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Acquisition & Procurement/News
Federal News Radio: DoD to Release Cybersecurity Guidance for Acquisition Program Managers
by Dominique Stump
Published on September 12, 2016
Federal News Radio: DoD to Release Cybersecurity Guidance for Acquisition Program Managers


cybersecurityThe Defense Department plans to release new guidance within the next two months to help program managers integrate cybersecurity approaches into DoD’s acquisition cycle, Federal News Radio reported Friday.

Scott Maucione writes the guide will outline systems security engineering strategies as part of DoD’s efforts to address vulnerabilities in defense systems and protect assets against cyber attacks.

“Ultimately this would eventually make its way into the development contract, but right now the specific guidance that we plan to publish is for program managers,” Robert Gold, director of engineering enterprise at DoD, told the radio station in an interview.

The report said Frank Kendall – undersecretary of defense for acquisition, technology and logistics – issued a policy last year that directs defense program managers to assess cybersecurity risks and help program users to write  testable security measures.

DoD/News
Kelly Morris: DLA Seeks Commercial Platforms to Manage, Secure Defense Supply Chain
by Scott Nicholas
Published on September 12, 2016
Kelly Morris: DLA Seeks Commercial Platforms to Manage, Secure Defense Supply Chain


Kelly Morris: DLA Seeks Commercial Platforms to Manage, Secure Defense Supply ChainKelly Morris, chief of research and development at the Defense Logistics Agency, has said DLA seeks technological ideas from the private sector to keep counterfeit electronics out of the military supply chain and implement additive manufacturing processes.

She highlighted various opportunities for companies to partner with DLA during an industry day held Wednesday at the agency’s McNamara Headquarters Complex in Virginia, DLA said Thursday.

DLA held the event to familiarize industry representatives with DLA’s ongoing efforts to increase warfighter support and address supply chain management challenges.

Morris added current R&D programs at DLA encompass distribution modernization, strategic materials, combat rations and supply chain security.

“We’re now looking for ways to procure parts via 3D models using our existing DLA processes and manufacturing.”

“We also want to move DLA from a PDF tech data package to a ‘smart’ data and engineering models.”

Morris believes that partnering with companies will help DLA to maximize the agency’s R&D budget of $38 million each year.

Government Technology/News
Matt Goodrich Unveils FedRAMP Authorization Baseline Cost Analysis
by Jane Edwards
Published on September 12, 2016
Matt Goodrich Unveils FedRAMP Authorization Baseline Cost Analysis


Matt Goodrich
Matt Goodrich

Matt Goodrich, director of the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program at the General Services Administration, has said a mid-range cloud service provider would incur a total median cost of $2.25 million in order to get a FedRAMP authorization.

Goodrich wrote in a blog entry posted Thursday a CSP would need to spend an additional $1 million to perform continuous monitoring operations on an annual basis once the FedRAMP certification is achieved.

The cost analysis is based on four CSPs that went through the old FedRAMP process for their software-as-a-service and infrastructure-as-a-service platforms, he said.

According to the analysis, the FedRAMP process’ baseline costs include documentation, evaluation by a FedRAMP-accredited third-party assessment organization, Joint Authorization Board review and engineering costs associated with the need to execute technical modifications to a cloud platform in order to meet FedRAMP requirements.

Goodrich noted that costs associated with the previous process prior to the launch of the FedRAMP Accelerated system also range between $500,000 and $4 million.

He said such large variances in costs are driven by several factors such as the employment of external consultants to help with the documentation process, engineering costs and length of 3PAO assessments.

DoD/News
Adm. Michael Rogers: AI, Human Analytics Integration Can Aid Natl Security Programs
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on September 12, 2016
Adm. Michael Rogers: AI, Human Analytics Integration Can Aid Natl Security Programs


big dataSome military and federal agency officials who took part in a panel discussion held Thursday in Washington believe that artificial intelligence technology can support missions in cyberspace and the intelligence community, DoD News reported Friday.

Amaani Lyle writes that Adm. Michael Rogers, head of the U.S. Cyber Command and the National Security Agency, proposed the integration of AI and human analytics to address global-scale challenges.

