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Contract Awards/News
Accenture Federal Services Lands Spot on $2.6B IRS BPA for Systems Modernization; Elaine Beeman Quoted
by Ireland Degges
Published on May 24, 2023
Accenture Federal Services Lands Spot on $2.6B IRS BPA for Systems Modernization; Elaine Beeman Quoted

Accenture Federal Services has secured a position on a seven-year, $2.6 billion blanket purchase agreement from the Internal Revenue Service.

Under the BPA, AFS will compete for task orders to help modernize the IRS’ extensive network of systems, the Arlington, Virginia-based contractor announced on Tuesday.

“We’re honored to support the IRS’ push to develop innovative ways for America’s millions of taxpayers to interact securely and effectively with the agency,” said Elaine Beeman, a senior managing director for AFS’ civilian portfolio.

Work under the Enterprise Development, Operations Services contract vehicle targets the over 400 IRS applications development systems. Awardee responsibilities include providing general modernization services, building out analytics and upgrading cybersecurity for the portfolio.

These endeavors will help the IRS applications development office generate new methods for taxpayers and tax professionals to engage with the organization.

Jessica Powell, a managing director and IRS client lead at AFS, said that the reforms will accelerate the processing of returns and distribution of credits and benefits that many Americans rely on.

“The IRS had the foresight and vision to create a contract vehicle with the ability to keep up with, or even ahead of, new legislative demands,” she said. “We’re thrilled to offer support to the IRS as they make these technology enhancements happen.”

AFS has recently won a number of contracts for information technology modernization services. In March, the enterprise received a $380 million award from Customs and Border Protection to deliver comprehensive technology support for various agency programs.

Late last year, AFS won a spot on a $137 million National Cancer Institute BPA to improve the agency’s scientific, grants management and business applications, and earlier, the company booked a $189 million contract from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to optimize and transfer data to the cloud.

Government Technology/News
Pentagon Releases Records Management Strategy; Kathleen Hicks Quoted
by Jane Edwards
Published on May 24, 2023
Pentagon Releases Records Management Strategy; Kathleen Hicks Quoted

The Department of Defense has debuted a new strategy aimed at improving its records management activities as part of efforts to achieve and maintain decision advantage.

“This DoD Records Strategy seeks to employ the latest technologies, such as artificial intelligence and cloud-based services, to reduce the administrative burden associated with records management, while creating an environment where DoD records are automatically identified and captured, expertly curated, and systemically governed,” Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks wrote in a foreword to the document.

Hicks, a 2023 Wash100 awardee, said the strategy builds on the goals included in the DOD Data Strategy.

The new strategy outlines four key enablers to achieve an information enterprise where records are discoverable and lifecycle managed by authorized users. One is advancing the strategic use of a records schedule through enhancements that offer a machine-readable roadmap to the value of digital assets.

The other three goals are completing metadata for records and records sharing backing automated records lifecycle management; providing guidance for electronic records management in a federated enterprise architecture; and developing a “multidimensional 21st Century Records Workforce” with skillsets in records curation, program management and ERM, among others.

To advance the automation of records processes for all users, the strategy enumerates several approaches, such as defining an information technology specialist role for ERM, deploying an auto-categorization tool and developing an ERM guidebook and playbook.

Government Technology/News
ORNL Researchers Use Code Toolkit to Back Exascale Small Modular Reactor for Nuclear Modeling
by Jane Edwards
Published on May 23, 2023
ORNL Researchers Use Code Toolkit to Back Exascale Small Modular Reactor for Nuclear Modeling

Researchers at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory are working to advance the future of fission power by using an exascale small modular reactor equipped with a toolkit of computer codes to conduct simulations of reactor systems in high resolution.

“By accurately predicting the nuclear reactor fuel cycle, ExaSMR reduces the number of physical experiments that reactor designers would perform to justify fuel use,” Steven Hamilton, ExaSMR project leader at ORNL, said in a statement published Monday.

“In large part, that’s what simulation is buying companies: a predictive capability that tells you how certain features will perform so that you don’t need to physically construct or perform as many experiments, which are enormously expensive,” Hamilton added.

