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News
DOD Teams With Selmet to Bolster Turbine Engine Supply Chain; Laura Taylor-Kale Quoted
by Ireland Degges
Published on August 7, 2023
DOD Teams With Selmet to Bolster Turbine Engine Supply Chain; Laura Taylor-Kale Quoted

In line with the Department of Defense’s goal to bolster U.S. supply chains, its Office of the Assistant Secretary for Industrial Base Policy has entered into a $1.31 million agreement with Selmet, Inc., a Consolidated Precision Products company.

The partnership, which was established through the office’s Manufacturing Capability Expansion and Investment Prioritization office, will help Selmet produce specialty titanium castings used for turbine engines on F-15, F-16, F-22 and F-35 aircraft, the DOD announced on Friday.

“Resiliency at all points in our defense industrial base is required to ensure the operational availability of the platforms on which our warfighters depend. Upstream supporting activities are just as important as the manufacturing of final products” said Laura Taylor-Kale, assistant secretary of defense for industrial base policy.

Made under the Defense Production Act Title III authorities and funded by the Additional Ukraine Supplemental Appropriations Act, the agreement will allow Selmet to procure and install the specific equipment needed to produce its titanium castings.

C4ISR/News
US Navy Lengthens Service Life of 4 Arleigh Burke-Class Ships
by Jamie Bennet
Published on August 7, 2023
US Navy Lengthens Service Life of 4 Arleigh Burke-Class Ships

The U.S. Navy has cleared a service life extension for four Arleigh Burke-class destroyers stationed in Virginia and Japan.

The Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, Surface Warfare Division, extended the service life of the USS Ramage and USS Benfold by five years, and the USS Mitscher and USS Milius by four years, the service branch announced Wednesday.

“These service life extensions demonstrate the Navy’s commitment to ensuring the surface fleet has the right capability and capacity,” said Rear Adm. Fred Pyle, director of Surface Warfare (N96).

The Ramage and Mitscher are homeported in Norfolk, Virginia. The former will stay in active duty until fiscal year 2035, while the latter will be in service until FY 2034. The Benfold and Milius are stationed in Yokosuka, Japan, and will be reviewed again in 2036 and 2035, respectively.

“These extensions align to Secretary of the Navy Del Toro’s commitment to Congress during the FY-24 posture hearings to analyze service life on a hull-by-hull basis and extend the correct ships in order to be good stewards of resources invested in the U.S. Navy by the American people,” Pyle said.

Each of the guided-missile destroyers underwent Aegis baseline modernization upgrades as part of the DDG modernization initiative.

This approval was announced a day after the Navy awarded multiyear procurement contracts for the construction of nine DDG 51 Arleigh Burke-class ships in Flight III configuration. The projects were granted to HII’s Ingalls Shipbuilding division and General Dynamics’ Bath Iron Works business.

News
MSU Secures $529M DOE Funding to Extend Rare Isotope Research
by Naomi Cooper
Published on August 7, 2023
MSU Secures $529M DOE Funding to Extend Rare Isotope Research

The Department of Energy‘s Office of Science has awarded $529 million in funding to Michigan State University to continue nuclear science research at the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams, MSUToday reported Friday.

Under the five-year cooperative agreement, FRIB will serve as a user facility for DOE-SC to study the properties and fundamental interactions of rare isotopes and nuclear astrophysics and their applications in medicine, homeland security and industry.

FRIB has provided over 200 rare isotope beams for experiments and supported over 500 participants worldwide, including scientists from colleges, universities and national laboratories, since user facility operation commenced in May 2022.

The facility also supports chip testing for advanced semiconductor devices, the harvesting of unused isotopes for use in several fields of study and the development of new technologies for other industries and applications.

