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Civilian/News
NASA to Launch Neutron Star Research Mission in February 2017
by Ramona Adams
Published on June 10, 2016
NASA to Launch Neutron Star Research Mission in February 2017


deep_spaceNASA‘s Kennedy Space Center in Florida has received the Neutron star Interior Composition Explorer technology the space agency aims to send to the International Space Station in February 2017 aboard a SpaceX cargo resupply spacecraft.

The NICER mission seeks to explore the astrophysics of neutron stars and test a space navigation technology intended to support NASA’s future deep-space missions, NASA said Thursday.

The payload will carry an X-ray Timing Instrument that is designed with 56 co-aligned optics and sensors built to offer scientists a view into neutron star emissions.

NASA plans to use the instrument’s astrophysical observations to test models of neutron star interiors such as high-density matter that laboratories cannot produce, according to NASA.

NICER will be included in the SpaceX-11 cargo delivery mission to the ISS in February 2017 and will operate from the space station’s ExPRESS Logistics Carrier 2 after the launch.

News
Navy Survey Vessel Completes Maiden Voyage; Nick Vincent Comments
by Jay Clemens
Published on June 10, 2016
Navy Survey Vessel Completes Maiden Voyage; Nick Vincent Comments


U.S. NavyThe U.S. Navy has transported its newest oceanographic survey vessel to Port Everglades near Florida to its construction site Pascagoula, Mississippi in the ship’s first voyage.

The Naval Oceanographic Office’s civilian survey detachment assessed USNS Maury’s over-the-side operations and underwater cameras designed for autonomous underwater vehicle launch and recovery missions during the trip, the Navy said Thursday.

Named after Cmdr. Matthew Fontaine Maury, the Pathfinder-class oceanographic survey vessel spans 353 feet in length and accommodates a moon pool for launching and retrieving autonomous underwater vehicles.

Capt. Nick Vincent, NAVOCEANO executive officer, said USNS Maury is intended to provide technology to warfighters and set a foundation for the next class of survey vessels.

The Military Sealift Command operates the oceanographic survey vessel and NAVOCEANO took control of the ship for the chief of Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command at Stennis Space Center in Mississippi.

Government Technology/News
Terry Halvorsen: Government-Industry Partnerships Could Help Address Cyber Challenges
by Jane Edwards
Published on June 10, 2016
Terry Halvorsen: Government-Industry Partnerships Could Help Address Cyber Challenges


Terry Halvorsen
Terry Halvorsen

Terry Halvorsen, chief information officer at the Defense Department, has said the government should forge partnerships with industry in order to address cybersecurity challenges, Signal magazine reported Wednesday.

Sandra Jontz writes Halvorsen gave the remarks Wednesday during his keynote speech at the NITEC 2016 conference hosted by the Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association Europe and NCI Agency in Estonia.

He cited DoD’s Defense Innovation Unit Experimental program that seeks to advance collaboration with technology firms and introduce changes to the department’s acquisition process, Jontz reports.

“It’s one of the things we’re going to have to change,” he said of the government’s procurement process.

“I would argue we can’t buy ships and planes that way anymore because they are also cyber assets,” he added.

Halvorsen, an inductee into Executive Mosaic’s Wash100 for 2016, also mentioned the need for a two-way dialogue between the government and industry when it comes to addressing requirements, according to the report.

DoD/News
FBI Appoints Todd McCall as Operational Technology Division Assistant Director
by Dominique Stump
Published on June 10, 2016
FBI Appoints Todd McCall as Operational Technology Division Assistant Director


FBITodd McCall, formerly the special agent in charge of FBI‘s Memphis division, has received an appointment from FBI Director James Comey to serve as assistant director of the operational technology division.

McCall will assume his new role as assistant director within June, the bureau said Thursday.

McCall started his career in FBI in 1990 as a special agent and has since held a number of leadership positions in the agency.

He was the Quantico FBI Laboratory supervisory special agent, photographic operations and imaging services unit chief and the operational technology division’s digital forensics and analysis section chief.

He was also involved in the investigations of the Oklahoma City bombing and the 9/11 United Airlines Flight 93 crash in Shanksville, Pennsylvania.

