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News
NAVSEA Unveils Roadmap for Navy Energy Systems Dev’t Efforts
by Matthew Nelson
Published on June 27, 2019
NAVSEA Unveils Roadmap for Navy Energy Systems Dev’t Efforts


Jeff Brody

Naval Sea Systems Command published its energy systems development roadmap, detailing efforts to help the U.S. Navy meet future sensor systems and weapon power requirements. The roadmap, referred to as the Naval Power and Energy Systems Technology Development Roadmap, aligned warfighter requirements with the creation of energy and electrical power systems to help augment maritime warfare capacities, the Navy said Thursday. 

The framework has also presented key priorities to assist the service branch in deploying future technologies and investing on research and development efforts for power and energy platforms.

“As new technologies evolve, it’s imperative we lead the innovation of power and energy architecture necessary for tomorrow’s sensors and weapons and deliver the Chief of Naval Operations’ mandate of as much power as we can afford to the warfighter,” said Stephen Markle, director of Electrip Ships Office at the Navy.

Government Technology/News
NASA Concludes Preliminary Design Review of Infrared Telescope Instrument
by Nichols Martin
Published on June 27, 2019
NASA Concludes Preliminary Design Review of Infrared Telescope Instrument


Jeff Brody

NASA has completed preliminary design review for the wide field instrument of an infrared-based telescope to explore distant space. The space agency said Wednesday that it met the design, schedule and budget requirements of the Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope’s WFI. This milestone allows NASA to commence detailed design and fabrication.

WFIRST will record data on the universe from beyond the lunar orbit via two instruments: the WFI and the coronagraph. The WFI will gather data on planets and other celestial bodies surrounding distant stars beyond the sun. The instrument will also work to illustrate the way matter forms and moves across the universe.

“The expansion of the universe is accelerating and one of the things the Wide Field Instrument will help us figure out is if the acceleration is increasing or slowing down,” Jeff Kruk, WFIRST project scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.

NASA engineers will use the review’s data to prepare for the WFI’s critical design review where the instrument will undergo testing in simulated space environments. The critical design review is scheduled to begin in June 2020 in preparation for WFIRST’s tentative launch in the mid-2020s.

News
David Goldfein: Air Force Seeking Commercial Space Tech for Nuclear Triad Operations
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on June 27, 2019
David Goldfein: Air Force Seeking Commercial Space Tech for Nuclear Triad Operations


David Goldfein: Air Force Seeking Commercial Space Tech for Nuclear Triad Operations
Gen. David Goldfein

U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David Goldfein said at a Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies event in Washington, D.C. that commercial space capabilities can improve nuclear triad operations, National Defense Magazine reported Wednesday.

Goldfein noted that commercial satellites and other low-Earth orbit technologies will provide nuclear command, control and communications operators with “resilient pathways to communicate” while enabling the Air Force to cut costs. He added that expanded access to smaller payloads and cheaper launch services has fostered more commercial opportunities for space missions.

“Whether it’s Silicon Valley or commercial space, there are unlimited opportunities ahead right now for us in terms of how we think differently on things like nuclear command-and-control,” he said. The Air Force handles the nuclear triad’s ground-based intercontinental ballistic missile and bomber force functions, while the Navy operates ballistic missile submarines for NC3 strategic deterrence activities.

News
Christopher Krebs: US Must Leverage Offensive Capabilities to Address Adversary Actions
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on June 27, 2019
Christopher Krebs: US Must Leverage Offensive Capabilities to Address Adversary Actions


Christopher Krebs: US Must Leverage Offensive Capabilities to Address Adversary Actions
Christopher Krebs

Christopher Krebs, director of the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, said during an interview with CBS that the U.S. needs to deploy a “range of tools” to address active adversarial threats.

Krebs, also a 2019 Wash100 Award recipient, noted that the government needs to take action through legal sanctions as well as overt and covert offensive capabilities to respond to adversaries such as nation states, proxy groups or criminal entities, CBS reported Wednesday.

He added that the government and private sector need to work together to effectively retaliate against threats from Russia and China. Russia aims to knock down the U.S. as a global leader while China seeks to manipulate the industry through strategies such as intellectual property theft.

CISA is collaborating with over 2,000 local jurisdictions across 50 states to strengthen the nation’s cybersecurity posture ahead of the 2020 election, Krebs said.

News
Kevin O’Connell: Commerce Dept Finalizing Space Data Access Agreement With Air Force
by Jane Edwards
Published on June 27, 2019
Kevin O’Connell: Commerce Dept Finalizing Space Data Access Agreement With Air Force


Kevin O’Connell: Commerce Dept Finalizing Space Data Access Agreement With Air Force
Kevin O’Connell

The Department of Commerce is close to signing an agreement with the U.S. Air Force to gain access to the service’s space situational awareness data to come up with a repository of sensor data for companies, C4ISRNET reported Wednesday.

Kevin O’Connell, director of the department’s office of space commerce, said gaining access to the Air Force Research Laboratory’s Unified Data Library would help the Commerce Department set up a cloud-based open architecture data repository to help companies mitigate space debris and prevent collisions in space.

O’Connell noted that the department is working on a summary of the 42 submissions received in response to a request for information issued in late spring with regard to the data repository and plans to hold an industry day to discuss the initiative.

Government Technology/News
Five Agencies Show Progress in Eighth FITARA Scorecard
by Jane Edwards
Published on June 27, 2019
Five Agencies Show Progress in Eighth FITARA Scorecard


Jeff Brody

The eighth iteration of the Federal Information Technology Acquisition Reform Act scorecard shows that five agencies saw improvement in their letter grades.

