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
Report: Pentagon Considers Plan to Deliver Small Precision Bombs to Ukraine
by Jane Edwards
Published on November 29, 2022
Report: Pentagon Considers Plan to Deliver Small Precision Bombs to Ukraine

The Department of Defense is looking at a proposal of Boeing to provide Ukraine with ground-launched small diameter bombs to help the Eastern European country counter Russian attacks amid declining U.S. and allied military inventories, Reuters reported Monday.

Boeing and Saab produce GLSDB, a GPS-guided weapon system composed of the GBU-39 small diameter bomb and the M26 rocket motor that can hit armored vehicles and other targets at a range of about 94 miles.

According to a document obtained by the wire service, GLSDB could be handed over to Ukraine as soon as spring 2023.

Boeing’s proposal to U.S. European Command, which manages the delivery of weapons to Ukraine, would require a price discovery waiver and source main GLSDB components from existing U.S. suppliers.

The news agency said the potential production of the small precision bombs would require at least six vendors to speed up parts delivery to accelerate weapons production.

A spokesperson for Boeing declined to comment. Lt. Cmdr. Tim Gorman, a spokesman for DOD, said the U.S. and its allies “identify and consider the most appropriate systems” that would support Ukraine.

Cybersecurity/News
DARPA-CYBERCOM Pilot Program Seeks to Speed Up Development of Cyber Capabilities for Operational Use
by Jane Edwards
Published on November 29, 2022
DARPA-CYBERCOM Pilot Program Seeks to Speed Up Development of Cyber Capabilities for Operational Use

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and U.S. Cyber Command have launched a pilot program that intends to accelerate the delivery of strategic and tactical cybersecurity capabilities to cyber operators.

The Constellation pilot program will establish an iterative, user-directed pipeline to expedite the development and integration of cyber capabilities into CYBERCOM’s software ecosystem, DARPA said Monday.

“To have the greatest operational and strategic impact, these emergent capabilities must reach operators continuously in short timescales, much shorter than legacy acquisition processes,” said Kathleen Fisher, director of DARPA’s Information Innovation Office.

“We are optimistic about Constellation’s potential to enable long-term sustainment for rapid cyber capability prototyping and integration. Running Constellation projects in parallel with DARPA development can help us reduce risks and transition timelines and overcome the ‘valley of death,’” added Fisher.

The pilot program will establish a framework and mechanisms to offer physical and virtual infrastructure, contracts and personnel and sustain relationships to help address the gap between operational warfighting capabilities and research and development.

Industry News/News
Treasury Dep Sec Wally Adeyemo Highlights Inflation Reduction Act Investment Opportunities
by Naomi Cooper
Published on November 29, 2022
Treasury Dep Sec Wally Adeyemo Highlights Inflation Reduction Act Investment Opportunities

Wally Adeyemo, deputy secretary of the Department of the Treasury, said the Inflation Reduction Act provides investment opportunities to advance the U.S. clean energy sector. 

In a recent roundtable with clean energy investors and operators, Adeyemo explained that the law works to enable the U.S. to boost the production of existing and new clean technologies and offers targeted bonus incentives to drive clean energy investments in underserved communities, Treasury reported Saturday. 

The department said third-party analysts estimate that the Inflation Reduction Act’s clean energy incentives will generate trillions of dollars in private sector investment in the energy market over the next decade.

Treasury is hosting a series of roundtable discussions with key stakeholders to gather public comments and inform its implementation of the Inflation Reduction Act, which was signed into law in August.

In October, Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service released six requests for public comments on the implementation of climate and clean energy tax incentives mandated by the law.

The notices focus on energy generation incentives, credit enhancements, incentives for homes and buildings, consumer vehicle credits, manufacturing credits and credit monetization.

Announcements/Awards/Executive Moves/News
David Wisniewski Appointed Deputy Director of NRO Cyber Security Office
by Naomi Cooper
Published on November 29, 2022
David Wisniewski Appointed Deputy Director of NRO Cyber Security Office

David Wisniewski, a former U.S. Space Force division chief, has joined the National Reconnaissance Office as its deputy director of the Cyber Security Office, according to a LinkedIn post published Tuesday.

In his new role, Wisniewski will oversee the development of an organization-wide cybersecurity strategy, plan enhancements to the agency’s cyber architecture and define future requirements.

The executive most recently served as division chief at the Space Warfighting and Analysis Center, where he helped develop an approach to creating resilient satellite navigation architectures.

Wisniewski previously held various roles focused on space and cyber programs during his more than 16-year career in the U.S. Air Force and was division chief of the future technologies division within the Space Security and Defense Program. The latter entity is a joint organization that manages space protection efforts across the Department of Defense and the Intelligence Community.

