Processing....

Logo

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
Government Technology/News
Navy Unveils Mobile App to Provide Credentialing, Career Development Info
by Jane Edwards
Published on February 3, 2016
Navy Unveils Mobile App to Provide Credentialing, Career Development Info


mobileThe U.S. Naval Education and Training Command has launched a new mobile application designed to provide uniformed personnel information on career development, credentialing and civilian career opportunities, the Navy reported Jan. 28.

The Navy Credentialing Opportunities Online mobile app was launched Thursday by NETC and is available for use on both iOS and Android-based mobile devices.

“This new app provides an expanded capability for sailors to help them translate the skills they’ve learned on the job into civilian credentials, career growth opportunities and related civilian occupations,” said Keith Boring, Navy COOL program manager.

The Navy COOL app has several tools, including Learning and Development Roadmaps to sailors’ career advancement, U.S. Military Apprenticeship Program trades and Rating Information Cards.

Civilian/News
Protection of Federal Employees’ Due Process Rights Pushed in New Bill
by Jay Clemens
Published on February 3, 2016
Protection of Federal Employees’ Due Process Rights Pushed in New Bill


CapitolDomeReps. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.) and Rob Wittman (R-Va.) have proposed a measure to protect the due process rights of federal employees who hold sensitive roles in government.

Norton said Monday the bill would repeal a federal court decision in 2013 that prevented federal employees from appealing an agency’s decision removing them from service based on national security reasons.

The Kaplan v. Conyers and MSPB decision at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit affects more than 200,000 Defense Department workers with noncritical sensitive job descriptions, according to Norton.

“This [proposed] bill protects the individual, constitutional rights of federal workers and continues to hold agencies accountable for the action they take against employees,” Wittman said.

“If we want to continue to get the best candidates serving in the federal government, we must ensure that their most basic constitutional rights are protected – at least to have an independent body review the decision of an agency official,” Norton added.

DoD/News
Mac Thornberry: More Defense OCO Funds Needed
by Jane Edwards
Published on February 3, 2016
Mac Thornberry: More Defense OCO Funds Needed


Mac Thornberry
Mac Thornberry

House Armed Services Committee Chairman Mac Thornberry (R-Texas) has said the Defense Department’s overseas contingency operations fund is in need of more funding, Breaking Defense reported Tuesday.

Colin Clark writes Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said Tuesday that the proposed $582.7 billion defense budget to be released next week as part of President Barack Obama’s fiscal year 2017 budget request would allocate $524 billion for the base budget and approximately $59 billion to OCO.

“To cover that minimum level of funding, $23 billion of the OCO adjustment would support base requirements, and an additional amount of OCO would fund current operations, the precise amount of which would depend on the world security situation and U.S. deployments,” Thornberry wrote in a letter to House Budget Committee Chairman Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.).

Joe Gould also reports for Defense News that Thornberry said at a press conference Monday that the OCO funds needed for 2016 would be based on military operations.

The House committee chair also noted at a National Press Club event last month that he anticipates a reduction in DoD’s base budget once the White House releases its FY 2017 budget request on Feb. 9, Gould reports.

News
Ashton Carter: $583B DoD Budget Plan Reflects Focus on Global Threats
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on February 3, 2016
Ashton Carter: $583B DoD Budget Plan Reflects Focus on Global Threats


Ashton Carter
Ashton Carter

Defense Secretary Ashton Carter has highlighted the Pentagon’s focus to address land, sea, air, space and cyber challenges during his preview of a $582.7 billion defense budget plan for fiscal 2017, DoD News reported Tuesday.

Cheryl Pellerin writes the new Defense Department spending proposal will be part of President Barack Obama’s 2017 budget request that could be released next week.

“In this budget, we’re taking the long view,” Carter told his audience at a breakfast event held Tuesday at the Economic Club of Washington.

“Even as we fight today’s fights, we must also be prepared for the fights that might come 10, 20 or 30 years down the road.”

The Hill newspaper reported DoD plans to invest $7.5 billion to bolster the military campaign against the Islamic State militant group next fiscal year and use $1.8 billion of the amount to procure laser-guided rockets and GPS-guided bombs.