The toolkit is designed to help researchers predict the entire fission process of a nuclear reactor design. It consists of OpenMC, Shift and NekRS computer codes that are being optimized for new exascale-class supercomputers.

OpenMC and Shift both use Monte Carlo methods and are being used to simulate reactor depletion and nuclear particle transport, while NekRS is designed to model thermal fluid dynamics.

The research team has linked up with nuclear power technology company Westinghouse for the ExaSMR project.

Under the effort, Westinghouse will conduct simulations to assess the performance of different fuel types in an operating reactor by running ExaSMR on Frontier, the world’s first exascale supercomputer, unveiled by ORNL and Hewlett Packard Enterprise in 2022.

News/Space
NASA to Study Ice Clouds Using Polarized Submillimeter Radiometer
by Jamie Bennet
Published on May 23, 2023
NASA to Study Ice Clouds Using Polarized Submillimeter Radiometer

NASA is sponsoring a new mission focused on the study of high-altitude ice clouds and their potential to improve climate forecasts.

The Polarized Submillimeter Ice-cloud Radiometer program, which was granted $37 million for lifecycle costs, will be conducted using two miniature satellites orbiting three to nine hours apart, the space agency said Tuesday.

PoISIR will employ radiometers from NASA’s Earth Venture Class of missions. They will monitor ice content as well as changes in the clouds throughout the day.

The two CubeSats will be built by Blue Canyon Technologies. NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center will provide the project management team for their construction, while the University of Wisconsin – Madison’s Space Science and Engineering Center will be responsible for science operations.

Ralf Bennartz, principal investigator at Vanderbilt University, is leading the study along with Dong Wu, deputy principal investigator at Goddard.

“Studying ice clouds is crucial for improving climate forecasts – and this will be the first time we can study ice clouds in this level of detail,” said Nicola Fox, associate administrator for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate.

Government Technology/News
NIST Accepting Nominations for Microelectronics Industry Advisory Group
by Kacey Roberts
Published on May 23, 2023
NIST Accepting Nominations for Microelectronics Industry Advisory Group

The National Institute of Standard and Technology is seeking candidates for a group that will counsel the Secretary of Commerce on matters relating to the U.S. microelectronics industry.

Industrial Advisory Committee member nominations are being sought from various stakeholders including in the industry, federal laboratories and academe who have extensive knowledge in microelectronics research, development, manufacturing and policy, NIST said Wednesday.

IAC members provide guidance on science and technology needs, national research strategies, CHIPS research and development programs and opportunities for public-private partnerships.

The committee was established in accordance with the Federal Advisory Committee Act and the William M. Thornberry National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021.

Nominations are accepted on a rolling basis but new members are typically appointed every October and are expected to serve three-year terms with the possibility to serve two consecutive terms.

Interested individuals can view this Federal Register notice for submission instructions.

Executive Moves/News
Elizabeth Bryant Named Head of DAU Office of Human Capital Initiatives
by Jane Edwards
Published on May 23, 2023
Elizabeth Bryant Named Head of DAU Office of Human Capital Initiatives

Elizabeth Bryant, an associate dean at the Defense Acquisition University, has been appointed the university’s director of the office of human capital initiatives.

She succeeds Scott Bauer, a nearly two-decade Department of Defense veteran who will assume a new role within the U.S. government, HCI said in a LinkedIn post.

Bryant’s “deep knowledge of DAU and our customers, together with her leadership skills, energy and enthusiasm for finding the new and better will be great assets,” said DAU President James Woolsey.

In this capacity, Bryant will lead HCI’s acquisition workforce governance, workforce analytics and strategic planning functions and will be responsible for several initiatives, including the Defense Acquisition Workforce Development Account, Public-Private Talent Exchange and the Defense Acquisition Workforce Awards Program.

Bryant is an acquisition professional who served as the associate dean for strategic consulting and executive engagement at DAU.

She previously served as a contracts group leader at the Defense Contract Management Agency and spent more than a decade within the U.S. Air Force, where she served as a contracting officer and chief of the aeromed contracts branch within the agile combat support directorate.

