Processing....

Executive Gov

Digital News Coverage of Government Contracting and Federal Policy Landscape
Sticky Logo
  • Home
  • Acquisition & Procurement
  • Agencies
    • DoD
    • Intelligence
    • DHS
    • Civilian
    • Space
  • Cybersecurity
  • Technology
  • Executives
    • Profiles
    • Announcements
    • Awards
  • News
  • Articles
  • About
  • Wash100
  • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Submit your news
    • Jobs
Logo
News
Army Officials Stress Impact of LOGCAP Contract in USACE Disaster Response Missions
by Monica Jackson
Published on August 29, 2018
Army Officials Stress Impact of LOGCAP Contract in USACE Disaster Response Missions


Army Officials Stress Impact of LOGCAP Contract in USACE Disaster Response MissionsU.S. Army officials have said the Logistics Civil Augmentation Program helped the Army Corps of Engineers respond to Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico in 2017, DVIDSHUB reported Tuesday.

Staff Stg. John Butts, contracting officer for USACE and administrator of LOGCAP in Puerto Rico, explained that the contracting process quickly helped get organizational resources to the area for the service’s disaster response operation.

“Because the mission needs could change at a moment’s notice, the fact that LOGCAP is a cost contract has been vital for the environment that we are working in,” he added.

LOGCAP Forward Planner Gill Ponce also explained that the contract provides various pre-awarded options, which helped streamline the contracting process and allowed emergency responders to act more quickly.

Ponce noted that USACE, Army Sustainment Command and DynCorp are collaborating to understand how LOGCAP was used in Puerto Rico, participating in emergency response exercises and applying lessons learned to future disaster recovery plans.

The LOGCAP contract also helped USACE support three other disaster response and recovery operations in 2017.

News
Navy Eyes Large Surface Combatant Procurement in 2023; Rear Adm. Ron Boxall Quoted
by Jane Edwards
Published on August 29, 2018
Navy Eyes Large Surface Combatant Procurement in 2023; Rear Adm. Ron Boxall Quoted


Navy Eyes Large Surface Combatant Procurement in 2023; Rear Adm. Ron Boxall QuotedThe U.S. Navy plans to purchase its first Future Surface Combatant ship in 2023 in support of its Arleigh Burke Flight III warship program, USNI News reported Tuesday.

The combatant ship will integrate design elements from Zumwalt-class (DDG-1000) and Arleigh Burke-class (DDG-51) destroyer vessels, according to the report.

The service’s Future Surface Combatant family of warships will be composed of a large combatant vessel, a small combatant and two unmanned surface vessels that will be available in small and large sizes.

Navy Rear Adm. Ron Boxall, surface warfare director, said the service will initially address the acquisition of the large combatant.

“Not many people make large surface combatants of the size and capability that we need,” Boxall told USNI News.

“So we’ve got to kind of look to our portfolio of blueprints that we have as a starting point, and we’ll edit and modify the hull and design things as we go forward,” he added.

Boxall noted the planned large combatant would require space to accommodate unmanned platforms and helicopters, long-range missiles and command-and-control systems to support offensive surface and aerial defense missions as well as integrate DDG-1000’s power system and signature controls.

News
House Panel Asks DHS, Mitre to Perform Biennial Reviews of Cyber Vulnerability ID Program
by Jane Edwards
Published on August 29, 2018
House Panel Asks DHS, Mitre to Perform Biennial Reviews of Cyber Vulnerability ID Program


House Panel Asks DHS, Mitre to Perform Biennial Reviews of Cyber Vulnerability ID ProgramThe House Energy and Commerce Committee has called on the Department of Homeland Security and Mitre to conduct biennial reviews to ensure the stability and effectiveness of a program that aims to facilitate the identification of cybersecurity vulnerabilities and sharing of such data among organizations.

The House panel said Monday DHS should provide a stable funding stream for the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures program by transitioning from a contract-based funding framework to a “dedicated program, project or activity line item” in its annual budget requests.

The committee made the recommendations after it assessed issues facing the CVE program based on the evaluation of documents requested from DHS and Mitre, according to letters addressed to Mitre and the department.

Those sets of documents include contracts linked to the CVE program; timelines of measures carried out by DHS and Mitre to oversee the CVE contract from Jan. 1, 2011 to March 31, 2017; and copies of analyses carried out related to the initiative.

The panel has asked Mitre and DHS to conduct a briefing about the recommendations stated in the letters by Sept. 10.