Announcements/Awards/Executive Moves/News
Kathleen Henry Joins MITRE as VP of Corporate Finance, Accounting and Treasury; Wilson Wang Quoted
by Ireland Degges
Published on November 29, 2022
Kathleen Henry Joins MITRE as VP of Corporate Finance, Accounting and Treasury; Wilson Wang Quoted

Kathleen Henry has been appointed vice president of corporate finance, accounting and treasury at MITRE, where she will manage a $2.2 billion budget.

In this role, Henry will be responsible for MITRE’s company-wide financial planning and budgeting, treasury, financial operations and accounting, the McLean, Virginia-based organization announced on Tuesday.

“I am pleased to welcome Katie to MITRE and know that her skills and vision will be integral to advancing MITRE’s Good Growth strategy while also driving change and transformation,” said Wilson Wang, the organization’s senior vice president, chief financial officer and treasurer.

Prior to joining MITRE, Henry spent 18 years at Booz Allen Hamilton. In her most recent position as vice president of finance, she oversaw everyday financial operations including strategic planning and forecasting, operational and management reporting and modeling and analysis for the enterprise’s national security portfolio while leading a team of 80 people.

Before assuming her previous role, Henry was the firm’s financial planning head, during which time she managed an $8 billion budget and led its finance transformation program, heading up a complete overhaul of the cost management approach.

While at Booz Allen, the executive created a dynamic infrastructure to organize the company’s cost structure, support processes and enable technologies to adapt to the expansion of Booz Allen’s business areas. Henry additionally led strategic initiatives regarding the COVID-19 pandemic.

She also served as an advisor to senior management on numerous business issues and played an important role in many firm-wide task forces erecting standards for budgeting, reporting and profit loss calculations.

Additionally, Henry was a key developer in the creation of an internal financial management training program for Booz Allen’s finance department.

In 2017, she created and implemented a 26-week junior staff training program for the organization, which now has over 200 employee graduates.

“Katie will bring new insights and innovation to achieve our corporate and financial goals and enhance collaboration across MITRE’s diverse sponsor engagements and project teams,” Wang predicted of Henry’s contributions to MITRE.

Industry News/News
DOE Requests Info on Acquisition, Financial Assistance Forecasting Tool Enhancement
by Naomi Cooper
Published on November 28, 2022
DOE Requests Info on Acquisition, Financial Assistance Forecasting Tool Enhancement

The Department of Energy has begun seeking information on a program that aims to enhance a web-based tool designed to provide a forecast of contract and financial assistance opportunities across DOE. 

A notice posted Tuesday on SAM.gov states that DOE is looking for industry sources capable of adding new features, such as alerts, artificial intelligence tools, data analytics and vendor management and matching, to the acquisition and financial assistance forecasting tool. 

The DOE Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization is collaborating with the National Nuclear Security Administration’s Office of Partnership and Acquisition Services to identify short and long-term improvements to increase the visibility of contract opportunities for companies looking to do business with the agencies.

DOE will use the information from the market research to inform the development of a performance work statement and acquisition strategy. 

Interested parties have until Dec. 21 to respond to the request for information.

Government Technology/News
OSTP, Energy Department Call on Electric Utilities to Share More Power Outage Data
by Jane Edwards
Published on November 28, 2022
OSTP, Energy Department Call on Electric Utilities to Share More Power Outage Data

The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy and the Department of Energy have launched a call to action urging electric utilities and their data system partners to take part in a national initiative by providing standardized power outage data.

DOE’s Outage Data Initiative Nationwide was established through a public-private partnership over the last eight years and is backed by over 60 electric utilities in 26 states, according to a White House blog post published Tuesday.

Denice Ross, U.S. chief data scientist at OSTP, co-wrote the blog post with Tom Wilson, assistant director for electricity at OSTP, and Chris Irwin, program manager at DOE’s office of electricity.

The ODIN data standards seek to facilitate data sharing to provide local emergency responders visibility into outages, speed up response times and save lives.

OSTP and DOE are encouraging utilities to use the ODIN standards to share data by Dec. 9. 

The two agencies will announce the utility companies that have made ODIN data sharing commitments at the White House Electrification Summit on Dec. 14.

Government Technology/News
NASA Seeks to Address Aviation Emissions Through Aircraft Design Competition
by Jane Edwards
Published on November 28, 2022
NASA Seeks to Address Aviation Emissions Through Aircraft Design Competition

Aircraft makers are exploring blended-wing bodies, transonic truss-braced wing models, double-bubble concepts and other unconventional plane designs for passenger aircraft and NASA is advancing that to help improve fuel efficiency and reduce emissions through a competition launched in June, The Wall Street Journal reported.

