Contract Management News
news feed
2013
May
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House Committee Plans Deep 2014 Spending Cuts
— May 23, 2013
A new House Appropriations Committee plan proposes increasing defense spending next year by 5 percent and imposing severe cuts upon many non-Defense Department agencies, especially the Health and Human Services, Labor, Education and State departments.
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Pentagon Sees Doubled Cost for Rocket Launch Program
— May 23, 2013
The Pentagon on Thursday told Congress that a recent restructuring of its heavy rocket launch program to add 60 more launches and extend the schedule for a decade would more than double the program's projected cost to $70.7 billion.
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Federal Relocation Costs and Auction Revenues
— May 22, 2013
Some federal agencies underestimated the costs to relocate communication systems from the 1710-1755 megahertz band, although auction revenues appear to exceed relocation costs by over $5 billion.
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GSA Awards Governmentwide Mobile Contract
— May 22, 2013
The General Services Administration on Wednesday awarded a governmentwide contract for discounted wireless services and mobile devices, which the agency expects will save $300 million over five years.
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IG Hits Back at Afghan Criticism on Contractor Taxes
— May 22, 2013
A government watchdog is defending an audit that uncovered tens of millions of dollars in Afghan taxes improperly levied against federal contractors in recent years amid sharp criticism from the country’s finance ministry.
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Agencies Respond to Tornado Under Shadow of Sequester
— May 21, 2013
Federal agencies snapped to respond Tuesday to the devastating Oklahoma tornadoes, the first major natural disaster to strike since sequester-related budget cuts took effect in March. Like most agencies, the Federal Emergency Management Agency is having to absorb a 5 percent reduction that will cost its disaster relief fund about $950 million, according to the White House budget office.
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Feds Respond to Oklahoma Tornadoes
— May 21, 2013
President Obama told Oklahomans they would "have all the resources they need" as they begin recovery efforts from a series of tornadoes that claimed the lives of several dozen people.
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Raytheon is in the Hunt for a $3b Space Project
— May 21, 2013
Even as spending is cut across the military, the final stage of a battle over billions of defense dollars is taking place at Hanscom Air Force Base in Bedford, where Waltham-based Raytheon and Maryland’s Lockheed Martin are locked in a competition to build a first-of-its-kind “Space Fence” to track orbital junk.
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VanRoekel to Lead OMB's Management Team
— May 21, 2013
Steven VanRoekel will lead the Office of Management and Budget’s management team, following the departure of OMB’s No. 2 official this month.
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Sequester Doesn't Add Up for IGs
— May 20, 2013
The inspector general for the General Services Administration expects to lose out on more than a quarter-billion dollars in potential government savings next year, as the sequester-related budget cuts force the agency to scale back on efforts to uncover waste and fraud for taxpayers.
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Shared Services Can Be a Money Maker for Some Agencies
— May 20, 2013
Sharing services isn’t just a good way for federal departments to lower information technology costs, it’s also a way for underfunded agencies to scratch back some of their dwindling budgets by providing services to their peers, a Customs and Border Protection official said Monday.
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Solar Industry Groups Seek Pact to Settle Trade Disputes
— May 20, 2013
An international group of solar industry trade associations meeting in Shanghai last week has issued a joint declaration appealing to China, the European Union and the United States to avert a trade war and negotiate a settlement to disputes over solar panels, according to one person who attended the meeting.
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DoD Examines 3 Budget-Cut Scenarios
— May 19, 2013
Senior US Defense Department officials are expected to present three budget-cutting scenarios to the defense secretary when they wrap up a wide-ranging review of military strategy at the end of this month, according to sources.
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How State Department Was Duped in $60M Fraud Scheme
— May 19, 2013
A federal investigation of former State Department contracting specialist Kathleen McGrade has uncovered a treasure trove of luxuries allegedly acquired with the proceeds of a multimillion-dollar contracting scam: a Steinway piano; sculptures; sapphire, emerald and diamond jewelry; and a 41-foot yacht bearing the name of the company she and her husband formed, Sterling Royale.
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Further Actions Needed to Address Challenges and Improve Accountability
— May 17, 2013
The Department of Defense continues efforts to establish a business enterprise architecture (a modernization blueprint) and transition plan and modernize its business systems and processes, in compliance with key provisions of the Ronald W. Reagan National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2005 and amendments.
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Top Gun Christine Fox Departing Pentagon
— May 16, 2013
Maybe she's lost that loving feeling, but Christine Fox, head of Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel's much-anticipated strategic review and the Pentagon's top "costing" official, is leaving her post next month, the E-Ring has learned.
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U.S. May Strip Bangladesh of Tariff Breaks
— May 16, 2013
The Obama administration may strip Bangladesh of import breaks following deadly accidents in the country’s textile industry, another sign of the pressure building on the Southeast Asian nation to improve labor conditions.
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Afghanistan Overtaxes U.S. Contractors, IG Finds
— May 14, 2013
Afghanistan has slapped U.S.-funded contractors working on reconstruction efforts with nearly $1 billion in taxes since 2008, often in spite of clear tax exemption agreements, a government watchdog has found.
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Businesses Fear Being Blindsided by Regs
— May 14, 2013
The Obama administration’s failure to release its legally required regulatory agenda has business groups worried that they could be blindsided by costly new federal rules.
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DoD Employees to Get 11 Furlough Days
— May 14, 2013
The Defense Department plans to furlough some 680,000 civilian employees for 11 days by the end of September as the result of sequester-related budget cuts.
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Is a Billion-Dollar Border Security Program Finally Due?
— May 14, 2013
The Department of Homeland Security has taken a positive step in one of the longer running procurement sagas of recent years, issuing downselect notices to several contractors to compete in the next phase of a controversial border security program, sources confirm.
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ICE Wants One Supplier for All Its Mobile Needs
— May 13, 2013
The Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency is looking for a single company to cover all its mobile needs, from providing equipment and data services to mobile device management and services to improve cell coverage inside its buildings.
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Still No Word on Defense Furloughs
— May 13, 2013
The Defense Department had not announced a final decision on departmentwide furloughs by late afternoon Monday, as the Navy pushed to exempt shipyard workers from any involuntary unpaid leave.
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FEMA Ramps Up Telework, Mobility
— May 10, 2013
Mobility is part of the mission at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and now leaders are taking it to the next level, radically transforming the workplace with a focus on technology.
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7 Guaranteed Ways to Destroy Your Productivity
— May 8, 2013
According to a report from CEB, fiscal austerity has prompted public sector executives to believe they'll need an 18 percent increase in employee performance to meet agency objectives.
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In Tracking Down Contract Overcharges, GSA Goes Slowly
— May 7, 2013
When the General Services Administration inspector general uncovered hundreds of thousands of dollars in overcharges by a contractor, the watchdog office wasted little time in telling GSA management to recoup the money.
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Most CIOs Can't Track IT Spending
— May 7, 2013
Most chief information officers are not confident in their ability to estimate and track information technology spending at their agencies, a new survey finds.
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Pentagon Plans to Cut Civilian Workforce
— May 7, 2013
The Pentagon plans to cut its vast civilian workforce by 5-6 percent over the next five years to match similar reductions in the number of US troops, Deputy Defense Secretary Ash Carter said Tuesday.
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Quality Tops Agencies' Data Challenges
— May 7, 2013
Agencies rely on vast sources of data to fight tax fraud, improve health care, manage federal buildings and improve delivery of citizen services.
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Interview: Robert Hale, Pentagon Comptroller
— May 6, 2013
With the uncertainty surrounding the US Defense Department’s budget, it’s no wonder Robert Hale, the Pentagon comptroller, has worked just about every day since January.
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Sequester Poses Public Service Challenges
— May 5, 2013
More than 35 years ago, as a newly minted law school graduate, I moved from my hometown of New York City to Washington to take a job at the Justice Department.
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Defense IG: TRICARE Acquisition Staff Lack Required Certification and Training
— May 2, 2013
Procurement personnel at the TRICARE Management Activity, which had an acquisition budget of $18.8 billion in 2012, lacked formal certification for their jobs, proper training and accurate position descriptions, the Defense Department Inspector General said in a highly critical report released yesterday
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Several Agencies Still Mum on Furloughs
— May 2, 2013
Several federal agencies have left their employees in sequestration limbo, failing to provide any details on the effects the automatic budget cuts will have on their workforces.
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The 6 Factors Needed to Drive Innovation in Government
— May 2, 2013
There is much discussion these days about innovation and how important it is to making government more effective and efficient – particularly in these resource constrained times that require federal employees to do more with less.
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3 Big Developments in Federal Performance Last Month
— May 1, 2013
The big news for many was the announcement last week that Shelley Metzenbaum, who is the Office of Management and Budget official spearheading the Obama Administration’s performance management initiatives on a day-to-day basis, will be leaving to return home to Boston.