“If you can’t get to some level of AI or machine learning with the volume of activity that you’re trying to understand when you’re [defending] networks from activity of concern, if you can’t get to scale, you are always behind the power curve,” Rogers told the Intelligence and National Security Summit.

“It’s got to be some combination of the two.”

He said NSA aims establish a construct to encourage fusion of ideas between the government and industry.

Robert Cardillo, director of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, agreed that AI could complement human-centered models to manage information, according to the publication.

“We’ve come to understand that the way we built systems in the past, the way we developed applications, the way we brought [information technology] to the analysts’ desktop, won’t work in the future,” Cardillo said at the forum.

The report said cyber and intelligence leaders formed small teams of information technology professionals to identify strategies to accelerate the IT development cycle.

DoD/News
Ashton Carter: DoD Makes Additional Commitments for UN Peacekeeping Efforts
by Ramona Adams
Published on September 9, 2016
Ashton Carter: DoD Makes Additional Commitments for UN Peacekeeping Efforts


Ashton Carter
Ashton Carter

Defense Secretary Ashton Carter has outlined the Defense Department‘s new commitments to aid U.N. peacekeeping operations, DoD News reported Thursday.

Cheryl Pellerin writes Carter said at the U.N. Peacekeeping Defense Ministerial in the U.K. that peacekeeping efforts are changing amid new global challenges and a wider reach of missions.

Carter announced DoD will support U.N.’s Enhanced Leader Development Program to train and prepare future senior mission leaders for peace operations and will also work with U.N. national investigative officers to help prevent sexual exploitation and abuse by peacekeepers.

DoD will also offer support for peacekeeper deployments to crisis zones and address gaps in areas such as counter improvised explosive devices and medical evacuation, Pellerin reports.

Carter noted DoD will work with U.N. to drive energy, water and waste management efficiency in peacekeeping camps and sites.

The report said the secretary also called on U.N. to assess leaders and forces against performance, equipment and conduct standards and to replace underperforming personnel.

DoD/News
Navy to Commission USS Montgomery Independence-Class LCS; Ray Mabus Comments
by Scott Nicholas
Published on September 9, 2016
Navy to Commission USS Montgomery Independence-Class LCS; Ray Mabus Comments


Littoral Combat ShipThe U.S. Navy will commission its newest Independence-class littoral combat ship designed to support operations in near-shore and open-ocean environments.

The service branch said Thursday it will hold the USS Montgomery commissioning activity Sept. 10 in Mobile, Alabama.

“The commissioning of USS Montgomery is not only a celebration of the partnership we share with the people of a great southern capital, but also of our nation’s highly skilled shipbuilders who… will help us continue to grow the fleet to more than 300 ships by the end of this decade,” said Ray Mabus, secretary of the Navy.

USS Montgomery was named after Alabama’s capital that in turn was named after Richard Montgomery, who was a continental army officer.

LCS units perform mine warfare, anti-submarine warfare and surface warfare missions and can be classified under the Freedom and Independence variants.

Lockheed Martin leads work on the Freedom variant while Austal USA heads the team working on the Independence variant.

Acquisition & Procurement/News
GSA Seeks to Add ‘Other Direct Costs’ to Multiple-Award Schedule Program; Tom Sharpe Comments
by Jay Clemens
Published on September 9, 2016
GSA Seeks to Add ‘Other Direct Costs’ to Multiple-Award Schedule Program; Tom Sharpe Comments


GSAThe General Services Administration has released a new policy change proposal that seeks to add other direct costs to the Multiple Award Schedule program to support agency access to order-level materials.

The proposed GSA Regulation rule is intended to help customer agencies and industry partners to respectively procure and provide OLMs through the MAS program, GSA said Thursday.

The agency added it aims to align the MAS program with other established indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract vehicles and provide additional flexibility to MAS users.

“This proposed rule is another step forward and a crucial component of GSA’s MAS transformation efforts,” said Tom Sharpe, commissioner of GSA’s Federal Acquisition Service.

“The proposed addition of OLMs… will improve our customers’ abilities to meet their mission needs while ensuring that the Schedules program can respond to ever-changing market forces.”

