contract will help the DHS effectively reform its IT systems, FedScoop reported Thursday.

Zangardi announced during the Billington Cybersecurity Summit that he has formed a group to oversee the overhaul.

He added that the DHS will work to leverage the EIS contract to distribute IT modernization benefits throughout the entire department. 

“As we move out into the future with [Internet-of-Things devices], it’s going to be greater in an even greater capacity,” Zangardi said.

Zangardi is coordinating with Acting DHS Deputy Secretary Claire Grady and the deputies of the department’s component agencies to implement the modernization plans.

​The DHS will leverage the EIS procurement vehicle in the second or third quarter of 2019, using funds from the agency’s budget for fiscal year 2020.

The GSA tapped 10 companies in 2017 to vie for task orders to deliver telecommunication services such as cloud infrastructure and network security under the potential 15-year EIS contract. 

News
Nominee James Gfrerer Unveils Plans for Veterans Affairs Information & Technology
by Monica Jackson
Published on September 7, 2018
Nominee James Gfrerer Unveils Plans for Veterans Affairs Information & Technology


Nominee James Gfrerer Unveils Plans for Veterans Affairs Information & TechnologyJames Gfrerer, President Trump’s nominee for assistant secretary for information and technology at the Department of Veterans Affairs, has disclosed his plans for the department, FCW reported Thursday.

Gfrerer told lawmakers during a hearing with the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee that he intends to boost coordination between the OI&T and the department’s health and benefits agencies, as the VA implements a 10-year plan to adopt a modern commercial electronic health record platform.

The U.S. Marine Corps veteran expressed interest in sustaining the Veterans Information Systems and Technology Architecture during the health record modernization effort.

Gfrerer will also work to address the cybersecurity weaknesses in the VA system; the issue has been mentioned in reports from the department’s inspector general.

If confirmed, Gfrerer will succeed Camilo Sandoval, a U.S. Air Force veteran and former senior advisor to the undersecretary for Veterans Health Administration.

News
Report: House Lawmakers Could Tie Defense Spending Bill to HHS-Labor-Education Appropriations Package
by Jane Edwards
Published on September 7, 2018
Report: House Lawmakers Could Tie Defense Spending Bill to HHS-Labor-Education Appropriations Package


Report: House Lawmakers Could Tie Defense Spending Bill to HHS-Labor-Education Appropriations PackageHouse lawmakers are expected to combine the fiscal 2019 defense spending measure with appropriations bills for the departments of Health and Human Services, Labor and Education in order to gain bipartisan support and pass the package before the current fiscal year ends on Sept. 30, Bloomberg Government reported Thursday.

“They did it in the Senate. We don’t have much choice,” Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.), chairman of the House Appropriations Labor-HHS subcommittee, told reporters Wednesday.

“If you want the defense bill, you’re going to have to deal with the `Labor-H’ bill.”

The Senate passed in August a package of appropriations bills that would earmark $854B in fiscal 2019 funds for the four departments.

The report said lawmakers aim to approve up to nine appropriations measures by the end of this month and tackle the remaining bills after the midterm elections in November, including the homeland security bill that contains funds for the proposed border wall.
 

News
USAF Secretary Heather Wilson Stresses Need to Modernize Software Acquisition Process
by Monica Jackson
Published on September 7, 2018
USAF Secretary Heather Wilson Stresses Need to Modernize Software Acquisition Process


USAF Secretary Heather Wilson Stresses Need to Modernize Software Acquisition Process

Heather Wilson, secretary of the U.S. Air Force and a 2018 Wash100 awardee, warns the service branch must modernize its software acquisition process to keep up with the technological advances of adversaries.

Wilson noted during an Aug. 27th conference that documents such as the U.S. Air Force Weapons Systems Software Management Guidebook contain outdated practices that inhibit modernization, the branch said Thursday.

“We’re going to accelerate to a new future driven by the threat that we face and move to a new paradigm for software development,” Wilson commented.

The Air Force is working to adopt new acquisition strategies such as employing Software-as-a-Service to create a faster decision-making and assessment process. Adopting a modern hardware and software acquisition plan will also lead to quicker implementation of the National Defense Strategy.

Wilson added that the strategy directs the Air Force to maintain its competitive edge in every domain and prepare for peer-to-peer conflict.

Government Technology/News
Ken Rogers: State Dept. Eyes Cloud Optimization Approach
by Jerry Petersen
Published on September 7, 2018
Ken Rogers: State Dept. Eyes Cloud Optimization Approach


Ken Rogers: State Dept. Eyes Cloud Optimization ApproachKen Rogers, deputy chief information officer for business management and planning at the State Department, has said that his agency intends to use enterprise license agreements as part of an effort to optimize its approach to cloud technology, Federal News Radio reported Thursday.

Next year, the State Department will begin consolidating its various cloud services contracts using enterprise licensing with the goal of “having an elastic cloud environment that can scale rather than setting up duplicative infrastructure environments,” Rogers said during an interview on Federal News Radio’s “Ask the CIO”.

Rogers noted that this optimized approach allows the department to move its clients “to that software-as-a-service layer where they can have a lighter lift,” reduce the time they spend on modernizing applications, “create efficiencies… remove some of the friction” and potentially bring about significant savings.

“This is a real opportunity to do real modernization,” Rogers said.

After the cloud services are consolidated, the State Department will proceed with system optimization efforts in order to achieve its target savings, Rogers added.

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