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Defense Furlough Decision Coming Soon
— May 1, 2013
The Pentagon acknowledged on Wednesday that some services could afford to eliminate at least some planned civilian furloughs, but the department still is aiming for a unified departmentwide policy on forced unpaid leave and will make a decision soon.
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Keys to Successful Telework May Already Be in Feds' Pockets
— May 1, 2013
The success of this year’s Telework Week event – in which more than 112,000 feds participated – is a testament to the progress federal agencies are making not only to make the workplace more flexible for employees but also to continue operations in the event of an emergency.
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Pentagon Prepares to Ask Congress for Break from 'Sequester'
— May 1, 2013
The Pentagon is preparing to ask Congress soon for more authority to shift funds to cope with automatic spending cuts, confronting lawmakers with another exception to the "sequester" just days after they gave a break to the flying public and the airline industry.
April
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Dempsey Says DoD Still Uncertain About Furloughs
— April 30, 2013
The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff told reporters Tuesday that Pentagon officials are “doing our best to avoid” furloughs of the Department of Defense’s 800,000 civilian employees, but he said that the department is still uncertain whether the 14 days now planned can be reduced.
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Budget Cuts Squelch Hiring
— April 29, 2013
Hiring in the federal government has dropped by a third over the past three years as budget cuts have taken their toll.
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Innovation in Government Dips
— April 29, 2013
Federal employees want to do their jobs better but don’t believe their agencies are adequately supporting them, according to a new analysis.
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Donley to Step Down as Air Force Secretary
— April 26, 2013
Air Force Secretary Michael Donley will be stepping down from the service's top spot in June, ending a nearly five year run as the Air Force's top civilian.
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Opportunity to Refocus on Strengthening Acquisition Management
— April 26, 2013
Although the Missile Defense Agency has made some progress, the new MDA Director faces challenges developing and deploying new systems to achieve increasingly integrated capabilities as well as supporting and upgrading deployed systems while providing decision makers in the Department of Defense and Congress with key oversight information in an era of fiscal constraints.
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House Republicans Pressure GSA to Sell Washington Warehouse
— April 25, 2013
In the latest of a two-year series of field hearings at vacant federal properties, a House Oversight subcommittee on Thursday grilled the General Services Administration over how long it is taking to sell off a vacant warehouse in Southeast Washington near the Navy Yard.
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So Long TRICARE Health Management Activity, Hello Defense Health Agency
— April 25, 2013
Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel tapped Air Force Maj. Gen. Douglas Robb for promotion today to the rank of lieutenant general and to serve as director of the new Defense Health Agency.Deputy Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter directed the establishment of the new agency – and the dissolution of the TRICARE Management Activity -- in a March 2, 2012 memo.
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DARPA Pleads Agency's Case in Lean Times
— April 24, 2013
Seeing a defense budget that is facing increasing pressure, the head of the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) spoke to reporters Wednesday about the need to protect research spending.
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Lawmakers Press DoD to Avoid Furloughs
— April 24, 2013
The Defense Department should rethink its plans for furloughs and other cutbacks to its civilian workforce, a bipartisan group of 126 House members said in a letter Tuesday to Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel.
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Lawmakers Urge 'Merit-Based' Furlough Decisions at Defense
— April 24, 2013
A bipartisan group of 126 lawmakers is asking Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel to “review sequestration-related actions” affecting civilian employees, especially furloughs, hiring freezes, and the firing of temporary and term personnel.
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Major Contractors Report Little Damage from Sequestration
— April 24, 2013
Defense contractors warned the automatic spending cuts known as sequestration would cause layoffs and facility closures, but nearly two months in, the biggest companies are reporting only a slight drop in sales.
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Senate Confirms Burwell to Lead OMB
— April 24, 2013
Sylvia Burwell won unanimous Senate confirmation Wednesday to be the next director of the Office of Management and Budget.
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GSA Plans to Add 10,000 Hybrid Cars to Federal Fleet
— April 22, 2013
The General Services Administration plans to add up to 10,000 hybrid cars to its fleet — effectively doubling the number — in an attempt to get agencies to replace conventional vehicles with more fuel-efficient ones.
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Feds Investigate Office Supply Vendor
— April 18, 2013
The government is investigating whether an office supply contractor has been improperly selling products made in China in violation of the Trade Agreements Act, court records show.
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Virginia Leaders Want Flexibility on Furloughs
— April 18, 2013
The Virginia congressional delegation wants the Pentagon to change the rules on civilian furloughs, hoping to lessen the impact in a state where 88,000 people are facing a significant pay cut.
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Assessments of Selected Large-Scale Projects
— April 17, 2013
The performance of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s (NASA) portfolio of major projects has improved in the areas of cost and schedule growth since GAO’s first assessment in 2009. Average development cost growth and schedule delay for the current portfolio have decreased to about a third of their 2009 levels.
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Lawmaker Wants Proof Agencies Are Complying With New Small Business Rules
— April 17, 2013
House Small Business Committee Chairman Rep. Sam Graves, R-Mo., on Tuesday stepped up pressure on agencies to comply with new rules requiring them to elevate their Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization offices as a means for giving more businesses a leg up in competing for contracts.
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Focus of IG Investigation Now Oversees GSA’s IT Supply Schedule Program
— April 16, 2013
An ongoing investigation by the Office of Personnel Management’s inspector general into contract steering and wasteful spending raises questions about a former OPM official who left the agency in September 2011 to oversee the General Services Administration’s biggest federal supply schedules program.
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Lawmaker Presses Agencies to Abide by Small Biz Law
— April 16, 2013
The chairman of the House Small Business Committee on Tuesday called on 35 federal agencies to provide details on their compliance with new federal provisions aimed to help small businesses compete for federal contracts.
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Navy Plans to Beef Up Cyber Workforce
— April 16, 2013
Cyber, shipboard networks and unmanned systems stand out as key Navy technology investments in 2014 and for the next several years, top service officials told a hearing of the House Armed Services Committee on Tuesday.
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U.S. Navy, Marine Corps Acquisition Plans Hit by Sequester
— April 16, 2013
Top officials from the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps told lawmakers on Tuesday that across-the-board budget cuts in fiscal 2013 and 2014 would reduce readiness and cut heavily into their procurement and research and development programs.
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White House Debuts Shared Services Catalog
— April 16, 2013
The government’s team of top information technology officials published a catalog of shared services on Tuesday aimed at helping agencies save money on IT services.
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12,000 DoD Civilian Jobs to be Axed
— April 14, 2013
The Defense Department would cut civilian staffs by about 12,200 in fiscal 2014 under the administration’s proposed budget, kicking off an expected five-year cycle of significant staffing cuts.
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At Many Offices, Half of Staff Think of Leaving
— April 14, 2013
More than half of employees at the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of the Secretary were considering leaving their jobs within a year, responses to the latest governmentwide employee satisfaction survey show.
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DoD Furloughs: A Bad Idea at a Bad Time
— April 14, 2013
The devastating impact on both America’s military preparedness and its national economy from the proposed furloughs of civilian Defense Department employees could not occur at a more dangerous moment.
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Ex-KPMG Auditor Charged in Cash-for-Tips Plot
— April 12, 2013
As investors Carl Icahn and William Ackman bickered loudly on TV this year about their opposing bets on Herbalife, two other men were discussing the company in a different context: obtaining non-public information to trade ahead of the stock’s next move.
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Is Government Cool Again for IT Pros?
— April 12, 2013
The government often gets a bad rap for lacking the “cool factor” when it comes to attracting and hiring talented technology professionals into federal jobs. But one expert contends that the government may well be the “coolest” place to work if you’re an IT pro.
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Admiral: Repair Work by Private Yards Won't Be Cut
— April 11, 2013
Almost all $287 million in local Navy ship repairs that were in danger of being cut no longer are on the chopping block, a senior Navy official said Wednesday - good news for thousands of skilled waterfront workers whose jobs were in jeopardy.
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Contractor Pleads Guilty in Bribery, Bid-Rigging Case
— April 11, 2013
A northern Virginia technology contracting firm and its former president pleaded guilty Thursday in U.S. District Court in Washington to bribery charges in what prosecutors call the largest bid rigging scam in federal contracting history.
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John Berry leaves Office of Personnel Management
— April 11, 2013
John Berry, generally cheerful and beaming, turns serious when protecting the honor of federal employees. His gestures become more pointed, his gaze sharpens, his smile disappears.
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OPM Chief Berry Stepping Down this Week
— April 11, 2013
Office of Personnel Management Director John Berry on Thursday announced he will step down when his four-year term expires at the end of this week.
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Spring 2013 Update
— April 11, 2013
Since 1992, GAO has published long-term fiscal simulations showing federal deficits and debt under different sets of policy assumptions.