Carter noted the budget also contains initiatives to reform DoD’s institutional organization, eliminate wasteful spending in the weapons acquisition process and recruit skilled civilian and military personnel, according to the story by Kristina Wong.

Aaron Mehta of Defense News reports the department seeks $71.4 billion to fund technology research and development projects, $8.1 billion to build submarines and another $7 billion to bolster cybersecurity in fiscal 2017.

DoD also plans to defer retirement of the A-10 Warthog fleet until 2022 and quadruple allocation for the European Reassurance Initiative to about $3.4 billion in a move to increase the number of U.S. military operations, infrastructure and training in European partner countries.

News
Harlin McEwen: FirstNet Forms Local Control, Identity & Access Mgmt Teams
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on February 3, 2016
Harlin McEwen: FirstNet Forms Local Control, Identity & Access Mgmt Teams


FirstNetThe First Responder Network Authority and its public safety advisory committee have created two task forces to help the agency manage governance and data access issues for the future national emergency services network.

Harlin McEwen, chairman of FirstNet’s public safety advisory committee, wrote in a blog entry posted Monday the first team will develop operational requirements for the broadband network’s local control application as well as guidelines for managing quality of service, priority and preemption on the infrastructure.

The second group aims to identify challenges that first responders face due to a lack of an interoperational identity, credential and access management system and establish a framework for emergency response organizations to implement federated identity, according to McEwen.

Barry Fraser and Chris Lombard respectively serves as chair of the local control and ICAM task teams.

FirstNet has asked both groups to submit reports to the agency later this year, McEwen noted.

Government Technology/News
Michael Gilmore: DoD Faces Cyber Workforce, Training Shortfall
by Anna Forrester
Published on February 3, 2016
Michael Gilmore: DoD Faces Cyber Workforce, Training Shortfall


Michael Gilmore
Michael Gilmore

Michael Gilmore, director of operational test and evaluation at the Defense Department, has said the military continues to face cyber vulnerabilities beyond current efforts to secure its systems, Federal News Radio reported Tuesday.

Jared Serbu writes that Gilmore said in a January report to Congress the service branches do not adequately include realistic and up-to-date cyber threat scenarios in training.

The report indicated that DoD has a shortage of cyber professionals amid increased demand as some members of the cyber opposing forces or “red teams” move to the private sector, while cyber protection teams do not receive the needed training to counter red teams.

“This trend must be reversed if the DoD is to retain the ability to effectively train and assess DoD systems and service members against realistic cyber threats,” Gilmore wrote in the report.

Acquisition & Procurement/News
Dennis Via, James Simpson: Army Contracting Command Continues Support for Force Readiness
by Anna Forrester
Published on February 2, 2016
Dennis Via, James Simpson: Army Contracting Command Continues Support for Force Readiness


army stock photoGen. Dennis Via, commander of Army Materiel Command, has noted the role of Army Contracting Command to help build force readiness through the procurement of equipment to support warfighting efforts, the U.S. Army reported Friday.

“ACC is critical to AMC’s ability to provide what the warfighter needs, when it’s needed,” Via told ACC Commander Maj. Gen. James Simpson at a recent briefing, according to the report.

Simpson said he expects ACC to execute approximately 170,000 contract actions worth $53 billion this current fiscal year and achieve steady activity through fiscal 2018.

The general also highlighted the command’s work to engage customers and stakeholders as well as communicate programs across the workforce to help drive morale and performance.

DoD/News
US Air Force Forms New Military Satellite Watch Team
by Jay Clemens
Published on February 2, 2016
US Air Force Forms New Military Satellite Watch Team


Surface Water and Ocean Topography spacecraftThe U.S. Air Force has organized a new team at the 50th Space Wing at Schriever Air Force Base in Colorado that has been tasked to watch the U.S. military’s satellites, Defense One reported Monday.

Patrick Tucker writes the Space Mission Force consists of 352 individuals distributed across four squadrons with four crewmembers each.

A mission planning cell that comprises an orbit analysts, intelligence professionals, engineers and mission specialists will support the mission planning cell, according to the report.

