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DoD/News
DoD IG: Navy Lacks IT Strategy to Oversee Financial Mgmt Systems
by Ramona Adams
Published on March 20, 2017
DoD IG: Navy Lacks IT Strategy to Oversee Financial Mgmt Systems


DoD IG: Navy Lacks IT Strategy to Oversee Financial Mgmt SystemsThe Defense Department‘s inspector general has reported that the U.S. Navy does not have an information technology strategy to oversee its financial management systems.

DoD IG said Thursday auditors found that Navy personnel use financial management tools that do not meet standards for the preparation of auditable financial statements.

The Navy and the Defense Finance and Accounting Service spent $2.5 billion over the past decade and plan to spend $823.4 million in the next five years to maintain and develop the Navy’s financial management systems, the report noted.

The Chief Financial Officers Act of 1990 requires federal agencies to submit annual financial statements that can be audited.

DoD IG noted the Navy’s financial management systems might not support auditable financial statements and the military branch might not meet the congressional mandate to prepare such statements by September 30, 2017.

The inspector general called on the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Financial Management and Comptroller to establish milestones and performance measures for a Navy-wide strategic plan on financial management systems.

News
GSA to Get $200M Funding Increase Under Trump’s FY 2018 Budget Proposal
by Jane Edwards
Published on March 20, 2017
GSA to Get $200M Funding Increase Under Trump’s FY 2018 Budget Proposal


GSA to Get $200M Funding Increase Under Trump’s FY 2018 Budget ProposalPresident Donald Trump’s budget request for fiscal 2018 would raise the General Services Administration’s discretionary spending authority to $500 million, the Washington Business Journal reported Thursday.

Daniel J. Sernovitz writes the figure represents a $200 million increase from GSA’s current budget authority and is up from the Obama administration’s $361 million budget proposal.

The White House’s FY 2018 budget request fails to include details on the amount of funds GSA is authorized to use under the Federal Buildings Fund as well as information on the FBI headquarters construction project and the Department of Homeland Security’s consolidation program at St. Elizabeth’s west campus in Washington, Sernovitz noted.

The proposed increase in GSA’s discretionary spending authority comes a week after the agency postponed the announcement of its selected site for the new FBI HQ, citing the need for congressional appropriations.

Civilian/News
OMB’s Mick Mulvaney: White House Could Release Detailed Budget Plan in May
by Ramona Adams
Published on March 20, 2017
OMB’s Mick Mulvaney: White House Could Release Detailed Budget Plan in May


OMB's Mick Mulvaney: White House Could Release Detailed Budget Plan in MayMick Mulvaney, director of the Office of Management and Budget, has said President Donald Trump plans to release a detailed version of his budget plan in May that will include a strategy to address U.S. deficits, Reuters reported Sunday.

Valerie Volcovici writes Mulvaney told NBC’s “Meet the Press” in an interview the White House does not expect the budget to be balanced in fiscal 2018 but said that the Trump administration will work to “get it to balance within the 10-year budget window.”

“Over the course of the next decade, we’ll have to look at the mandatory spending side in order to figure out a way to make changes to the way we spend money,” Mulvaney added.

He noted the president also could release a U.S. infrastructure modernization plan in the summer or fall.

Last week, Trump submitted a $1.1 trillion FY 2018 budget plan to Congress and requested $30 billion in supplemental military funds for the remainder of the current fiscal year.

DoD/News
Trump to Nominate Boeing Vet Patrick Shanahan as Deputy Secretary of Defense
by Ramona Adams
Published on March 17, 2017
Trump to Nominate Boeing Vet Patrick Shanahan as Deputy Secretary of Defense


Trump to Nominate Boeing Vet Patrick Shanahan as Deputy Secretary of Defense
Patrick Shanahan

President Donald Trump intends to nominate Patrick Shanahan, Boeing senior vice president of supply chain and operations, as deputy secretary of defense.

Trump announced plans to nominate Shanahan and five other individuals to various Defense Department posts in a White House press release published Thursday.

Shanahan currently oversees Boeing’s manufacturing operations and supplier management programs, serves on the executive council and leads the company’s environment, health and safety and intellectual property management groups.

The three-decade Boeing veteran previously served as SVP of commercial airplane programs and was responsible for the profit and loss management of the 737, 747, 767, 777 and 787 programs as well as operations at principal manufacturing sites in Washington state and South Carolina.