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Why This Is the Age of Small Government (Sort Of)
— April 11, 2013
With the president's budget released on Wednesday, all the plans, Democratic and Republican, are in. And under each, nondefense spending—funding for many of the government's most-visible operations—will reach a 50-year low.
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Obama Budget to Propose 215 Program Cuts, Consolidations
— April 10, 2013
The Obama administration will propose 215 program cuts, consolidations and other savings as part of its fiscal 2014 budget request set for release Wednesday, according to the Office of Management and Budget.
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Budget Director Nominee Wants More Emphasis on Management
— April 9, 2013
President Obama’s choice to head the Office of Management and Budget elicited enthusiasm from Republicans as well as Democrats on a key Senate panel on Tuesday, though several used the confirmation hearing as a chance to lay down markers on issues of regulatory overreach, tax reform and the value of cost-benefit analysis.
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Budget Will Propose Program Cuts, Consolidations to Save $25B
— April 9, 2013
The president’s fiscal 2014 budget set for release on Wednesday morning will “go further” than past submissions in cutting and consolidating wasteful or duplicative programs, according to an Obama administration official who spoke only on background.
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New Defense budget Means More Financial Uncertainty for Pentagon
— April 9, 2013
The Obama administration is poised to roll out a 2014 defense budget that is billions of dollars higher than legally mandated spending caps, setting the stage for another year of financial uncertainty and turmoil at the Pentagon, defense analysts say.
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VA Seeks to Quadruple Funding for Paperless Claims System
— April 8, 2013
The Veterans Affairs Department will request a discretionary budget of $63.5 billion in 2014, a four percent increase over the 2013 funding levels President Obama approved last month and $500 million below what the department originally sought for 2013, the White House said in a preliminary release of the VA budget.
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Key Pentagon IT Programs Survived 2013 Budget Cuts Mostly Unscathed
— April 4, 2013
Though the Defense Department must absorb an extra $41 billion in funding cuts between now and the end of the fiscal year, key information technology and communications program emerged relatively unscathed from the sequestration process in the 2013 omnibus federal budget signed by President Obama on March 26.
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Petition Seeks Student Loan Help for Feds
— April 4, 2013
A new public petition is asking the Obama administration to help federal employees by forgiving some student loan debt to offset the pay freeze, now in its third year.
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As Budgets Tighten, Contract Attorneys Expect Uptick in Bid Protests
— April 3, 2013
Two weeks after sequestration began, contract lawyer Bill Spriggs got a call from a vendor client upset that a federal contracting official had just ordered it to cut its price by 10 percent for “sequestration-related cuts” without a change in service levels.
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DoD Still Swamped by Excess Parts
— April 3, 2013
For almost a quarter-century, the Government Accountability Office has said the military’s management of equipment and parts stockpiles is one of the government programs most vulnerable to waste, fraud and mismanagement.
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SBA Chief Sees Capital in Gains
— April 3, 2013
As head of the Small Business Administration, Karen Mills helped guarantee $106 billion in lending to more than 193,000 small businesses, including two record years of more than $30 billion each.
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DoD Contracting Official Charged with Bribery
— April 2, 2013
Federal prosecutors have charged a Defense Department contracting official in California, who purportedly referred to himself as “the Godfather” at Camp Pendelton, with bribery following an undercover sting.
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Hagel Still Reviewing Sexual Assault Case
— April 2, 2013
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel is still reviewing an Air Force sexual assault case where a jury’s guilty verdict was overturned by a military commander.
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In Focus: Where the Federal Workforce Counts
— April 2, 2013
As agencies scramble to determine which employees might be subject to furlough and for how long, states are bracing for the economic fallout from sequestration.
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U.S. Would Save $14 Billion Buying German Combat Vehicle
— April 2, 2013
The U.S. Army would save $14 billion and get a better combat vehicle by choosing a German-made transport over versions being developed by BAE Systems Plc (BA/) and General Dynamics Corp. (GD), the Congressional Budget Office said.
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Camp Pendleton Employee Accused of Taking Bribe
— April 1, 2013
A U.S. Defense Department employee who federal officials said referred to himself as the “Godfather at Camp Pendleton” because of his influence over construction contracts was arrested after extorting a $10,000 bribe from a cooperating witness for the FBI, officials said Monday.
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DOD Procurement of Mi-17 Helicopters
— April 1, 2013
In summary, DOD's Office of the Secretary of Defense directed the Navy to cancel its competitive solicitation for 21 civilian Mi-17s because Russian authorities told DOD in late 2010 that, in accordance with Russian law, they would sell the helicopters only through Rosoboronexport since they were intended for military end use.
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Furlough Watch: Agency-by-Agency Impacts of Sequestration
— April 1, 2013
The across-the-board budget cuts known as sequestration now scheduled to hit in two days would have serious implications for federal workers, including mandatory unpaid furloughs for hundreds of thousands of employees, beginning in April.
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How a Contracting Official Scammed More Than $30M
— April 1, 2013
Until recently, Army Corps of Engineers program manager Kerry Khan had millions of dollars, mistresses in three states and a taste for high-end cars and liquor, according to court records.
March
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Accident Spotlights Need for Contract Rule Changes
— March 31, 2013
On April 8, 2011, six workers employed under a federal contract were disposing of fireworks at a storage facility in Waipahu, Hawaii, when a large explosion occurred, killing five and injuring the sixth.
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Many Furloughs Will be Rolled Back
— March 31, 2013
The Defense Department and at least a handful of other agencies are rolling back or rethinking plans for civilian employee furloughs in the wake of a newly passed spending bill for the rest of fiscal 2013.
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DOD Competes Fewer Contracts
— March 29, 2013
The Defense Department held fewer competitions for contracts in fiscal 2012 than in 2008, declining in total by 5.5 percent during the four-year span, according to a report released March 28.
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In Focus: Clocking Clearances
— March 29, 2013
As recently as 2007, if you were a federal employee or contractor who needed a security clearance to handle classified information you could expect to wait more than 100 days before your background investigation was complete.
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Pentagon to Cut $41 Billion After Getting More Funding
— March 29, 2013
The Pentagon must cut about $41 billion this fiscal year, not the $46 billion anticipated before Congress passed a stopgap spending bill providing some relief from automatic reductions, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said.
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APNewsBreak: Pentagon Cuts Number of Furlough Days
— March 28, 2013
The Pentagon will sharply cut the number of unpaid furlough days civilians will be forced to take over the next several months from 22 to 14, defense officials said Wednesday, reducing the impact of automatic budget cuts on as many as 700,000 workers.
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Assessments of Selected Weapon Programs
— March 28, 2013
The Department of Defense (DOD) 2012 portfolio of 86 major defense acquisition programs is estimated to cost a total of $1.6 trillion, reflecting decreases in both size and cost from the 2011 portfolio.
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For Federal Workforce, The Furlough Terrain is Uneven
— March 28, 2013
Every U.S. Park Police officer will be off the job for 14 days — but the national parks they patrol will be staffed. The Department of Housing and Urban Development will shut down for seven days starting in May, after concluding that staggering furloughs for 9,000 employees would create too much paperwork.
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Lawmakers: VA has Conflict on Vets’ Businesses
— March 28, 2013
Two key lawmakers are accusing the Veterans Affairs Department of violating the law by having one person head both the office that verifies veteran-owned businesses can receive government contracts and the office that promotes veterans’ entrepreneurship.
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Pentagon Scales Back Furloughs, Calls for Additional Flexibility
— March 28, 2013
Most Defense Department civilians can expect 14 furlough days this year instead of the previously planned 22 days, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel confirmed Thursday, adding that the department needs additional flexibility to respond to across-the-board budget cuts from sequestration.
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Selected Defense Programs Need to Implement Key Acquisition Practices
— March 28, 2013
Of the 14 selected Department of Defense (DOD) major automated information system (MAIS) programs, 9 had stayed within their planned cost estimates, while 5 did not (with cost increases ranging from 3 to 578 percent); 5 programs remained on schedule, while 9 experienced delays (ranging from 6 months to 10 years); and 8 programs met their system performance targets, while 5 did not fully meet their targets, and 1 did not have system performance data available.
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Senate Backs Amendment to Boost IGs' Power
— March 28, 2013
The Senate has passed a bipartisan provision to provide a stronger force of inspectors general and to make agencies more accountable to their auditors.
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Agencies Take Concrete Steps Now That Sequester Is Law
— March 27, 2013
However reluctant he may have been politically, President Obama on Tuesday signed the fiscal 2013 continuing resolution locking in the sequester, and agencies began their long-dreaded move toward concrete action to apply $85 billion in across-the-board budget cuts.
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F-35 Fighter Transforming Defense Industry Says Retiring Chief
— March 26, 2013
The retiring chief of the trouble-plagued F-35 Joint Strike Fighter says he remains bullish about the hi-tech war plane, with costs soon to be further reduced as production takes off, and believes the program will transform the aerospace industry.