News
Senators Call for GAO Review of New Military EHR System
by Joey Harris
Published on August 29, 2018
Senators Call for GAO Review of New Military EHR System


Senators Call for GAO Review of New Military EHR SystemThe Senate wants the Government Accountability Office to review the Defense Department‘s efforts to deploy a new military electronic health record system and challenges related to the implementation and performance of the EHR platform, Federal News Radio reported Tuesday.

The upper chamber voted 95-0 to mandate a GAO study of MHS Genesis through an amendment to the $854B minibus appropriations bill senators approved Thursday.

Lawmakers specifically want the congressional watchdog to determine measures that DoD has undertaken to update Genesis after the Pentagon’s Office of Operational Test and Evaluation found earlier this year that the system was “neither operationally effective nor operationally suitable.”

They also seek to determine if the platform works to meet health care requirements at the four Pacific Northwest sites and if the department has a capacity to accomplish its global deployment goals by 2022, the report noted.

Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., introduced the amendment that must have a counterpart version in the House before it can move up the legislative ladder. If the measure becomes law, GAO would be given six months to complete the review.

Executive Moves/News
Jack St. John Assumes Role as Full-time GSA General Counsel
by Nichols Martin
Published on August 29, 2018
Jack St. John Assumes Role as Full-time GSA General Counsel


Jack St. John Assumes Role as Full-time GSA General CounselJack St. John, acting general counsel at the General Services Administration, has been appointed to assume his position on a full-time basis.

He will lead the 130 attorneys under the agency’s Office of General Counsel, and will conduct chief legal advisory duties to the GSA head, the agency said Tuesday.

He will also continue to guide GSA Administrator Emily Murphy on how to identify agency priorities and boost policy implementation, and advise on regulation in his capacity as the designated agency ethics official.

St. John joined the agency in January 2017 as senior White House advisor, and was later appointed in March of that year as GSA chief of staff.

He then assumed the concurrent, additional role of acting general counsel in October 2017.

Prior to joining GSA, St. John practiced law in Alabama. 

Government Technology/News
F-35C Operational Tests Conducted on USS Abraham Lincoln
by Nichols Martin
Published on August 29, 2018
F-35C Operational Tests Conducted on USS Abraham Lincoln


F-35C Operational Tests Conducted on USS Abraham Lincoln

U.S. Navy fighter pilots flew F-35C Lightning II aircraft during an operational test aboard the fifth Nimitz-class aircraft carrier. The test aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln evaluated the aircraft’s aptitude to operate as part of a carrier air wing, the service branch said Tuesday.

\n\n

“Operating this new generation of aircraft out on the aircraft carrier brings a different set of tools, techniques and procedures, and we’re learning how to integrate them into the battle group,” said Rear Adm. Dale Horan who directs the Joint Strike Fighter Fleet Integration Office.

\n\n

Evaluators assessed the F-35C’s capacity to operate with other deployed aircraft and integrate into air plans, with maintenance and logistics taken into consideration.

\n\n

The aircraft joined F/A-18, E-2D and EA-18G units in a continuous cycle of mission simulation, aerial maneuver practice and take off and landing.

\n\n

The F-35C is built to transmit information to legacy aircraft, wings, groups and ground forces, in addition to other F-35 units.

\n\n

The Navy will use data from the test as basis for future F-35C operations aboard the service branch’s aircraft carriers.

News
OMB Director Outlines Efforts to Automate, Simplify Procurement-Related Tasks
by Jerry Petersen
Published on August 28, 2018
OMB Director Outlines Efforts to Automate, Simplify Procurement-Related Tasks


OMB Director Outlines Efforts to Automate, Simplify Procurement-Related TasksMick Mulvaney, director of the Office of Management and Budget, has outlined new agency initiatives meant to reduce the amount of repetitive administrative tasks needed for procurement activities.

Mulvaney said in an August 27 memorandum that the OMB plans to use artificial intelligence and automation tools to handle routine procedures, thereby reducing the likelihood of errors and enhancing “compliance with contracting protocols and financial analysis and reporting.”

The OMB director added that his agency developed, in partnership with the General Services Administration, a centralized service that government contractors can use when filing post-award data in compliance with the Federal Acquisition Regulation.

The OMB’s efforts are a response to the President’s Management Agenda, which criticized the amount of resources “spent complying with outdated, redundant and unnecessary requirements.”

The PMA challenged federal agencies to divert “time, effort and funding… toward accomplishing mission outcomes” and bring about a shift from “low-value to high-value work.”

Government Technology/News
Report: James Mattis Asks White House to Develop National AI Strategy
by Jane Edwards
Published on August 28, 2018
Report: James Mattis Asks White House to Develop National AI Strategy


Report: James Mattis Asks White House to Develop National AI StrategyDefense Secretary James Mattis has called on President Donald Trump to come up with a national artificial intelligence strategy in order to keep up with AI development plans of China and other countries, The New York Times reported Sunday.