Executive Moves/News
National Institutes of Health Names Jeanne Marrazzo NIAID Director
by Jamie Bennet
Published on August 7, 2023
National Institutes of Health Names Jeanne Marrazzo NIAID Director

Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo, director of the Division of Infectious Diseases at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, has been chosen to lead the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

Her appointment to the NIAID director post will take effect in the fall, and she will succeed NIAID Acting Director Dr. Hugh Auchincloss, who stepped into the role after Dr. Anthony Fauci’s departure in December, the National Institutes of Health said Wednesday.

Marrazzo’s early career experience includes time as a faculty member at the University of Washington School of Medicine.

She was inducted as a fellow of the American College of Physicians in 1996, and became chair of the Subspecialty Board on Infectious Disease by the American Board of Internal Medicine in 2012.

Marrazzo is a fellow of the Infectious Disease Society of America and a specialist in HIV and the human microbiome. The Lesbian/Bisexual Women’s Health Study, which she co-founded, was noticed and funded by NIAID.

Cybersecurity/News
CISA Executive Assistant Director for Cybersecurity Eric Goldstein Discusses Cybersecurity Strategic Plan for 2024-2026
by Jamie Bennet
Published on August 7, 2023
CISA Executive Assistant Director for Cybersecurity Eric Goldstein Discusses Cybersecurity Strategic Plan for 2024-2026

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency has released its Fiscal Year 2024-2026 Cybersecurity Strategic Plan, which will assemble government and industry players, both within and outside the United States, to implement foundational shifts in IT protection in the nation.

In a blog post published last week, Eric Goldstein, CISA’s executive assistant director of cybersecurity, discussed the strategy, which centers three main goals: addressing immediate threats, bolstering security resilience and treating Internet-based defense as a national safety issue.

To mitigate urgent threats, CISA will intensify efforts to study how attacks really occur, as well as coordinate information sharing and crackdown on threats. It will also refine metrics to measure the efficacy of tools and other investments for cybersecurity, and build a specialized workforce to patrol existing and emerging technologies.

“Ultimately, cybersecurity is a whole of CISA, whole of government, whole of nation mission. It takes every one of us to contribute to our individual and societal security,” Goldstein wrote.

“Through our shared efforts, we believe 2023 can be an inflection point when we shift the arc of national risk to create a safer future for generations to come,” he stated.

Executive Moves/News
Defense Logistics Agency Elevates Adarryl Roberts to CIO
by Jamie Bennet
Published on August 7, 2023
Defense Logistics Agency Elevates Adarryl Roberts to CIO

Adarryl Roberts has been elevated from program executive officer to chief information officer at the Defense Logistics Agency, according to a LinkedIn post on Sunday.

Roberts has been with the DLA for over a decade, beginning as a portfolio manager for enterprise sourcing, medical and contingency in 2012.

As PEO, he oversaw the major automated information systems and special interest programs of the DLA. Prior to taking on the PEO role, he was director of the agency’s Business Systems Center of Excellence.

In his first position with the DLA, Roberts spent three years overseeing 14 program managers that served the Department of Defense and DLA’s enterprise programs focused on procurement, finance and equipment management.

Roberts has a bachelor’s degree in business administration from Fayetteville State University in North Carolina. He earned Acquisition Management Level III and Acquisition Contracting Level III certifications at the Defense Acquisition University.

Industry News/News
PSC Shares Insights With CMS on Labor Harmony Clauses in Contact Center Operations Contracts
by Jane Edwards
Published on August 4, 2023
PSC Shares Insights With CMS on Labor Harmony Clauses in Contact Center Operations Contracts

The Professional Services Council has submitted to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services its feedback on a request for information on the potential inclusion of a labor harmony clause in future contracts for contact center operations.

PSC said in a letter dated Tuesday it believes the inclusion of a labor harmony agreement “would likely result in requests for employment conditions that would make it difficult for any contractor to fulfill the stated performance goals of the CCO contract.”

According to the council, such agreements seek to prevent the risk of boycott, work stoppage or picketing that could interfere with the contractor’s operations and are common in shipping and construction contracts.