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Investigating Federal Programs to Make Sure Public Dollars are Spent Wisely
— March 25, 2013
For the past five years, federal watchdog Steve Lord has been looking at airport body scanners and baggage screening equipment differently than most of the traveling public, focusing an objective, critical eye on airport security systems and machinery, and informing powerful people about what he sees.
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VA Awards Omnibus IT Contracts Valued at $5.3 Billion
— March 25, 2013
The Veterans Affair Department awarded contracts for desktops, laptops, servers, switches, routers, storage services and tablet computers valued at $5.3 billion to three companies that will compete for orders through the indefinite quantity, indefinite delivery contract for five years.
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Contractor Political Donations Unscathed by Sequester
— March 22, 2013
Members of Congress continue raising campaign cash from the defense industry at fundraisers across Washington, even as military contractors brace for revenue losses from sequestration’s deep federal spending cuts.
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Sequester, Spending Bill Chop NASA Funding
— March 22, 2013
Congress sent a fiscal 2013 spending bill to President Obama on Thursday that will leave NASA with about $1.2 billion less this year than it received last year.
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Congratulations to the 2013 Federal 100
— March 20, 2013
The power of the individual informs FCW's coverage each and every day, but with the Federal 100, we take time to really spotlight and celebrate it.
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Contractor Site User Uncovered GSA Data Compromise
— March 20, 2013
A user of an online federal contracting registry found a way of bypassing security controls to see every contractor’s personal and proprietary data, prompting the government to alert registrants about possible fraud, according to the General Services Administration, the owner of the system.
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New WH Plan Would Cut $100B From Defense
— March 20, 2013
The White House is preparing to submit a fiscal 2014 federal budget that would partially offset across-the-board sequestration cuts by reducing the Pentagon budget by $100 billion, but not until later this decade, according to a senior defense official and budget documents.
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Officials Sound the Alarm Over Retention, Recruitment
— March 20, 2013
The furloughs, pay freezes, possible retirement benefit cuts and other dire news for federal employees threaten to shatter the government’s recruitment and retention efforts, Obama administration officials and union leaders said Wednesday.
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Senate Approves 2013 Spending Bill to Keep Government Open
— March 20, 2013
The Senate on Wednesday voted 73-26 to pass an amended version of the fiscal 2013 bill to keep the government running past the March 27 expiration date of last year’s continuing resolution. The legislation would extend the freeze on federal pay.
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Budget Cutting Forces Pentagon to Review Strategy
— March 19, 2013
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has ordered the Pentagon to reconsider a sweeping military strategy that the Obama administration unveiled just last year to determine whether it is still affordable in light of recent budget cuts.
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Congress Seeks Answers on Sequestration
— March 19, 2013
Congressional Republicans are preparing to grill federal officials about why agencies were slow to develop plans for across-the-board budget cuts enacted in 2011 and whether they could have done more to avoid the unpaid leave federal workers may face because of those cuts.
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Congress Stands in Way of Cuts, DoD Says
— March 19, 2013
Amid accusations that the Defense Department still has bloated budgets — and protects them by hyping the potential harm of even modest cuts — the Pentagon’s top financial officer said big cuts are in fact being made and more are coming.
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Lawmakers Hunt Sequester Alternative in Defense, DHS Savings
— March 19, 2013
House lawmakers on Tuesday probed for alternatives to sequestration’s across-the-board budget cuts, interrogating executives and auditors from agencies many lawmakers associate with wasteful spending -- the Defense and Homeland Security departments.
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Cost-Type Contracts in the Cross-Hairs at DoD
— March 18, 2013
Although the current focus in the federal market centers on budgetary issues like sequestration, continuing resolutions, and the outlook for the fiscal year (FY) 2014 budget there is another aspect that will push agencies to spend less and achieve economies and value for their contract dollar.
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Lockheed Names Two New Leaders
— March 18, 2013
Lockheed Martin Corp. named new leaders for its aeronautics business and its F-35 fighter-jet program, the Pentagon’s costliest weapons system, as the company faces Defense Department pressure to cut the plane’s costs.
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CR Could Reduce Furloughs, Other Cuts
— March 17, 2013
Congress is racing to pass a 2013 spending bill needed to avert a partial government shutdown when the current stopgap funding measure expires next week.
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Small-Business Office Confronts Critics: 'We Do Not Block Rules'
— March 14, 2013
He bristled at assertion that the office has become a pawn of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of Manufacturers, The American Chemistry Council and other groups that are fighting against a wide array of proposed federal rules.
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F-35 Joint Strike Fighter Not Ready for Combat Until at Least 2019, GAO Says
— March 12, 2013
The $397 billion F-35 Joint Strike Fighter will not be ready to go into operation until at least 2019, 23 years after the Pentagon signed a contract in 1996 with Lockheed Martin to produce just fewer than 2,500 of the aircraft for the Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps, according to a new report.
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Government Contracting Weekly
— March 12, 2013
Government Contracting Weekly will not air this Sunday, but will return for a new episode on March 24. In the meantime visit the website for past episodes.
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Outsourcing the Fight Against Terrorism
— March 11, 2013
The C-12 twin-engine turboprop drops through a break in the clouds, and Kenya’s tropical Lamu Archipelago, surrounded by coral-green waters, emerges like a lost continent.
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BRAC Savings Estimates Were Flawed, Report Says
— March 8, 2013
The 2005 Base Closure and Realignment Commission may have achieved recurring annual savings, but flawed cost estimates produced a doubling of anticipated expenses, the Government Accountability Office reported on Thursday.
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Pentagon’s Internal Feud Over Contract Auditing Takes a New Twist
— March 8, 2013
The ongoing dispute over the quality of work at the Defense Contract Audit Agency took a new turn on Thursday with the release of a Defense Inspector General’s Office report criticizing the professional judgment used in DCAA assignments dating back to 2010 and earlier.
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A Special Budgetary Place for Defense
— March 7, 2013
The Defense Department gets special budgetary treatment, and the Pentagon’s fiscal 2013 appropriations bill in the House’s Continuing Resolution that passed Wednesday proves the point.
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Opportunities Exist to Improve Future Base Realignment and Closure Rounds
— March 7, 2013
The Department of Defense developed and used a quantitative model known as the Cost of Base Realignment Actions (COBRA), which GAO has found to be a reasonable estimator for comparing potential costs and savings among candidate alternatives, to estimate the costs and savings associated with Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) 2005 recommendations.
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Sequester Punctures Area Economy’s Government-Dependent Bubble
— March 7, 2013
Recent American history is strewn with examples of regional economies that grew dangerously dependent on a single industry: Los Angeles with aerospace in the early 1990s, Northern California with tech at the turn of the millennium, Detroit with auto manufacturing and Las Vegas with home building in the mid-2000s
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As Pentagon Budget Cuts Hit, Firms Hold Off on Layoffs
— March 6, 2013
Despite predictions that sequestration-related defense cuts could result in 1 million layoffs, contractors have filed few notices of plant closings or mass layoffs, suggesting that any big impact on the economy from Pentagon downsizing is at least 60 to 90 days away.
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House Votes to Avert Shutdown as Obama Looks for Big Deal
— March 6, 2013
The House took its first step to avert a government shutdown as President Obama began a series of rare meetings with Republican lawmakers on Wednesday, reviving chances for a long-term deal to reduce the federal deficit.
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TRANSCOM Boss: Drawdown on Track Despite Cuts
— March 6, 2013
U.S. Transportation Command has the resources now to get American assets out of Afghanistan, but that might not last, the general in charge of the command said Wednesday.
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Camp to Release Small Business Tax Draft on Wednesday
— March 5, 2013
Rep. Dave Camp, the House’s top tax writer, will release a draft proposing changes to tax laws for small businesses on Wednesday, as part of his broader efforts to comprehensively overhaul the tax code.
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Pentagon Releases Further Sequestration Guidance
— March 5, 2013
Across-the-board spending reductions from sequestration will necessitate cutbacks to many Pentagon programs, including support for tuition assistance, congressional travel, bonuses for civilian employees and military entertainment, Defense Comptroller Robert Hale said Tuesday.
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The 7 Characteristics of Highly Successful Government Leaders
— March 5, 2013
One former senior level political appointee, Linda Springer, recently observed that a common set of successful characteristics of private sector leaders – being decisive, directive, and a risk taker – could actually undermine success in the public sector.
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Eight Sequester Cuts Worth Watching
— March 4, 2013
The Office of Management and Budget released a breakdown of cuts March 1 that must be implemented now as part of sequestration.
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Feds Fear Sequester’s Impact
— March 4, 2013
At press time March 1, Washington appeared paralyzed. Obama and Republicans on Capitol Hill blamed each other for the sequester, and the deadline to begin cutting $85 billion from the federal budget appeared inevitable.
