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News
BWXT Advanced Technologies Widens ASME Certification to Support Nuclear Reactor Design Projects; Joe Miller Quoted
by Ireland Degges
Published on April 6, 2023
BWXT Advanced Technologies Widens ASME Certification to Support Nuclear Reactor Design Projects; Joe Miller Quoted

BWXT Advanced Technologies has widened the purview of its ASME N-Type Certificate of Authorization to advance present and future nuclear reactor design projects.

With this expansion, the license now includes high-temperature reactor design under ASME Section III requirements and allows the company to begin operations at its newly-established BWXT Innovation Campus, the Lynchburg, Virginia-based enterprise announced on Thursday.

Joe Miller, president of BWXT Advanced Technologies, said that the organization has a “long history of high-quality nuclear design expertise and construction experience.”

He said that the broadening of the certification exemplifies the rigor of BWXT’s processes and the dedication of its workforce to reaching the standards of ASME Section III and N Stamp requirements and the expanding industry.

The comprehensive recertification process was completed alongside BWXT’s ongoing work to design a high-temperature gas reactor for the Department of Defense’s Strategic Capabilities Office’s Project Pele, which is being conducted under a $300 million contract expected to conclude in 2024.

BWXT’s commercial arm also holds various ASME Certificates of Authorization regarding its efforts to design, fabricate, manufacture, assemble and construct an assortment of nuclear power plant components for both North American and international facilities.

“ASME certification for the nuclear and non-nuclear industries is considered by many to be the internationally recognized ‘gold standard’ of certification and accreditation programs,” said Michael Frediani, director of auditing and inspection at ASME.

The organization, he added, has over 100 years of experience certifying manufacturers and accrediting other companies.

It was established as a not-for-profit professional entity intended to drive collaboration, information sharing and skill development spanning every engineering field and emphasize the role of engineers in society.

Wash100
Executive Mosaic Applauds Parsons’ Carey Smith & STRATCOM’s Gen Anthony Cotton in 2023 Wash100 Profiles
by reynolitoresoor
Published on April 6, 2023
Executive Mosaic Applauds Parsons’ Carey Smith & STRATCOM’s Gen Anthony Cotton in 2023 Wash100 Profiles

Parsons Chairwoman, President and CEO Carey Smith and United States Strategic Command Commander Gen. Anthony Cotton were individually celebrated on Thursday for their selection to Executive Mosaic’s elite 2023 Wash100 list. 

For the past ten years, the Wash100 Award has recognized the most powerful and influential leaders across the government contracting sector. Executives named to the distinguished list have not only demonstrated outstanding leadership, innovation and vision throughout their careers, but they’re also uniquely poised to deliver notable impact within the federal landscape in the coming year.

Smith earned her fifth Wash100 Award this year for her success in growing the Parsons enterprise through organic opportunities as well as key mergers and acquisitions. She has helmed Parsons for the past six and a half years thus far, and under her leadership, the company has grown its revenue to over $4.2 billion — with acquisitions accounting for $205 million of overall sales. 

Read more about why we selected Carey Smith for this year’s Wash100 Award here. 

Air Force Gen. Cotton made his debut on the Wash100 list this year for his work advancing the country’s nuclear recapitalization and deterrence objectives. During his inaugural year as the head of STRATCOM, Gen. Cotton has championed efforts to strengthen the country’s integrated deterrence capabilities as global competition increases. You can find more of Gen. Cotton’s achievements over the past year in his Wash100 profile. 

Did you know Executive Mosaic readers can cast 10 votes for their favorite GovCon leaders as part of the 2023 Wash100 popular vote competition? The voting period ends on April 28, so visit Wash100.com to cast your votes today! 

Government Technology/News
Stacey Dixon Talks ODNI’s Personnel Vetting Reform Efforts at Senate Panel Hearing
by Jane Edwards
Published on April 6, 2023
Stacey Dixon Talks ODNI’s Personnel Vetting Reform Efforts at Senate Panel Hearing

Stacey Dixon, principal deputy director of national intelligence, said the Office of the Director of National Intelligence has come up with guidelines and standards to improve the personnel vetting process as part of the implementation of the Trusted Workforce 2.0 framework.

“We revised the investigative standards and issued new performance management standards with measures and metrics to ensure that activities and services meet desired outcomes,” Dixon, a 2023 Wash100 awardee, told members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence during a hearing on March 29.

She said ODNI expects to release later this spring the updated National Training Standards for background investigators and security adjudicators in accordance with the goals of TW 2.0 and is finalizing the approval process for information collection related to personnel vetting questionnaire forms.

Dixon cited the introduction of a continuous vetting capability, which she said has helped ODNI identify adverse information in real time.

“ODNI has now certified 54 departments and agencies with national security sensitive populations as having compliant personnel security programs that are able to implement expanded capabilities through a combination of automated record checks and agency-specific information,” she noted.