Shanahan held vice president and general manager roles for Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner aircraft, missile defense systems business unit and rotorcraft systems segment.

He is a fellow with the Royal Aeronautical Society, Society of Manufacturing Engineers and American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.

Government Technology/News
Thomas Bossert: Trump Administration to Pursue Federal IT Modernization
by Ramona Adams
Published on March 17, 2017
Thomas Bossert: Trump Administration to Pursue Federal IT Modernization


Thomas Bossert: Trump Administration to Pursue Federal IT Modernization
Thomas Bossert

Thomas Bossert, an adviser to President Donald Trump on homeland security and counterterrorism, has said the Trump administration will pursue information technology modernization projects as part of efforts to secure federal networks, Federal News Radio reported Thursday.

Meredith Somers writes Bossert said at a Center for Strategic and International Studies-hosted cybersecurity forum that the White House will release details on its strategy to modernize government IT systems in the coming weeks and months.

Bossert added that federal networks and data is a top cybersecurity priority for the Trump administration and that he believes it is the most directly controllable aspect of cybersecurity for the president.

He noted that cybersecurity will also be part of the defense and homeland security spending in Trump’s budget request.

The White House also plans to require federal agencies to report known and unmitigated risk; push for the adoption of the National Institute of Standards and Technology‘s cybersecurity framework; and hold federal agency heads accountable for enterprise network security, Somers reported.

Bossert added Trump looks to collaborate with the private sector to address botnets, the report stated.

DoD/News
Maj. Gen. Bo Dyess: Air Force Could Partner With Army on Multi-Domain Battle Concept
by Jane Edwards
Published on March 17, 2017
Maj. Gen. Bo Dyess: Air Force Could Partner With Army on Multi-Domain Battle Concept


Maj. Gen. Bo Dyess: Air Force Could Partner With Army on Multi-Domain Battle ConceptMaj. Gen. Bo Dyess, acting director of the U.S. Army capabilities integration center, has said the U.S. Air Force is “very close” to forming a partnership with the Army to create new functionalities for the multi-domain battle concept.

Dyess said Monday at the Association of the U.S. Army’s Global Force Symposium that the service branch would require in the future warfare air defense platforms designed to fight anti-access/anti-denial systems as well as the Air Force’s close air support in order to move soldiers through contested environments, the Army reported Thursday.

The possible collaboration with the Air Force comes nearly two months after the Army and Marine Corps formed a joint task force and released a white paper about the multi-domain battle concept.

“Multi-domain battle is an evolution, not a revolution,” Dyess said.

“It’s a natural evolution of combined arms designed to meet challenges of the 21st century,” he added.

Dyess noted that the Army Training and Doctrine Command has started to integrate some of the concept’s aspects with the Army Doctrine Publication 3.0 that seeks to detail a common operational framework for warfighters.

Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David Goldfein also introduced the multi-domain command-and-control concept that aims to facilitate decision-making processes, situational awareness and use of aerial assets in future combat.

News
Reports: Trump Proposes $1.1T Federal Budget for FY 2018, Requests $30B in FY 2017 Supplemental Military Funds
by Jane Edwards
Published on March 17, 2017
Reports: Trump Proposes $1.1T Federal Budget for FY 2018, Requests $30B in FY 2017 Supplemental Military Funds


Reports: Trump Proposes $1.1T Federal Budget for FY 2018, Requests $30B in FY 2017 Supplemental Military FundsPresident Donald Trump has proposed to Congress a $1.1 trillion budget for fiscal year 2018 and requested $30 billion in supplemental military funds for FY 2017, Defense News reported Thursday.

Joe Gould writes the White House’s FY 2018 budget plan would provide the Defense Department with $639 billion, which includes $574 billion for DoD’s base requirements and $65 billion for overseas contingency operations.

The request also proposed a 28 percent cut to the budget of the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development.

The FY 2017 supplemental funding request for the military seeks to authorize $5 billion in OCO budget and $24.9 billion in funds for DoD’s base budget initiatives that include F-35s, F/A-18 Super Hornets, Terminal High Altitude Area Defense system, Army helicopters, DDG-51 Arleigh Burke-class destroyers and tactical missiles.

The departments of Veterans Affairs and Homeland Security will respectively see a funding increase of 6 percent and 7 percent under Trump’s FY 2018 budget proposal, according to a report by Kim Soffen and Denise Lu for The Washington Post.