The NASA competition is seeking U.S. aircraft manufacturers that could help design and develop a full-scale demonstrator that could transport 150 passengers.

The agency expects to have an aircraft prototype ready by 2027 and transition to mass production in the next 10 years.

According to the report, submission of proposals for the aircraft design contest closed in September and NASA intends to announce in January the winning design with plans to use a portion of its space budget to fund construction and testing work on the selected aircraft.

“If we don’t do this there will never be change,” said Rich Wahls, mission integration manager for NASA’s Sustainable Flight National Partnership program, which covers the plane-design competition. “We have to get this into the fleet quickly to make a climate impact.”

Wahls noted that offerors should demonstrate that their aircraft designs could lead to the production of 60 units a month.

Boeing and NASA are already working on a transonic truss-braced wing model, according to the report.

Government Technology/News
DARPA Unveils Project to Reduce Heat, Boost Capacity of Radio Frequency Systems
by Jamie Bennet
Published on November 28, 2022
DARPA Unveils Project to Reduce Heat, Boost Capacity of Radio Frequency Systems

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is launching a project intended to reduce thermal resistance in high-power density transistors.

The Technologies for Heat Removal in Electronics at the Device Scale program would help boost the electronic capacity of radar capabilities, especially when applied in the military’s mission-critical and situational awareness operations, DARPA said Wednesday.

Gallium nitride and other wide bandgap transistors have proved effective in increasing power output by more than fivefold, according to Thomas Kazior, the agency’s program manager for THREADS. However, the technology is prone to excessive waste heat.

“If we can relax the heat problem, we can crank up the amplifier and increase the range of radar. If the program is successful, we’re looking at increasing the range of radar by a factor of 2x to 3x,” Kazior explained.

DARPA has issued a broad agency announcement for THREADS and is hosting a Proposers Day on Nov. 30.

Industry News/News
GSA Presents Student Design Competition to Build All-Inclusive Federal Workspace
by Naomi Cooper
Published on November 28, 2022
GSA Presents Student Design Competition to Build All-Inclusive Federal Workspace

The General Services Administration has launched a competition for students in architecture and design programs to create a federal workspace that eliminates barriers to achieving an all-inclusive experience. 

The Access for All design competition invites students to integrate universal design ideas into government facilities to advance accessibility and enhance inclusivity for federal employees and the general public, GSA said Tuesday. 

Through the competition, the GSA Office of Design and Construction aims to encourage equal opportunities for all communities in support of the Biden administration’s goal to promote diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility in the federal workforce.

“The Access for All Challenge.Gov competition is part of an ongoing effort to generate new ideas about how we address universal design and accessibility issues in federal facilities and provide positive examples of what is achievable,” commented Nina Albert, commissioner of the Public Buildings Service at GSA.

Open until May 2, 2023, the challenge offers $4,500 in total cash prizes.

Previous 1 … 678 679 680 681 682 … 2,619 Next
News Briefing
I'm Interested In:
Recent Posts
  • Army Taps GDMS, Pacific Defense for CMFF Prototype Development
  • CISA, UK NCSC Release Joint Guidance on Operational Technology Security
  • NOAA Taps Raytheon for NEON Stratus Project Study
  • GAO Report: ODNI Yet to Address Key Recommendations on Managing Workforce, Facilities
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
  • Guidehouse Hires New Partners to Drive Modernization, Mission Readiness
  • Google, GDIT Showcase ‘Cloud-in-a-Box’ Appliance During Air Force Mobility Guardian
  • Chenega Subsidiary, Meritus to Provide Security Guard Services to NAVFAC Northwest Under Navy Contract
  • Parry Labs Demos Phantom Network Gateway Prototype in NE25 Multi-Domain Exercise
  • Riverside Research Names Ralph Semmel to Board of Trustees
  • Tria Federal Eyes Broader AI Adoption With Launch of Tria Forge Platform
RSS GovConWire
  • Long-Serving Siemens Executive Barbara Humpton Joins USA Rare Earth as CEO
  • Carahsoft Books $510M Air Force Contract for ServiceNow Tools
  • Lockheed Secures $12.5B F-35 Production Contract Modification
  • Raytheon Wins $5B Army Contract for Coyote Missile System
  • Navy Seeking Industry Partners for $3.5B Service Craft, Boats Acquisition
  • Phil Root Appointed GRVTY Chief Technology Officer
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