The agencies showing progress in their letter grades are the departments of Defense, Agriculture, Justice and Treasury and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Eleven federal agencies maintained their scores, while five agencies showed a drop in their letter grades. Nextgov reported that agencies have made headway in taking part in PortfolioStat reviews and reporting their IT investments to the Office of Management and Budget’s dashboard.

Carol Harris, director of IT and cybersecurity team at the Government Accountability Office, said the decline in most agencies’ scores could be attributed to an update to the incremental development metric and the addition of the cybersecurity metric to the scorecard.

The cyber reporting metric’s inclusion in the scorecard “had a generally negative effect, as there were 12 agencies with either a D or an F,” Harris told the House Oversight and Reform Committee’s government operations subpanel Wednesday. She also noted that 10 agencies saw their grades drop due to the incremental development metric.

News
House Passes Contractor Back Pay Legislation; PSC’s Alan Chvotkin Quoted
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on June 27, 2019
House Passes Contractor Back Pay Legislation; PSC’s Alan Chvotkin Quoted


Jeff Brody

House lawmakers voted 227-194 to pass an appropriations package containing a bill to mandate back pay for federal contractors that were affected by the 35-day government shutdown, the Washington Business Journal reported Wednesday.

The Fair Compensation for Low-Wage Contractor Employees Act of 2019 is among the five bills included in the Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies Appropriations Act of 2020 — which proposes a $383.3 billion budget for some federal departments and science organizations.

Rep. Ayanna Pressely, D-Mass., introduced the measure to ensure that federal contract employers would obtain reimbursement for costs associated with the impasse over funding. The Professional Services Council supports the passage and urged the Senate to approve similar legislation.

“Inclusion of the ‘Fair Compensation for Low-Wage Contractor Employees Act of 2019’ in the House-passed fiscal year 2020 Appropriations Act is a first step to providing fairness and equity to a portion of the government contractor community,” said Alan Chvotkin, executive vice president and counsel of PSC.

Executive Moves/News
Report: Mark Morgan to Become Interim CBP Commissioner
by Jane Edwards
Published on June 27, 2019
Report: Mark Morgan to Become Interim CBP Commissioner


Report: Mark Morgan to Become Interim CBP Commissioner
Mark Morgan

Mark Morgan, acting director of the Department of Homeland Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement, will assume the role of acting commissioner at the Customs and Border Protection, The Washington Post reported Tuesday. Sources said Morgan will succeed John Sanders, who will step down from his role at CBP on July 5.

Previously, Morgan worked at the FBI under the leadership of Director James Comey and moved to CBP in 2014, where he served as head of the agency during the Obama administration. Matt Albence, deputy director at ICE who served as head prior to Morgan’s appointment, will return to his role as interim chief of ICE, according to DHS officials.

The move is the latest in a string of leadership changes at DHS as the country faces a record increase of migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border. U.S. authorities detained over 144,000 migrants along the border in May.

Government Technology/News
Agencies Advance Trusted Internet Connections Pilots
by Jane Edwards
Published on June 26, 2019
Agencies Advance Trusted Internet Connections Pilots


Jeff Brody

Several agencies have begun conducting pilots of the updated Trusted Internet Connections policy even if the policy is not yet finalized, FedScoop reported Tuesday. The Office of Management and Budget released the draft TIC 3.0 policy in December, which intends to build network security across the government and eliminate barriers to the adoption of cloud and other tech platforms. 

Jim Russo, telecommunications manager at the General Services Administration’s office of telecommunications services, said one of the agencies piloting TIC 3.0 is the Small Business Administration, which aims to connect cloud to cybersecurity and software-defined networking. 

“The [TIC 3.0] draft gives us a pretty good idea of where it’s going, and we’re encouraging agencies to go ahead and create their requirements, start working with [the Cybersecurity Infrastructure Security Agency], bring things to us, and put their requirements out there for industry to take a look at and come up with solutions that may work out,” Russo said. “We’re going to keep moving forward, even though the policy is not final, and when it is we’ll sort of catch it on the fly.” 

News/Press Releases
The Washington Post Selects SPA as a “Top DC Workplace” for Sixth Consecutive Year, Dr. William Vantine Quoted
by William McCormick
Published on June 26, 2019
The Washington Post Selects SPA as a “Top DC Workplace” for Sixth Consecutive Year, Dr. William Vantine Quoted


 

The Washington Post Selects SPA as a “Top DC Workplace” for Sixth Consecutive Year, Dr. William Vantine Quoted
Dr. William Vantine

Systems Planning and Analysis, Inc. (SPA) has been named a “Top DC Workplace” by The Washington Post for the sixth consecutive year, SPA announced on Monday.

“On behalf of the entire SPA team, it is a tremendous honor to be selected for the sixth year in a row as a Washington Post Top Workplace in the DC area,” said SPA President and CEO Dr. William Vantine.

“We are proud of the high quality services we provide our clients and the opportunity for our employees to make a difference.  Our objective has always been to provide a top tier benefits package, a professional work environment, and the opportunity for individual growth and initiative.”

The Washington Post’s 2019 Top Workplaces are determined based on feedback collected via anonymous employee survey conducted by an independent research firm.

About SPA

We believe we can best support our clients by aligning everything we do with their critical missions with a focus on future needs. We expand our capabilities and tools to meet the evolving needs of our clients while adhering to our core values of candor and integrity.

We support a large variety of Department of Defense and other government agencies missions, most involve aspects of national security.

We provide timely and objective analysis and integrated technical, operational, programmatic, policy, and business solutions in support of important National objectives.

We develop customized software-based tools to respond to our client’s needs and support the timely and objective analysis to inform important decisions.

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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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