The Air Force also plans to set up additional Space Mission Force crews at the 21st Space Wing at Peterson Air Force Base and at the 460th Space Wing at Buckley Air Force Base in Colorado, Tucker reports.

Defense One reports the move is part of the military’s efforts to protect space assets and increase space funds over the next five years.

Government Technology/News
NIST Measures Webb Telescope’s Mirror Backplane Structure; John Stoup Comments
by Jane Edwards
Published on February 2, 2016
NIST Measures Webb Telescope’s Mirror Backplane Structure; John Stoup Comments


deep_spaceThe National Institute of Standards and Technology has used the M48 Coordinate Measurement Machine to measure the four mounts that work to support the Primary Mirror Backplane Support Structure of the James Webb Space Telescope.

PMBSS is designed to support the telescope’s 21-foot-diameter mirror and 5,300 pounds of optical tools and other instruments, NIST said Monday.

NASA researchers will use the measurement data to position the components within the structure before they conduct vibration tests on the telescope’s mirror.

“When you have something like this and bring it into orbit, you can’t go up to space and reposition it,” said John Stoup, a mechanical engineer at NIST’s physical measurement laboratory in Maryland.

NASA plans to launch the Webb telescope in October 2018 to gain insights on the formation of the first galaxies and stars in space.

Civilian/News
NASA Appoints Todd May as Full-Time Director of Marshall Space Flight Center
by Anna Forrester
Published on February 2, 2016
NASA Appoints Todd May as Full-Time Director of Marshall Space Flight Center

 

Todd May
Todd May

Todd May has been named director of NASA‘s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.

The space agency said Tuesday May will be in charge of the $2.5 billion Marshall center and its 6,000 civil service and contractor employees who handle human spaceflight, science and technology missions.

“Todd’s experience and leadership have been invaluable to the agency, especially as we have embarked on designing, building and testing the Space Launch System, a critical part of NASA’s journey to Mars,” said NASA Administrator Charles Bolden.

May has been responsible for the flight center since being appointed as the acting director after the retirement of Patrick Scheuermann in November 2015.

Prior to his current post, May served as the deputy director of Marshall beginning August 2015 and led the Space Launch System since it started in 2011.

May started at NASA in Marshall’s materials and processes laboratory in 1991 and in 1994 became deputy program manager of the Russian integration office in the International Space Station Program of NASA’s Johnson Space Center.

He had his bachelor’s degree in materials engineering from Auburn University in Alabama and had received several honors including NASA’s Exceptional Achievement Medal and the Presidential Rank Award of Meritorious Executive.

 

Previous 1 … 2,548 2,549 2,550 2,551 2,552 … 2,597 Next
News Briefing
I'm Interested In:
Recent Posts
  • GSA Unveils Generative AI Evaluation Suite USAi
  • FAR Council Issues Model Deviation Text for Federal Acquisition Regulation’s 6 Sections
  • NSF, NVIDIA Back Ai2 in Development of Open-Source AI Models
  • Navy CDAO Discusses Upcoming AI, Data Weaponization Strategy
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
  • CGS Joins US Coast Guard in National Security Cutter Commissioning
  • BigBear.ai, Smiths Detection Complete Testing of Integrated Airport Security Technology
  • BlackSea Technologies Adds Mike Kushin to Board
  • Divergent & Raytheon Partner to Re-engineer Naval Systems Using Digital Manufacturing
  • X-energy, DIU & Air Force to Advance Commercial Microreactor Technology
  • Scott Bukofsky Joins NSTXL as Senior Vice President of Microelectronics
RSS GovConWire
  • Navy Taps eSimplicity for $99M Spectrum Management Support Contract
  • Kepler Appoints Carl Jenkins as SVP of Engineering
  • Lockheed Martin Lands $4.2B Army Contract Modification for Guided Rocket Systems
  • Merlin Eyes Going Public Through Inflection Point-Backed Bleichroeder SPAC Merger
  • William Maxwell Named Highlight Chief Financial Officer
  • Booz Allen Secures $1.6B DIA Task Order for CWMD Intelligence Analysis Support
Footer Logo

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