Dixon told lawmakers about the role of industry in advancing changes to the vetting process.

“Industry has advocated for the elimination of periodic reinvestigations, reciprocal treatment of clearances, a single uniform policy structure, and a reengineered approach to personnel vetting processes,” she said.

Government Technology/News
Coast Guard OKs Strategic Plan to Guide Unmanned Systems Use
by Naomi Cooper
Published on April 5, 2023
Coast Guard OKs Strategic Plan to Guide Unmanned Systems Use

Vice Adm. Peter Gautier, deputy commandant for operations of the U.S. Coast Guard, has signed a strategic plan to guide the service branch’s development and adoption of unmanned systems.

The Unmanned Systems Strategic Plan outlines the Coast Guard’s goal of unlocking opportunities and addressing risks presented by the use of autonomous platforms by finding ways to use such systems to execute its mission objectives.

According to the strategic plan, the Coast Guard must prepare for the impacts of the unlawful use of unmanned systems on its operations.

The framework also requires the service branch to regulate the lawful use of automation and unmanned systems in the Marine Transportation System.

The plan additionally highlights the need to establish resilient tactical communications networks to analyze and disseminate data and information collected from unmanned systems for operational commanders.

News/Space
Space Safety Coalition Amends Best Practices Guidelines to Address Sustainability, Collision Prevention
by Jamie Bennet
Published on April 5, 2023
Space Safety Coalition Amends Best Practices Guidelines to Address Sustainability, Collision Prevention

The Space Safety Coalition amended its best practices guidelines to emphasize proactive sustainability and address the growing risk of space collisions.

The changes have become part of the global “rules of the road” in the Best Practices for the Sustainability of Space Operations, SSC announced Tuesday.

SSC was established in 2019 to promote standards jointly developed by commercial and government satellite operators, manufacturers of spacecraft and launch vehicles, industry representatives and other key stakeholders from around the world.

The revisions recommend approaches to avoid intentional collisions or fragmentation. The document also includes guidance on post-mission disposal of launch vehicle and spacecraft, operational cybersecurity, and spacecraft anomaly root cause assessment. 

The updated guidelines were endorsed by 27 commercial space community representatives, including Charles Law, senior manager of flight dynamics at SES.

“These best practices clearly set aspirational targets to encourage all space actors to advance towards a safer, more responsible and sustainable use of space,” Law remarked. “Importantly, these best practices seek to stop intentional collisions and fragmentations, and it is encouraging to see a framework to coordinate between manoeuvrable [sic] satellites and to exchange orbit information.”

News/Space
SDA’s Derek Tournear on Building Resilience in Space Through Satellite Proliferation
by Naomi Cooper
Published on April 5, 2023
SDA’s Derek Tournear on Building Resilience in Space Through Satellite Proliferation

Derek Tournear, director of the Space Development Agency, said SDA is working to build resilience in space through the proliferation of satellite communications systems that are cost-effective, cyber-hardened and interoperable.

Speaking at the Navy League’s 2023 Sea Air Space Conference and Exposition, Tournear said that SDA’s Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture satellites undermine the idea of shooting down satellites to disconnect them from ground assets as they are “more affordable than the missiles that you need to shoot them down,” the Department of Defense reported Tuesday.

“We made it to where … it’s really difficult to shoot those satellites down just by just by virtue of proliferation,” said Tournear, a previous Wash100 awardee.

SDA is also investing in boosting its satellites’ resilience to cybersecurity threats, according to Tournear.

“If there’s a common mode failure that can take out all your satellites or your ground systems, then you can’t proliferate your way out of that. So that’s a major concern. We have a lot of protections in place, and that’s something that we put a lot of resources on to make sure that we’re hardened against cyber threats,” the official said.

SDA launched on Sunday the first 10 satellites for PWSA’s Tranche 0 Transport and Tracking Layer aboard SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California.

The low-Earth orbit satellites will demonstrate low-latency military communications to enable warfighters to track missile threats.

News
US Navy Discusses Unmanned Maritime Systems Priorities With Military Partners, Industry
by Naomi Cooper
Published on April 5, 2023
US Navy Discusses Unmanned Maritime Systems Priorities With Military Partners, Industry

The U.S. Navy’s Program Executive Office for Unmanned and Small Combatants held a three-day hybrid event to discuss with military and industry partners the service branch’s unmanned systems development priorities.

More than two dozen government organizations and 430 companies, including small businesses, participated in the three-day event to discuss opportunities and capability gaps in unmanned surface vessels, Naval Sea Systems Command said Tuesday.

“We’ve hosted a variety of industry days in the past, but nothing quite like this. Hundreds of companies are joining us in person and online with the chance to interact with representatives from a wide breadth of Navy unmanned topics,” said David Kelley, principal assistant program manager for acquisition for the Unmanned Maritime Systems Program Office.