HCI provides strategic support to the Army, Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps and other DOD components to help recruit and develop defense acquisition professionals to facilitate the delivery of capabilities to warfighters.

News
CHIPS and Science Act Spurs $140B in Private Semiconductor R&D Investments
by Naomi Cooper
Published on May 23, 2023
CHIPS and Science Act Spurs $140B in Private Semiconductor R&D Investments

The CHIPS and Science Act has spurred $140 billion in private sector investment to accelerate semiconductor research, development and manufacturing in the U.S. since President Biden signed it into law in August 2022.

Among the latest companies that have committed to advancing the domestic semiconductor supply chain are Applied Materials, Analog Devices, IBM, Intel and Micron, the White House said Monday.

Applied Materials will invest up to $4 billion in the construction of a research and development center in California that will house the production of tools for chip development.

In October 2022, IBM announced a $20 billion investment in New York’s Hudson Valley region to design and manufacture semiconductors and support other emerging technology areas.

Intel said it would invest $20 billion in building two semiconductor facilities in Ohio, while Micron said it would construct a $15 billion facility in Idaho.

Analog Devices also committed $1 billion to double production at its existing facility in Oregon.

Government Technology/News
Frank Kendall: Air Force Working With 2 Vendors on Next-Gen Air Dominance Program
by Jane Edwards
Published on May 23, 2023
Frank Kendall: Air Force Working With 2 Vendors on Next-Gen Air Dominance Program

Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall said the service’s program engineers are working in coalition with two defense contractors on the Next Generation Air Dominance project at a design-and-development hub at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, Defense One reported Monday.

Kendall, a 2023 Wash100 Award winner, told reporters at an event that the military branch has “intimate knowledge” of the early-stage efforts of the two vendors and has assigned separate teams to each contractor working on the NGAD program, which will replace the service’s fleet of F-22 Raptor fighter jets.

“They have direct access into the database that’s being used for the design,” he said of the Air Force.

Kendall noted that the Air Force will work to ensure that it has access to all sustainment data related to the aircraft and advance the use of a modular open system design to facilitate the implementation of updates and work with different and new suppliers, according to a report by Defense News.

The Air Force plans to award an engineering and manufacturing development contract for the NGAD contract in 2024.

Artificial Intelligence/News
EEOC Releases Guide to Prevent AI Discrimination Against Job Seekers, Workers
by Naomi Cooper
Published on May 23, 2023
EEOC Releases Guide to Prevent AI Discrimination Against Job Seekers, Workers

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has released a technical assistance document intended to prevent artificial intelligence systems from discriminating against workers and job seekers.

The document aims to guide employers in complying with Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 when using algorithmic decision-making tools to recruit, retain or promote employees, the EEOC said Thursday.

Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 protects job seekers and workers from discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex or national origin.

The EEOC’s technical assistance document assesses the concept of adverse impact to ensure that AI and other automated systems does not lead to workplace discrimination.

“As employers increasingly turn to AI and other automated systems, they must ensure that the use of these technologies aligns with the civil rights laws and our national values of fairness, justice and equality,” said Charlotte Burrows, chair of EEOC.

Government Technology/News
Johns Hopkins APL Researchers Develop Rapid Additive Materials Development Framework
by Naomi Cooper
Published on May 23, 2023
Johns Hopkins APL Researchers Develop Rapid Additive Materials Development Framework

A team of researchers at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory has developed a framework to accelerate the development of additive manufacturing materials using novel measurement techniques and simulation.

The four-step rapid material development process begins with computational fluid dynamics modeling to predict material density or porosity formation, APL said Monday.

“CFD modeling quickly enables elimination of inappropriate parameters, which reduces the need for time-consuming trial-and-error experiments,” said Li Ma, a senior APL researcher.

The next step involves the use of machine learning to build a statistical design of experiments and fabrication.

Researchers will then use X-ray computed tomography and high-throughput testing to measure the material’s strength, porosity, hardness and corrosion performance.

“Similar to a medical CT scan, XRCT provides a high-resolution 3D inspection of internal material structure and can reveal small internal defects like pores or cracks that could create use-case issues,” said Brendan Croom, a senior scientist who leads XRCT testing for the team.

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