DoD/News
Ashton Carter Proposes Additional Military, Civilian Personnel Mgmt Strategies
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on June 10, 2016
Ashton Carter Proposes Additional Military, Civilian Personnel Mgmt Strategies


Ashton Carter
Ashton Carter

Defense Secretary Ashton Carter has unveiled the third and fourth sets of the Defense Department‘s Force of the Future initiative in a move to reform strategies for DoD to manage its civilian and military personnel.

The program’s first link aims to increase the recruitment of professionals and adoption of new ideas across the department while the second link focuses on employee retention through family support programs, DoD said Thursday.

In a memo published Thursday, Carter said he will ask Congress to provide service branches a greater flexibility to adjust policies under the Defense Officer Personnel Management Act in order to help them address future unforeseen challenges and needs.

He proposed to incentivize best-performing military officers, offer an option for an officer to pursue career development opportunities without compromising their career progression at the department and allow the service branches to assign officers in cybersecurity and other specialized fields.

For DoD’s civilian workforce, he seeks to instituting a talent exchange program meant to help expose the department’s civilians to industry best practices.

He also wants the department to consider qualified civilian students for employment opportunities as well as seeks congressional approval to offer paid parental for civilian employees at DoD.

“Winning the competition for good people is a critical part of our military edge,” Carter said.

“This latest set of proposals, targeting both our military officers and our civilian workforce, will help win that competition so we can meet the security challenges of the 21st Century.”

Civilian/News
4 Senators Ask Sen. Mitch McConnell to Advance Beth Cobert’s Nomination as OPM Chief
by Jane Edwards
Published on June 10, 2016
4 Senators Ask Sen. Mitch McConnell to Advance Beth Cobert’s Nomination as OPM Chief


US office of personnel managementSenators from Maryland and Virginia have asked Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) to have the upper chamber vote on the confirmation of Beth Cobert, acting director at the Office of Personnel Management, as OPM chief.

Sens. Mark Warner (D-Virginia), Tim Kaine (D-Virginia), Barbara Mikulski (D-Maryland), and Ben Cardin (D-Maryland) said in a letter to McConnell that Cobert’s confirmation is needed in order to establish a “stable leadership” at OPM, Warner’s office said Thursday.

The lawmakers also noted that a Republican senator continues to place a hold on Cobert’s nomination despite the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee’s unanimous decision in February to advance her nomination as OPM head.

“While we understand our colleague has concerns relating to OPM rulemaking that occurred well prior to Ms. Cobert’s tenure at OPM, we continue to urge him to elevate those concerns in a productive and appropriate manner rather than hamstringing the agency at a moment when strong leadership is sorely needed,’’ the senators wrote.

The letter coincides with the first anniversary of the data breaches at OPM that affected the personal data of at least 20 million individuals.

President Barack Obama nominated Cobert, an inductee into Executive Mosaic’s Wash100 for 2016, as OPM director in November.

News
House Panel’s FY 2017 DHS Funding Bill to Allocate $41B in Discretionary Budget
by Jane Edwards
Published on June 10, 2016
House Panel’s FY 2017 DHS Funding Bill to Allocate $41B in Discretionary Budget


BudgetThe House Appropriations Committee has introduced a bill that would authorize $41.1 billion in discretionary budget for the Department of Homeland Security for fiscal year 2017.

The committee said Wednesday the proposed FY 2017 DHS appropriations bill reflects a $100 million increase from the enacted FY 2016 discretionary budget and would allocate $7.3 billion in funds to help the Federal Emergency Management Agency support emergency response and disaster relief operations.

“This bill secures our border, funds detention operations, and provides critical funding to protect our cyber networks,” said Homeland Security Subcommittee Chairman John Carter (R-Texas).

“In addition, it directs the Transportation Security [Administration] to conduct a critical assessment of its operations and requirements to handle increased passenger traffic while enhancing aviation security,” he added.

Under the proposed legislation, the Customs and Border Protection would receive $11.2 billion in budget to support the employment of 23,871 CBP officials and 21,370 border patrol agents.