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Issa Goes Directly to Agencies to Specify Spending Cuts
— March 4, 2013
The top House oversight chairman has plunged into the debate over sequestration by writing to 17 major agencies in search of specific programs or funding streams that could be cut as an alternative to current law's across-the-board requirement.
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Pentagon Warns Governors of Sequestration’s Impact on States
— March 4, 2013
Deputy Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter warned governors that across-the-board federal cuts from sequestration could have a dire impact on local economies, especially through mass unpaid furloughs and reduced spending on military activities.
February
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Ashton Carter: Superhero of the Sequester
— February 28, 2013
Deputy Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter says he’ll give back part of his paycheck if the sequester leads to furloughs at the Pentagon. Why won’t more politicians follow his lead?
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As Budget Cuts Loom, is Government Shutdown Next?
— February 27, 2013
With big, automatic budget cuts about to kick in, House Republicans are turning to mapping strategy for the next showdown just a month away, when a government shutdown instead of just a slowdown will be at stake.
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Budget Cuts May Spur Involuntary Separations
— February 27, 2013
While the Pentagon’s military personnel budget accounts are exempt from sequestration, the automatic cuts could force the acceleration of already planned personnel reductions and increase the likelihood that the services have to make some of those cuts involuntary, the services’ personnel chiefs said Wednesday.
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Chief of F-35 Jet Program Rebukes Main Contractors
— February 27, 2013
The general in charge of building the new F-35 fighter jet sharply criticized the main contractors on Wednesday, saying that Lockheed Martin and the engine maker, Pratt & Whitney, were trying to “squeeze every nickel” out of the program.
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Hagel Vows to ‘Take Care’ of DoD Work Force
— February 27, 2013
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel pledged to take care of the Defense Department’s military and civilian work force even as billions of dollars in defense spending cuts loom.
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Lawmakers Push GSA to Unload More Properties
— February 27, 2013
Key lawmakers are pressing the General Services Administration and other agencies to more aggressively dispose of excess and underutilized federal properties.
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Senator Suggests Cuts to Avoid Pentagon Furloughs
— February 27, 2013
Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., called for the Pentagon to eliminate “unnecessary” jobs and programs in an effort to avoid furloughing “essential personnel,” should sequestration take effect March 1.
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Sequester Spin Gets Ahead of Reality
— February 27, 2013
The descriptions of the post-sequester landscape coming from the Obama administration have been alarming, specific — and, in at least some cases, hyped.
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What Time Does the Sequester Start?
— February 27, 2013
Because there appears to be no serious effort to stop it before it starts, we have to think about the actual mechanics of the sequester.
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DOD to Start Filing More Contract Information
— February 26, 2013
Defense contracting officers now must indicate the type of functions that service contracts cover, particularly those closely associated with inherently governmental or critical functions, as the data goes into the Federal Procurement Data System.
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Government Input Requested for a Survey
— February 26, 2013
GSA is in the process of establishing the One Acquisition Solution for Integrated Services (OASIS) and One Acquisition Solution for Integrated Services Small Business (OASIS SB) multiple award IDIQ contracts that will be available for use by all government agencies.
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Senate Votes to Confirm Hagel
— February 26, 2013
The Senate on Tuesday voted to confirm former Sen. Chuck Hagel as Pentagon chief in a 58-41 vote, ending one of the most contentious confirmation fights for a Defense secretary in U.S. history.
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Hagel: Good or Bad for Contractors?
— February 25, 2013
I’ve taken a very informal survey of executives, as well as others close to the government market, to see what having Chuck Hagel as secretary of defense will mean.
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Sequester's Cuts in Military Affect S.A.
— February 25, 2013
Days before the budget sequester takes effect, military and community leaders around the state are girding themselves for cuts that could cost Texas 91,000 jobs.
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Sequestration Hinders DOD Quickpay Plan
— February 25, 2013
Defense officials announced they are ending their own temporary efforts to accelerate payments to all prime contractors, according to a Feb. 25 Federal Register notice.
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Health World Braces for Sequester
— February 24, 2013
Every corner of the healthcare world has something — and potentially a lot — to lose from the $85 billion in automatic spending cuts set to hit the government on March 1.
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White House Releases State-By-State Breakdown of Sequester’s Effects
— February 24, 2013
The White House on Sunday detailed how the deep spending cuts set to begin this week would affect programs in every state and the District, as President Obama launched a last-ditch effort to pressure congressional Republicans to compromise on a way to stop the across-the-board cuts.
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Education Secretary Decries Sequestration
— February 22, 2013
Education Secretary Arne Duncan came out swinging Thursday, directing his harshest words at congressional lawmakers before what he calls “increasingly likely” mandatory spending cuts for “real kids, real teachers and real classrooms” from sequestration this March.
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Pentagon Fears Drastic Cuts with Lack of Spending Bill
— February 22, 2013
Congress' failure to pass a spending bill for the Pentagon is causing almost as much concern as the automatic spending cuts that loom March 1, according to an internal document obtained by USA TODAY.
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For Obama and Team, Calm, Not Crisis, in Latest Fiscal Battle
— February 21, 2013
President Obama is just seven days away from the first significant test of his second term as deep spending cuts loom, yet inside the White House a clear sense of confidence stands in contrast to the air of crisis that surrounded previous fiscal showdowns with Republicans.
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House Leader Suggests 'Common Sense Alternatives' to Sequester
— February 21, 2013
The dreaded automatic spending cuts slated to kick in March 1 could be avoided with some “common-sense alternatives” to reduce waste in agency budgets, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., said on Wednesday, the day before a USA Today-Pew Research Center poll showed a majority of Americans backing President Obama’s approach to the fiscal stalemate.
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Pentagon Buyers Authorized to Discuss Budget Cuts with Industry
— February 21, 2013
The Pentagon's top weapons buyer on Thursday authorized Defense Department purchasers and program managers to begin talking to industry partners about plans for implementing $46 billion in budget cuts on March 1 and what impact it may have on business.
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CACI Names Former Lockheed Executive as CEO
— February 20, 2013
Arlington-based CACI International has appointed Kenneth Asbury as president and chief executive, taking over from Daniel D. Allen, who just assumed the role last year.
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Services Lay Out Sweeping State-by-State Spending Cuts
— February 20, 2013
Budget cuts by the Air Force, Army and Navy scheduled to take effect March 1 will force almost $34 billion in wage and spending reductions and prompt furloughs or layoffs for millions of people, according to documents obtained by USA TODAY.
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Agencies Outline Deep Cuts Under Sequestration
— February 19, 2013
If across-the-board budget cuts take effect as scheduled next month, every FBI employee, including special agents, will be furloughed for almost three weeks by the end of September.
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Deficit Hawks Simpson and Bowles: Skirt the Sequester
— February 19, 2013
Congress must replace upcoming “dumb” across-the-board budget cuts with targeted spending cuts and sweeping changes to tackle the nation’s debt without restricting economic growth, the former co-chairs of President Obama’s debt commission say in a revamped bipartisan proposal for fiscal restraint.
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F-35 Warplane Costs Driven Up by Production Choice: U.S. General
— February 18, 2013
A decision to start production of Lockheed Martin Corp's F-35 fighter jet before it was fully tested has driven up the $396 billion cost of the troubled project and increased risks, the U.S. general heading development of the warplane has said.
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Defense Contractors Rethinking Veteran Support
— February 17, 2013
Ever since President Obama started bringing troops home from Iraq and Afghanistan, military veterans have been increasingly entering the civilian sector in search of new careers.
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White House Seeks 'Balanced Way' to Budget Fix
— February 17, 2013
President Barack Obama is concerned about the effect that looming, drastic across-the-board budget cuts will have on the middle class, his new chief of staff said Sunday. Congressional Republicans predicted the cuts would start as scheduled next month and blamed Obama not only for doing little to stop them but for the idea itself.
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Senate Democrats Offer a Proposal to Head Off Automatic Cuts
— February 14, 2013
Senate Democratic leaders reached agreement Thursday on a $110 billion mix of tax increases and spending cuts to head off automatic spending cuts through the end of the year. But with even some Democrats tepid on the proposal, the chances of a deal before the March 1 deadline have receded.
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Analysis: Striking a New Deal for Defense
— February 13, 2013
The Pentagon prides itself on solid contingency planning, with one glaring exception: the prospect of reduced funding. Only in the past couple of months has the Defense Department begun to prepare for the significant budget cuts likely this year.
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Continued Uncertainties Surround Sequestration
— February 13, 2013
In his recent State of the Union address, President Obama urged Congress to adopt an alternative to the sequestration cuts scheduled to take effect on March 1, 2013.