GSA wants to apply the change to the Federal Supply Schedule 03 FAC, Federal Supply Schedule 56, Federal Supply Schedule 70, Federal Supply Schedule 71, Federal Supply Schedule 84, Federal Supply Schedule 738X and Professional Services Schedule 99.

The Federal Register is set to publish the proposed rule Friday for a 60-day public comment period.

Civilian/News
Report: Dawn Leaf to Retire as Labor Department CIO
by Dominique Stump
Published on September 9, 2016
Report: Dawn Leaf to Retire as Labor Department CIO


headshot-dawn-leaf
Dawn Leaf

Dawn Leaf, Labor Department chief information officer, is set to retire at the end of September after a 35-year career in the private and government sector, FCW reported Wednesday.

Adam Mazmanian writes Gundeep Ahluwalia, deputy CIO at the department, will assume Leaf’s position upon her retirement.

As DOL CIO, Leaf worked to modernize the information technology systems and processes of the department to support its missions and operations.

She was previously the senior adviser for cloud computing at the National Institute of Standards and Technology‘s Information Technology Laboratory, where she helped drive the organization’s efforts in cloud computing.

She is a former Commerce Department deputy CIO and chief technology officer, Bureau of Industry and Security CIO and Smithsonian Institution CTO.

Leaf was with the Westinghouse Electric business acquired by Northrop Grumman before she began her career in the federal government in 1999.

News
Deborah Lee James: More Assessment Needed Before DoD’s Final Cost Estimate for Nuclear Modernization
by Jay Clemens
Published on September 9, 2016
Deborah Lee James: More Assessment Needed Before DoD’s Final Cost Estimate for Nuclear Modernization


Deborah Lee James
Deborah Lee James

Secretary of the Air Force Deborah Lee James believes the Defense Department needs more room for evaluation before it can finalize the cost estimate on the effort to modernize the U.S. intercontinental ballistic missile arsenal, National Defense Magazine reported Wednesday.

John Harper writes DoD’s Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation Office estimated the cost of the Ground-Based Strategic Deterrent program to reach more than $85 billion in the coming years, or $23 billion more than the U.S. Air Force’s own estimate.

James told reporters at the Pentagon that DoD and the Air Force used different methods, assumptions and data for the cost estimates.

“The data that everybody is using to try to build up these cost estimates is somewhat dated simply because we haven’t done it in so long,” she added.

The Air Force issued the request for proposals on the GBSD program in July.

The report said Lockheed Martin, Boeing and Northrop Grumman have submitted proposals for the program.

“[As] we get the proposals back from industry, this will inform what I believe will be refinements in that cost estimate over time as we learn more,” James said, according to the report.

Acquisition & Procurement/News
Air Force Develops Human Systems Integration Framework for Acquisition Practitioners
by Jay Clemens
Published on September 9, 2016
Air Force Develops Human Systems Integration Framework for Acquisition Practitioners


Air Force logoThe Air Force Research Laboratory has developed and tested a human systems integration framework tool designed to help practitioners familiarize themselves with the military  branch’s acquisition process.

The Human Systems Integration directorate within AFRL’s 711th Human Performance Wing designed the tool to cover various facets of human systems integration under such domains as manpower, personnel, training, human factors, occupational health, environment, safety, survivability and habitability, the branch said Thursday.

“The HSIF tool allows practitioners to maintain continuity throughout that entire cycle, and can be preserved as an artifact once the process is complete,” said Bill Kosnik, an engineering psychologist in the directorate’s Human Systems Implementation division.

“The goal is for it to serve as a record management tool in addition to a step-by-step guide,” added Kosnik.

The HSIF tool comprises various stage of the entire acquisition cycle such as development planning, operation, sustainment and disposal, with a canvas that lists the acquisition timeline across its top and the integrator roles and domains on the left side.

The Pacific Science and Engineering Group site currently hosts the tool and the Air Force plans to transfer the tool to its own network in the future.

“We’ll also extend access to acquisition program managers, systems engineers, (human systems integration) domain experts, Air Force Life Cycle Management Center personnel and others,” Kosnik added.

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