Mattis asked the Trump administration to establish a presidential commission that would help position the U.S. as “a leader not just in matters of defense but in the broader ‘transformation of the human condition,’” according to a May memo obtained by the publication.

The report said the Defense Department has launched efforts to advance AI and one of those is the establishment of a joint AI center in June to oversee AI initiatives across the Pentagon and service branches.

In May, the White House formed a new select committee within the National Science and Technology Council to help coordinate federal research initiatives related to AI.
 

Government Technology/News
NIST Seeks Feedback on Initial Guide on Trusted Cybersecurity Tools for Cloud Operations
by Monica Jackson
Published on August 28, 2018
NIST Seeks Feedback on Initial Guide on Trusted Cybersecurity Tools for Cloud Operations


NIST Seeks Feedback on Initial Guide on Trusted Cybersecurity Tools for Cloud OperationsThe National Institute of Standards and Technology is seeking feedback regarding a draft practice guide for the use of trusted cybersecurity tools to conduct cloud workloads on hybrid cloud platforms.

The agency said Friday the document aims to showcase the effect of using credible computing systems on cloud operations, boost data security practices within workloads and protect data privacy.

Feedback on the preliminary draft will be used to develop the NIST Cybersecurity Practice Guide.

NIST’s National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence will accept initial comments until Sept. 30.

News
Report: Senate’s FY 2019 Minibus Measure to Appropriate $60M for Health IT Interoperability Efforts
by Jane Edwards
Published on August 28, 2018
Report: Senate’s FY 2019 Minibus Measure to Appropriate $60M for Health IT Interoperability Efforts


Report: Senate’s FY 2019 Minibus Measure to Appropriate $60M for Health IT Interoperability EffortsA package of fiscal 2019 appropriations bills passed by the Senate would earmark $60.3M in funds to support the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology’s health IT interoperability efforts, Meritalk reported Monday.

The upper chamber passed on Aug. 23 the minibus measure that would appropriate $854B in funds for the departments of Defense, Health and Human Services, Labor and Education.

The report said the Small Rural Hospital Improvement Grant Program would receive $15.9M in funding to facilitate health IT adoption.

The Senate measure would allocate an $85M budget for the Social Security Administration’s IT modernization effort and $20.77M for the Labor Department’s technology investment initiatives.
 

Previous 1 … 2,081 2,082 2,083 2,084 2,085 … 2,715 Next
News Briefing
I'm Interested In:
Wash100 Vote Now
Recent Posts
  • Gen. Michael Guetlein, Emil Michael Offer Update on Golden Dome
  • Trump Nominates Gary Shatswell as CIO, Assistant Secretary at VA
  • CISA, UK NCSC Warn of China-Linked Covert Cyber Networks in New Advisory
  • GSA Introduces New Cohort of Presidential Innovation Fellows
About

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.

Read More >>

RSS ExecutiveBiz
  • MITRE, The Weather Company Partner to Advance AI-Driven Weather Forecasting
  • KBR, AWS Partner to Support Space Data Processing
  • Alpha Omega CEO Gautam Ijoor Highlights AI-Driven Approach to Federal IT Delivery
  • GDIT Border Surveillance Towers Receive CBP Certification for Autonomous Operations
  • Deloitte Launches Google Cloud Agentic Practice to Accelerate AI Adoption
  • SMX, Vannevar Partner to Advance Military AI Capability Delivery
RSS GovConWire
  • Eric Grein Joins OMNI as VP of Corporate Development & Strategy
  • Cross-Enterprise AI Firm r4 Technologies Taps Mark Heinrich to Lead r4 Public Division
  • 5 Things GovCons Should Know About Changing Procurement Regulations Across Government
  • Iron Bow Lands $100M Deal to Support Air Force IT Modernization
  • Leidos Secures $617M Army Contract for IFPC Inc 2 Launchers
  • Roger Mason Nominated as NRO Director
Executive Gov

Copyright © 2025
Executive Mosaic
All Rights Reserved

  • Executive Mosaic
  • GovCon Wire
  • ExecutiveBiz
  • GovCon Exec Magazine
  • POC
  • Home
  • Acquisition & Procurement
  • Agencies
    • DoD
    • Intelligence
    • DHS
    • Civilian
    • Space
  • Cybersecurity
  • Technology
  • Executives
    • Profiles
    • Announcements
    • Awards
  • News
  • Articles
  • About
  • Wash100
  • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Submit your news
    • Jobs
Go toTop