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Defense Officials Again Sound Alarm on Sequestration
— February 13, 2013
Senior Defense Department officials warned Congress on Tuesday that the looming sequestration cuts represent a dire and unprecedented threat to the U.S. military, with the potential to harm everything from combat readiness at a time of dangerous international tensions to the Pentagon’s efforts to reduce military suicide.
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Does New House Plan to Keep Agencies Funded Have a Chance?
— February 13, 2013
House Appropriations Committee Chairman Harold Rogers, R-Ky., says he is preparing to introduce a bill to keep government agencies funded through the end of the fiscal year that will be written with a spending level beyond what Speaker John Boehner has promised rank-and-file conservatives.
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Senator Puts Wasteful Contractors and Agencies 'On Notice'
— February 13, 2013
Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., written off by many political strategists last year as a poor prospect for reelection, has landed the chairmanship of a new and permanent Financial and Contracting Oversight subcommittee of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs panel.
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Hunter: DoD Being Overly Dramatic About Cuts
— February 12, 2013
A California Republican accuses the Defense Department "adding drama" to looming budget cuts — like not deploying an aircraft carrier — when less drastic options are available.
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Improvements Made but Additional Steps Needed to Strengthen Strategic Planning and Assess Progress
— February 12, 2013
The Department of Defense (DOD) has improved its Strategic Management Plan (SMP) by including additional strategic planning elements that were lacking from previous plans; however, the fiscal year 2012-2013 SMP still needs to incorporate some key information that would make it more useful for DOD decision makers as a guide for implementing business transformation efforts and for measuring progress.
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Obama: We Need 'Smarter Government'
— February 12, 2013
President Obama called for smarter government during his State of the Union address Tuesday night in a speech that focused on creating more jobs and strengthening the economy without adding to the country’s deficit.
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Panel Votes to Approve Hagel
— February 12, 2013
The Senate Armed Services Committee voted 14-11 Tuesday to approve former Sen. Chuck Hagel’s nomination as Defense secretary after a lengthy meeting that featured sharp exchanges about compensation the nominee has received for speaking engagements.
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Public-Sector Workers Rally Against Sequestration
— February 12, 2013
Hundreds of public-sector employees gathered with their unions outside the U.S. Capitol Building Tuesday for a rally against the automatic federal budget cuts known as sequestration.
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Top Pentagon Brass Lay Out Details of Sequestration Nightmare
— February 12, 2013
With less than three weeks to go before automatic governmentwide budget cuts, the entire leadership team at the Pentagon on Tuesday implored the Senate Armed Services Committee to cancel sequestration and adjust the continuing resolution set to run out March 27.
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Senate Democrats to Offer Alternative to Automatic Spending Cuts
— February 11, 2013
Senate Democrats plan to unveil this week a series of targeted spending cuts and tax increases on the top-earners to replace deep, across-the-board federal spending cuts due to begin on March 1, a senior Democratic aide said on Monday.
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Union Presses for Cuts to Contract Spending
— February 11, 2013
Federal agencies could find 70 percent to 90 percent of the $85 billion in sequestration budget cuts by scaling back spending on services contracts, according to a new report commissioned by the American Federation of Government Employees.
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Thinking the Unthinkable
— February 9, 2013
The automatic cuts imposed by Congress’s “sequester” on America’s budget fall heavily on defence, which accounts for at least half of discretionary spending.
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White House Warns of Sequestration Damage Across Government
— February 8, 2013
If sequestration takes effect March 1, more than 1,000 FBI and other federal law enforcement agents would be sidelined, hundreds of federal prosecutors and thousands of food safety inspectors would be furloughed, and widespread furloughs at the IRS would leave millions of taxpayers unable to get answers from IRS call centers as the April 15 tax deadline approaches, according to the White House.
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Controller Outlines Strategy to Simplify Government
— February 6, 2013
The chief impediments to streamlining federal functions are “parochial stakeholder interests” and a lack of urgency among managers implementing laws and programs, U.S. Controller Danny Werfel told a business group on Wednesday.
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Dempsey: Changes Aimed at Balancing Readiness, Budget Uncertainty
— February 6, 2013
Postponing deployment of an aircraft carrier and a guided missile cruiser to the Middle East is just the first in a series of changes to the military’s global presence as the Defense Department tries to maintain readiness amid budget uncertainty, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Martin Dempsey said Wednesday.
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Panetta: Defense Budget Cuts Will Damage Economy
— February 6, 2013
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta on Wednesday laid out a grim list of spending cuts the Pentagon will have to make in the coming weeks that he said will seriously damage the country's economy and degrade the military's ability to respond to a crisis.
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Agencies to Outline Sequester Plans as Early as Today
— February 5, 2013
Federal agencies may start telling their employees as early as Tuesday about the cost-cutting steps — which could include furloughs — they are preparing to take if the steep budget cuts known as sequestration take effect.
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Everything You Need to Know About the Dell Buyout
— February 5, 2013
After weeks of rumored talks, Dell has announced its sale to Microsoft, Silver Lake Partners, and founder Michael Dell for $24.4 billion, the biggest leveraged buyout since the 2008 financial crisis.
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New U.S. Army Memo Details ‘Devastating’ Effects of Cuts
— February 5, 2013
Documents released by the U.S. Army this week begin to spell out, in often gruesome detail, the $18 billion in fiscal year 2013 cuts that the service would have to endure if sequestration hits on March 1, and Congress funds the Pentagon with a continuing resolution (CR) for the remainder of 2013.
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Obama Demands Sequester Delay
— February 5, 2013
President Obama on Tuesday demanded that Congress approve legislation to replace at least some of the $85 billion in automatic spending cuts set to hit the government on March 1.
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Parts for F-35 Would Evade Export Ban
— February 5, 2013
The government would allow the export of Japanese-made parts for the U.S. F-35 stealth fighter as an exception to Japan’s long-standing ban on weapons exports, sources said Monday.
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The Five Hottest IT Jobs Over the Next Five Years
— February 5, 2013
It’s hard to predict the future and what tech skills will be the most in-demand going forward, particularly when it comes to the ever-changing technology landscape. But a new special report by Dice.com predicts five tech jobs that will be hot over the next five years.
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Democrat Offers Sequestration Alternative
— February 4, 2013
A Democratic lawmaker has offered an amendment to GOP legislation that would replace the automatic, across-the-board spending cuts scheduled to take effect on March 1.
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Feds Anticipate the Worst as Spending Cuts Loom
— February 4, 2013
Most federal workers believe their agency will have to furlough employees if sequestration happens and remains in effect, according to a poll of Government Executive readers.
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The 5 Things Successful Women in Government Do
— February 4, 2013
When it comes to women’s achievements, few compare to the rising roles of women in government. In Obama’s first term cabinet, five women were tasked with providing the president key insight into running government.
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Contract Management Week 2013
— February 1, 2013
The NCMA Board of Directors has declared the week of July 21–July 27, 2013, as "Contract Management Week" (CM Week) in recognition and honor of the thousands of contracting and procurement professionals in the profession today.
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Defense Positions a Military Cyber Squad on DHS Turf
— February 1, 2013
Pentagon plans to deploy a military cyber squad to guard U.S. networks sustaining hospitals and other vital commercial sectors drew hopeful skepticism from technology experts -- and silence from counterparts at the Homeland Security Department.
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What the Heck is Operational Efficiency?
— February 1, 2013
Excellence in Government recently surveyed over 2,000 federal managers to find out what they felt were the most pressing management issues facing the federal workforce in 2013.
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What's the Goal of Human Capital Measurement?
— February 1, 2013
Think of analytic maturity as akin to mountain climbing: The methods become more difficult as companies climb the mountain, but they are more rewarding as they reach higher ground.
January
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Companies, Cities Prepare for Coming Defense Cuts
— January 31, 2013
The Lockheed Martin executive was two years out of her internship when then-Defense Secretary Dick Cheney killed the A-12 bomber. On Jan. 7, 1991, a unit of General Dynamics (the division is now part of Lockheed) responded by firing 4,000 workers here in a one-day swoop.
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Pentagon Policy Chief: Furloughs are Not a Sure Thing
— January 31, 2013
The Defense Department’s top policy administrator on Thursday assured colleagues in a memo that media reports of coming furloughs in the civilian workforce “included many inaccuracies,” reiterating that Defense Secretary Leon Panetta is working closely with the White House and Congress to avoid furloughs.
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Workers Prepare Budgets because Congress Won’t
— January 31, 2013
Civilian workers in the Defense Department are bracing themselves for layoffs and furloughs that could cost them a chunk of their paychecks with the automatic spending cuts set to begin March 1.