Rear Adm. Casey Moton, program executive officer for unmanned and small combatants, said there is a need to expand the unmanned industrial base to address demands for autonomous maritime systems that represent “an entirely new class of Navy weapons systems.”

The event took place from March 1 to 3 and saw participation from the Navy, Marine Corps and other industry partners,

Artificial Intelligence/News
President Biden Meets With Science & Tech Advisory Council Over AI Risks & Policy
by Jamie Bennet
Published on April 5, 2023
President Biden Meets With Science & Tech Advisory Council Over AI Risks & Policy

Technology companies have a responsibility to ensure that their products are protected against artificial intelligence exploitation before they are launched on the market, President Joe Biden said Tuesday in his meeting with an advisory group composed of scientists and engineers.

Biden spoke with the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology regarding the opportunities and risks of AI to national security, the economy and the public.

“AI can help deal with some very difficult challenges like disease and climate change, but we also have to address the potential risks to our society, to our economy, to our national security,” he told the council.

He mentioned the increasing adverse effects of inadequate safeguards on technologies such as social media, citing mental health implications especially on young people. 

Biden highlighted actions taken by the government, including proposing a bill of rights to ensure early-stage security incorporation into AI platforms. He also reminded the council of his administration’s recommended bipartisan legislation to limit tech companies’ access to personal consumer data.

PCAST was founded in 2001 to make policy recommendations on science, technology and innovation. It currently has 27 members and three co-chairs: Arati Prabhakar, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy and Wash100 awardee; Maria Zuber, vice president for research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; and Frances Arnold, Linus Pauling professor of chemical engineering, bioengineering and biochemistry at the California Institute of Technology.

All three officials were present at the meeting.

Contract Awards/News
AFWERX Taps Spectrohm-Battelle Team to Develop Threat Detection Tool
by Naomi Cooper
Published on April 5, 2023
AFWERX Taps Spectrohm-Battelle Team to Develop Threat Detection Tool

A partnership between Spectrohm and Battelle has secured a contract from the U.S. Air Force’s innovation arm to develop a hand-held screening tool to support the inspection of sealed vehicle tanks for illegal substances, including narcotics and explosives.

The phase two contract was awarded under AFWERX’s Small Business Technology Transfer program to develop a fuel-tank screening technology intended to secure entry control points across the Department of Defense facilities, Spectrohm said Tuesday.

Tim Cargol, CEO of Spectrohm, said the resulting platform will have potential applications in border security, critical infrastructure protection and law enforcement.

Joe Cochran, manager of Battelle’s infrastructure, security and protection division, said the company offers its LS10 liquid threat detection platform to address DOD’s force protection requirements.

Wash100
A Pair of DOD VIPs, Robert Skinner & Christine Wormuth, Earn 2023 Wash100 Awards
by Charles Lyons-Burt
Published on April 5, 2023
A Pair of DOD VIPs, Robert Skinner & Christine Wormuth, Earn 2023 Wash100 Awards

Executive Mosaic publications on Wednesday extolled the virtues of two integral Department of Defense leaders for their 2023 Wash100 Award recognitions. Individual profiles on Lt. Gen. Robert Skinner and the Hon. Christine Wormuth were published in GovCon Wire and ExecutiveBiz respectively that cataloged their 2022 triumphs and previewed what they’ll contribute to national security objectives in the year ahead.

A much-anticipated, rolling tradition, the Wash100 is now in its 10th year and has established itself as the most revered reflection of achievement in government contracting and the federal arena. Only candidates with outstanding leadership, innovation, vision and reliability are considered, much less inducted. Recipients span the public and private sectors.

If you’ve so far managed to avoid the Wash100 popular vote contest, put an end to your procrastination and cast 10 votes for your favorite candidates today at Wash100.com!

Skinner, director of the Defense Information Systems Agency and commander of Joint Force Headquarters of the Department of Defense Information Network, received his second consecutive Wash100 Award for his work in bringing the U.S. closer to a ‘joint and coalition environment.’ His efforts served to assist in bridging the gaps between mission partner environments and Joint All-Domain Command and Control, the initiative to unite and unify all communications systems across the DOD.

If you want to read more about Skinner’s legacy and the pedigree that earned him a spot in the 2023 Wash100 class, read his profile here.

Wormuth is the secretary of the U.S. Army and a first-time winner of the award. Her recent work has been guided by a modernization plan that is aimed to help the Army reach its target future state by 2030. In remarks at various speaking events, she highlighted focus areas such as sensing technologies, data analytics, logistics, deterrence and more as crucial to the Army’s current strategy.

Delve into all six concentration points of Wormuth and the Army’s future-forward approach in her profile here.

Executive Mosaic warmly congratulates Lt. Gen. Robert Skinner and the Hon. Christine Wormuth on their richly deserved 2023 Wash100 Awards!

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