The committee’s proposed bill also includes the following appropriations:

  • $5.9 billion for the Immigration and Customs Enforcement
  • $7.6 billion for the Transportation Security Administration
  • $1.8 billion for the National Protection and Programs Directorate’s cybersecurity programs
  • $10.3 billion for the U.S. Coast Guard
  • $1.9 billion for the U.S. Secret Service
  • $119.1 million for the Citizenship and Immigration Services’ E-Verify platform

Government Technology/News
Debbie Fairbrother: NASA Reinstates Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility as Launch Site
by Scott Nicholas
Published on June 9, 2016
Debbie Fairbrother: NASA Reinstates Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility as Launch Site


spaceNASA has re-established the space agency’s Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility in Texas as a site for heavy-lift balloon launch missions.

The agency said Wednesday it is scheduled to launch the Balloon-borne Imaging Telescope  payload Thursday night to conduct galactic observations as part of a technology demonstration initiative.

NASA has not had a major balloon campaign at the CSBF site since 2007.

“Re-establishing CSBF as a launch site fills an operational gap, significantly enhancing our ability to deliver short-duration nighttime flight observation,” said Debbie Fairbrother, NASA’s balloon program office chief.

SuperBIT weighs 1,540 pounds and is built to fly on a 29.47-million-cubic-foot scientific balloon.

NASA noted it aims to evaluate and validate the technology during the flight test in preparation for the agency’s balloon-borne research.

Government Technology/News
Vormetric’s Wayne Lewandowski: Federal Govt’s Cyber Strategy Should Prioritize Encryption, Access Controls
by Jane Edwards
Published on June 9, 2016
Vormetric’s Wayne Lewandowski: Federal Govt’s Cyber Strategy Should Prioritize Encryption, Access Controls


Wayne Lewandowski
Wayne Lewandowski

Wayne Lewandowski, vice president of federal operations at Vormetric, has said the federal government should develop a cybersecurity strategy that focuses on the adoption of encryption and access controls for privileged users in order to safeguard critical data from cyber attacks.

Lewandowski wrote in a Federal News Radio commentary published Wednesday that such a strategy calls for the implementation of a “detailed discovery” approach to identify sensitive information.

“This approach, which is best done with encryption, access controls to encrypted data and then monitoring of access patterns for privileged users is the best first step to take to limit the damage from penetrations to the network and extraction of data,” Lewandowski said.

“Nothing is an absolute in security… but, encryption with access-based controls has proved effective at removing many threat vectors associated with system administrators and root access,” he added.

Lewandowski wrote computer systems across federal agencies need updates in order to facilitate integration with “modern security tools” and cybersecurity training against phishing and other cyber threats.

He also mentioned the programs under President Barack Obama’s Cybersecurity National Action Plan that include the proposed $3.1 billion fund for federal information technology system updates and the development of a national commission focused on cyber.

Government Technology/News
House Passes Bipartisan IT Software License Mgmt Reform Bill
by Scott Nicholas
Published on June 9, 2016
House Passes Bipartisan IT Software License Mgmt Reform Bill


ITphotoThe U.S. House has unanimously passed a bipartisan bill co-authored by Rep. Matt Cartwright (D-Pennsylvania) and 28 other colleagues that seeks to reform how the federal government manages software licenses.

Cartwright’s office said Wednesday the Making Electronic Government Accountable By Yielding Tangible Efficiencies Act of 2016 received a 366-0 vote and will work to codify and support the current administration’s $4 billion effort to manage IT software licenses.

“Of the twenty-four major federal agencies, only two have implemented policies of comprehensive and clear management of software licenses,” said Cartwright.

“The MEGABYTE Act is the first in a series of steps we can take to minimize wasteful software spending, and to promote efficient procurement of technology.”

The bill would have the Office of Management and Budget issue a directive to require chief information officers at each executive agency to develop a comprehensive software licensing policy that will track and maintain such licenses, analyze software usage and provide management training.

Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-Louisiana) has introduced similar legislation in the Senate

The Government Accountability Office has listed IT software license management as a main priority in its annual duplication report, Cartwright’s office said.

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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.

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