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Defense Budget Cuts Hit Businesses, Localities
— January 30, 2013
The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan led to increased defense spending after the 2001 terrorist attacks, but defense's share of the national economy is forecast to continue falling as overseas fighting ends
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Let the Sequesters Begin, Some Republicans Say
— January 30, 2013
Congressional Republicans are preparing to let $85 billion in automatic spending cuts begin to bite March 1, saying they have become convinced that letting the “sequesters” take effect is the only way they will be able to wrangle real spending cuts from President Obama.
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Government Contracting Weekly: Tune In on February 3, 2013
— January 29, 2013
The "Art of Winning" episode of Government Contracting Weekly, features Cheryl Campbell, SVP of Health and Compliance Programs at CGI Federal, and Roger Waldron, President of the Coalition for Government Procurement.
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Q and A with Ashton Carter, Deputy Defense Secretary
— January 28, 2013
The Pentagon has issued guidance to prepare for as much as $50 billion in automatic cuts this year unless Congress approves a deficit reduction package, mainly the spending measures, by April.
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Threat of Automatic Cuts Costly to Federal Agencies
— January 27, 2013
The drastic $85 billion in automatic spending cuts Congress approved in hopes of heading off another deficit showdown may or may not occur, but federal agencies say the threat has been disrupting government for months as officials take costly and inefficient steps to prepare.
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Once Unthinkable, Severe Spending Cuts Now Seem Plausible
— January 24, 2013
Republicans and Democrats in the Senate appear to be coming to the same conclusion on spending, namely that once unthinkable, draconian cuts designed to force a more reasonable compromise may be much harder to undo than anyone ever imagined.
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Report: USAID Probed for Alleged Bid-Rigging
— January 24, 2013
Investigators are looking into allegations that the top lawyer for the State Department's aid agency rigged a bid and that top officials tried to cover it up, according to The Associated Press.
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House Votes to Suspend Debt Limit
— January 23, 2013
A measure to suspend the nation’s legal limit on borrowing for nearly four months cleared a key vote in the House Wednesday, as Republicans broadly endorsed a new tactic that would temporarily remove the threat of a potentially calamitous government default from their ongoing fight with Democrats over government spending.
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Improper Payment Rate Falls, but Some Trouble Persists
— January 23, 2013
Eager to find savings, the Obama administration and Congress are stepping up pressure on agencies to reduce the tens of billions of dollars mistakenly paid each year to individuals, contractors, and state and local governments.
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Labor CFO: Challenge is Making Best Use of Scarce Resources
— January 23, 2013
Jim Taylor once planned to be a city manager. But after taking a Federal Emergency Management Agency internship in 1980, Taylor went on to hold senior management jobs at FEMA, the Commerce Department and the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector General.
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Pentagon Leaders Continue Push Against Sequestration
— January 23, 2013
With the revised deadline for preventing automatic spending cuts only six weeks away, the Defense Department continues its pleas to Congress to come up with a new budget deal because national security readiness “is at a tipping point.”
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GAO Faults Oversight of IT Investments
— January 22, 2013
Many of the government’s information technology investments lack proper oversight and transparency and end up over budget or behind schedule, according to David Powner of the Government Accountability Office.
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Wary DOD Slows Spending
— January 22, 2013
Based on our analysis, CSIS concludes that approximately 100 Defense Department contracts are likely to be affected by the requirement for advance review for all awards and modifications that will obligate more than $500 million.
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Financial Crisis Losses and Potential Impacts of the Dodd- Frank Act
— January 16, 2013
The 2007-2009 financial crisis has been associated with large economic losses and increased fiscal challenges. Studies estimating the losses of financial crises based on lost output (value of goods and services not produced) suggest losses associated with the recent crisis could range from a few trillion dollars to over $10 trillion.
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OMB Says 2014 Budget Request Will Be Late
— January 14, 2013
The Obama administration’s fiscal 2014 budget request, due on Capitol Hill by Feb. 4, will be late, according to the acting head of the White House Office of Management and Budget.
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Planning and Data System for VA's Verification Program Need Improvement
— January 14, 2013
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has made significant changes to its verification processes for service-disabled and other veteran-owned small businesses to improve operations and address program weaknesses, but continues to face challenges in establishing a stable and efficient program to verify firms on a timely and consistent basis.
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Telework Keeps People On the Job Longer
— January 14, 2013
Technology has been touted as a means for retiring federal workers to pass on their knowledge and expertise to tech-savvy new hires. But that may not be the only benefit it is having on knowledge transfer in the federal government.
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DHS Consolidation Hopes Dim
— January 13, 2013
The Republican chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee has no firm plans to strip oversight responsibilities from his colleagues by consolidating the more than 100 panels with jurisdiction over the Department of Homeland Security.
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Ashton Carter is Staying at Pentagon
— January 11, 2013
Deputy Defense Secretary Ashton Carter is staying at the Pentagon, ending speculation that he will soon be tapped for Secretary of Energy.
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Pentagon No. 2 Issues Guidance to 'Mitigate' Budget Uncertainty
— January 11, 2013
After months of near-silence on planning for sequestration, Deputy Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter on Thursday instructed Pentagon managers to prepare specific actions in case Congress and the White House fail to enact a new budget deal.
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Sequestration Endangers New Bomber, Air Force Secretary Warns
— January 11, 2013
The head of the U.S. Air Force on Friday said his service hopes to keep plans for developing a future strategic bomber on track in the face of looming budget cuts, but he suggested the project's future could be in question if federal sequestration takes effect.
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Pentagon Gets to Work Planning for Severe Cuts
— January 8, 2013
Defense officials have begun “serious planning” for automatic spending cuts that could force the Pentagon to lay off hundreds of thousands of civilian workers as it reduces its budget by $500 billion over the next 10 years.
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Fiscal Cliff Deal: No Comfort to Feds
— January 7, 2013
The fiscal cliff deal, struck last week, delayed steep sequestration budget cuts for two months, but it does virtually nothing to solve the major problems facing federal employees.
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Budget Era Could Mean Fewer Air Force Programs
— January 6, 2013
The Air Force Materiel Command’s top leader said it’s unlikely the military branch will launch the number of new programs it once did in an era of budget austerity and with the impact of potential automatic, across-the-board defense cuts still unknown.
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Contractors Quietly Optimistic Following Sequestration Delay
— January 6, 2013
While the two-month delay in planned federal spending cuts that Congress approved last week provides short-term relief for government contractors, many companies said the move does little more than maintain the uncertainty that has plagued them for months.
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Obama Signs $633B Defense Bill
— January 3, 2013
President Barack Obama signed a $633 billion defense bill for next year despite serious concerns about the limits Congress imposed on his handling of terror suspects and lawmakers' unwillingness to back the cost-saving retirement of aging ships and aircraft.
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'Cliff' Deal Gives Defense a Reprieve
— January 2, 2013
The “fiscal cliff” deal gives the Pentagon and defense industry only a temporary reprieve Tuesday from across-the-board spending cuts.
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Markets rise, but business sees missed chance in ‘cliff’ deal
— January 2, 2013
Economists and business groups say the “fiscal cliff” deal will provide some help to the economy, but is overall a missed opportunity to put the nation’s fiscal health on track.
Read more: http://thehill.com/blogs/on-the-money/domestic-taxes/275311-markets-rise-but-business-sees-missed-chance-in-cliff-deal#ixzz2GvjxzZ9O
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Here's What's in The Fiscal Cliff Deal
— January 1, 2013
At around 2 a.m. on New Year's Day, the Senate passed a measure aimed at pulling the country back from the "fiscal cliff" of automatic tax hikes and spending cuts. The measure, hammered out by Vice President Joe Biden and Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, still needs approval by the House.
2012
December
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Obama: No Long-Term Deal on Sequestration
— December 31, 2012
President Obama, speaking with a group of what the White House characterized as middle class Americans arrayed on a stage behind him, announced Monday afternoon that a deal to prevent a series of tax hikes from going into effect at the beginning of the New Year was "within sight."
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Pentagon Goes On An $8 Billion Year-End Technology Spending Spree
— December 31, 2012
While lawmakers went into overdrive to hammer out a budget deal before tax increases and automatic spending cuts kick in Jan. 1, the Defense Department pumped out billions of dollars in new weapons contracts in a move apparently designed to obligate funds before year end.
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Obama EPA Administrator Jackson Leaving
— December 27, 2012
The pre-second term exodus from the Obama administration continued Thursday with the retirement of Environmental Protection Agency administrator Lisa Jackson.
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Congress Orders Better Tracking of Improper Payments
— December 21, 2012
Agencies will have to do more to track billions of dollars in improper payments, under a bipartisan bill that won final congressional approval Thursday and now goes to President Obama for his signature.
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Agencies Begin Preparations for Sequestration
— December 20, 2012
Federal agencies were to begin telling their employees Thursday how they will be affected by sequestration budget cuts, administration officials told federal unions Wednesday.