VA would receive $78.9 billion in funds to update the agency’s benefits claims system and expand medical services, while DHS would get $44.1 billion in budget for border protection and immigration enforcement programs that include the construction of a border wall and recruitment of 500 new border patrol employees.

The administration’s budget request only covers discretionary spending for FY 2018 and includes funding cuts to several agencies in addition to the State Department.

Those agencies include the Environmental Protection Agency, Agriculture Department and the Labor Department, the report added.

News
Air Force Aims to Help Airmen Develop Mobility Skills Through New Course
by Scott Nicholas
Published on March 17, 2017
Air Force Aims to Help Airmen Develop Mobility Skills Through New Course


Air Force Aims to Help Airmen Develop Mobility Skills Through New CourseThe U.S. Air Force‘s Expeditionary Center has launched three new courses to educate students about their roles in the Air Mobility Command’s mission and offer information on organizations that collaborate to support rapid global mobility efforts.

The military branch said Saturday the RGM courses are designed for AMC airmen at newly assigned, upgraded and transitioning leadership positions.

“We have a responsibility to provide our airmen with the tools and knowledge to succeed in any environment,” said Gen. Carlton Everhart II, AMC commander.

“Our team at the Expeditionary Operations School developed this course from the ground up with mobility airmen in mind,” said Maj. Gen. Christopher Bence, commander of the Air Force Expeditionary Center.

AMC will deploy a mobile on-demand training and information platform to aid the Air Force Expeditionary Operations School in mobility force development efforts.

The service branch noted that RGM Courses 1 and 2 are web-based and accessible via any device.

RGMC 3 is a five-day course for students to interact with AMC subject matter experts in scenario-based education challenges.

DoD/News
Senate Votes to Retain Military Rank of National Security Adviser HR McMaster
by Ramona Adams
Published on March 16, 2017
Senate Votes to Retain Military Rank of National Security Adviser HR McMaster


Senate Votes to Retain Military Rank of National Security Adviser HR McMaster
H.R. McMaster

The Senate voted 86-10 Wednesday to let H.R. McMaster keep his military status as a three-star lieutenant general with the U.S. Army while he serves as President Donald Trump’s national security adviser, Defense News reported Wednesday.

Joe Gould writes that senators did not have to subject McMaster’s appointment to confirmation in the upper chamber but the law requires them to reconfirm a military officer of three star rank or above when the officer has been appointed for a different position.

President Trump selected McMaster to be his national security adviser after Michael Flynn resigned from the role last month.

The Senate Armed Services Committee backed the approval of McMaster to retain his current rank through a 23-2 vote last week.

“McMaster’s distinguished career has included multiple overseas tours in the service of our country, experiences that will be invaluable as he provides President Trump with advice on the many challenges facing the United States around the globe,” the White House said Wednesday.

Civilian/News
NASA Study: Biofuels Can Reduce Jet Engine Particle Emission
by Ramona Adams
Published on March 16, 2017
NASA Study: Biofuels Can Reduce Jet Engine Particle Emission


NASA Study: Biofuels Can Reduce Jet Engine Particle EmissionA NASA-led study has found that the use of biofuels to power jet engines can reduce particle emission levels by 50 percent to 70 percent.

The Alternative Fuel Effects on Contrails and Cruise Emissions Study includes findings from a cooperative international research program that involved agencies from Germany and Canada, NASA said Thursday.

ACCESS examined the effects of alternative fuels on engine performance, emissions and aircraft-generated contrails using data collected from flight tests in 2013 and 2014 near NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center.

“The observed particle reductions we’ve measured during ACCESS should directly translate into reduced ice crystal concentrations in contrails, which in turn should help minimize their impact on Earth’s environment,” said Bruce Anderson, an ACCESS project scientist at NASA’s Langley Research Center.

Researchers found that contrails form long-lasting clouds and have a bigger impact on the Earth’s atmosphere than all aviation-related carbon dioxide emissions.

During the tests, NASA flew its DC-8 aircraft powered by a 50-50 blend of aviation fuel and a renewable alternative fuel while research aircraft trailed the DC-8 to measure emissions and monitored contrail formation.

NASA plans to conduct additional studies to explore the potential advantages of using biofuels in aircraft.

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