PSC noted that CMS would face difficulties in assessing labor harmony clauses as part of the process for evaluating proposals “because each has a different cost and technical impact to the contract.”

The inclusion of such clauses in CCO contracts would result in unnecessary government interference with contractual agreements in the private sector, impose cost on employees who may not receive any benefit, discriminate against vendors based on labor affiliation and may impact small businesses.

“In light of the concerns outlined in this letter, PSC respectfully submits that a mandatory labor harmony clause would not benefit CMS and would directly contradict its interests due to the unique requirements of CCO work,” Krista Sweet, vice president of civilian agencies at PSC, wrote in the letter to CMS.

“If CMS wants to ensure greater pay and benefits for CCO workers, it can leverage the power of the federal government to directly increase the wage determination for these jobs, a goal which PSC strongly supports,” she added.

News
EPA Identifies Product & Service Categories for Federal Purchasing Ecolabel Program
by Jamie Bennet
Published on August 4, 2023
EPA Identifies Product & Service Categories for Federal Purchasing Ecolabel Program

The Environmental Protection Agency has listed five categories under consideration to be added to its Recommendations of Specifications, Standards and Ecolabels for Federal Purchasing.

Food service ware, healthcare, laboratories, professional services and uniforms and clothing were named as the new product and service categories to be included in the expanded recommendations, which aid in the identification of environmentally preferable goods for government procurement, EPA said Tuesday.

In November, the agency announced plans to expand the recommendations to comply with the Biden administration’s federal sustainability policies and initiatives.

The standards and ecolabels that will pass assessments and be included in the recommendations will be finalized later this year. EPA said it will add more categories when it has sufficient resources.

Government Technology/News
New FCC Inquiry Seeks Public Comment on Radio Spectrum Usage; Jessica Rosenworcel Quoted
by Jamie Bennet
Published on August 4, 2023
New FCC Inquiry Seeks Public Comment on Radio Spectrum Usage; Jessica Rosenworcel Quoted

The Federal Communications Commission issued a Notice of Inquiry into radio spectrum usage in non-federal sectors.

The agency announced Thursday that the investigation will help deepen its understanding of the benefits, limitations and feasibility of spectrum utilization and management as commercial spectrum bands increasingly become congested.

FCC normally uses third parties to collect spectrum usage data. The new inquiry will gather insights from industry, government, academia and international entities with expertise in spectrum research.

The notice is inviting feedback on best practices and technical parameters relevant to the study of spectrum usage. FCC is also interested in learning about band-specific, service-specific and operational considerations surrounding the technology.

“I believe we can do more to increase our understanding of spectrum utilization and support the development of AI tools in wireless networks. That is what today’s inquiry is all about,” FCC Chair Jessica Rosenworcel said in a statement. “I look forward to the record that develops because I believe if we do this right, we can help turn spectrum scarcity into abundance.”

Cybersecurity/News
US, International Partners Release Advisory on Addressing Common Exploited Vulnerabilities 
by Naomi Cooper
Published on August 4, 2023
US, International Partners Release Advisory on Addressing Common Exploited Vulnerabilities 

Cybersecurity agencies from the U.S., Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the U.K. are urging organizations to prioritize implementing secure-by-design practices and patching common vulnerabilities and exposures to reduce the risk of compromise by malicious cyber actors.

In a joint advisory, the agencies provided details on CVEs routinely and frequently exploited by threat actors in 2022 to compromise organizations and outlined common weakness enumerations associated with the vulnerabilities, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency said Thursday.

Technology vendors, designers and developers are recommended to implement secure design practices throughout the entire software development life cycle and establish a coordinated vulnerability disclosure program.

“With our partners, we urge all organizations to review our joint advisory, for every enterprise to prioritize mitigation of these vulnerabilities, and for every technology provider to take accountability for the security outcomes of their customers by reducing the prevalence of these vulnerabilities by design,” said Eric Goldstein, executive assistant director for cybersecurity at CISA.

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