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House Approves $633 Billion Defense Bill
— December 20, 2012
The House on Thursday overwhelmingly passed a $633 billion defense bill for next year despite Pentagon complaints that it spares outdated but politically popular weapons at the expense of the military's ability to fight.
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More Cuts in Defense Spending a "Given": Air Force
— December 20, 2012
Further cuts in U.S. military spending are certain, even if Congress and the White House find a way to avert damaging automatic reductions, a top U.S. Air Force general told Reuters as prospects for such a deal appeared to dim.
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US Air Force Revamps Raytheon Missile Contract, Resumes Payments
— December 20, 2012
The U.S. Air Force said on Thursday it has restructured a troubled air-to-air missile program run by Raytheon Co, freeing $104 million in immediate funding for the company and putting the program on track to return to its original schedule by mid-2014.
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House, Senate Reach Agreement on Defense Bill
— December 18, 2012
House and Senate negotiators reached agreement Tuesday on a $633 billion defense bill that would tighten sanctions on Iran, increase security at diplomatic missions worldwide after the deadly Sept. 11 raid in Libya and presses the military on possible options to end the bloodshed in Syria.
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100 Most Influential People in U.S. Defense
— December 17, 2012
The U. S. defense community encompasses the best America has to offer: leadership, innovation, technology and vision. It’s a combination that has helped ensure the U.S. has fielded the best-trained, best-equipped military force in the world for nearly a century.
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Editorial: Sequestration: What will happen?
— December 16, 2012
Unless the White House and House Republicans strike a long-term budget deal in the next two weeks, across-the-board budget cuts of between 8 and 10 percent will cascade across government beginning Jan. 2.
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Grant-Making Components Should Enhance the Utility of Their Staffing Models
— December 14, 2012
The Department of Justice's (DOJ) three grant-making components--the Office of Justice Programs (OJP), the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS), and the Office on Violence Against Women (OVW)--have partially met five of six leading practices, and fully met another, to ensure that the staffing models the contractor prepared for each of them to assess their workloads and workforce capacities are sound and reliable.
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Performance.gov Expands Data on Agency Goals
— December 14, 2012
The public can now get an online look at how agencies are progressing toward their priority performance goals under upgrades to a central website unveiled Friday by the Office of Management and Budget.
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Chained to the Fiscal Cliff?
— December 13, 2012
Here we are again, back in that old, familiar Washington place known as Down to the Wire.
With 19 days left until the end of the year, and even less time for cutting a deal on the fiscal cliff, President Obama and Republican House Speaker John Boehner reportedly are in their second round of the deficit reduction offer-counteroffer game.
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$21 Billion Fleet Plan Runs into Budget Snags
— December 11, 2012
A decade after awarding the first contract to modernize its aging fleet, the Coast Guard is making modest headway. But snags are surfacing as the agency struggles to mesh its plans with tightening budgets.
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Most Contractors Opt Out of Air Force Chopper Bids
— December 11, 2012
Five big defense contractors on Tuesday withdrew from the U.S. Air Force's latest attempt to replace its aging fleet of HH-60 Pave Hawk rescue helicopters, leaving just Sikorsky Aircraft in line for a deal whose valued is capped at $6.84 billion.
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Senators Press Army to Step Up Contractor Suspensions
— December 11, 2012
The Army is taking too long to suspend and debar unethical contractors working in Afghanistan, heightening the risk that funds could flow to terrorist groups, a group of senators has charged.
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Bill For Pentagon Audit Failures Adds Up
— December 10, 2012
The inability of the Pentagon to properly audit certain contracts will result in significant financial losses each year, a recent Defense Department Inspector General (IG) report says.
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CIO Overhaul: Issa Plan Would Reinvent How IT is Managed
— December 10, 2012
An ambitious plan is emerging in Congress that, if approved, would represent the most sweeping overhaul of the way agencies buy and manage information technology since the 1996 Clinger-Cohen Act, which created chief information officers at all agencies.
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Don’t Throw Feds Over ‘Cliff'
— December 9, 2012
With all eyes on Washington over how to avert the looming fiscal cliff before the end of the year, critics of the public sector have been arguing that pay and benefits for federal employees ought to be among the first and deepest cuts.
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Defense Bill Would Lower Reimbursement Cap for Contractor Executive Pay
— December 6, 2012
Executive compensation for top defense contractors may continue to be in the millions of dollars, but less of it will be coming from taxpayers if a clause in the U.S. National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) survives conference and is signed into law by President Obama.
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Fiscal Cliff Offers Hint at More Defense Cuts
— December 5, 2012
House Republicans' "fiscal cliff" counteroffer to President Barack Obama hints at billions of dollars in military cuts on top of the nearly $500 billion that the White House and Congress backed last year, and even the fiercest defense hawks acknowledge that the Pentagon faces another financial hit.
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Pentagon Begins Planning for Sequestration
— December 5, 2012
The Pentagon has officially begun planning for how it would carry out the first $50 billion across-the-board spending cut as part of the 10-year, $500 billion sequestration cuts set to take effect Jan. 2.
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Senator’s Report Alleges Waste in DHS Grant Program
— December 5, 2012
State and local governments have tapped federal homeland security grants to pay for snow cone machines, sports stadium fortifications and a training simulation that highlighted a “zombie apocalypse,” according to a report released Wednesday by Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla.
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Opportunities Exist to Improve Information Used in Monitoring Status of Efficiency Initiatives
— December 4, 2012
The military departments and SOCOM have taken various steps to track the implementation of their efficiency initiatives. For example, prior to or during fiscal year 2012, they identified necessary programmatic actions to implement initiatives and began to carry out these actions, such as reassigning personnel from organizations being consolidated and terminating weapon system programs.
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Provision Slashing Up to 36,000 Defense Jobs Stays Alive
— December 4, 2012
The Senate defeated an amendment to the Defense authorization bill that would have halted an effort to cut the department’s civilian and contractor workforces by an estimated 5 percent through fiscal 2017.
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Actions Needed to Improve Cost Estimate and Oversight of Test and Integration
— December 3, 2012
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has provided significantly more time and money to the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) than previously planned and expressed high confidence in the project's new baselines. Its current cost estimate reflects some features of best practices for developing reliable and credible estimates.
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Best Way to Deal With the Debt Ceiling? Kill It
— December 3, 2012
There are countless ways to criticize the debt ceiling — it's a tax on the majority party; a high-stakes yes-or-yes question; even a weird, mandatory hostage crisis — but they all arrive at the same conclusion, which is that it's a really dumb idea.
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FAR Rule to Restrict Use of Generic DUNS Numbers - Update from Wolters Kluwer Law
— December 3, 2012
The Civilian Agency Acquisition and Defense Acquisition Regulations Councils have issued FAC 2005-62, which contains a final rule (FAR Case 2010-014, effective December 20, 2012) that amends the Federal Acquisition Regulation to limit the use of generic substitutes instead of Data Universal Numbering System numbers, and to update the policies and procedures associated with reporting in the Federal Procurement Data System.
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Feds Dissatisfied: Survey Shows Morale in Decline
— December 3, 2012
The latest governmentwide employee satisfaction survey indicates that budget cuts, a continuing pay freeze and relentless attacks on federal employees are sapping morale and hampering some agencies’ performance, federal managers and experts say.
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GSA Makes Long-Awaited Move to Consolidate FBI Headquarters
— December 3, 2012
The General Services Administration on Monday issued calls to Washington-area developers for proposals to redevelop the office complex at Federal Triangle South and to create a consolidated headquarters for the FBI, which has long outgrown the J. Edgar Hoover Building on Pennsylvania Avenue Northwest.
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Oversight of Departmentwide Efforts Should Be Strengthened
— December 3, 2012
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has taken some relatively recent steps to enhance strategic workforce planning across the department. These steps are generally consistent with leading principles, but the department has not yet implemented an effective oversight approach for monitoring and evaluating components' progress.
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The Federal Government's Long-Term Fiscal Outlook
— December 3, 2012
GAO's simulations continue to illustrate that the federal government is on an unsustainable long-term fiscal path. In both the Baseline Extended and Alternative simulations, debt held by the public grows as a share of gross domestic product (GDP) over the long term.
November
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Alumni of 1990 Fiscal Talks Offer Lessons for 'Cliff' Walkers
— November 30, 2012
If Washington’s budgetary gladiators are to avoid the fiscal cliff, then they need to work in smaller groups; avoid the media; dismiss objections from colleagues, core constituents and lobbyists; and put the good of the country before their own political futures.
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GSA Acquisition Chief Returns
— November 30, 2012
Stephen Kempf, the longtime commissioner of the General Services Administration’s Federal Acquisition Service, has returned from two months of medical leave. But he has a new title.
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Senate Approves Wartime Contracting Reform Bill
— November 30, 2012
The Senate on Thursday added broad overseas contracting reform to its version of the Defense authorization bill, handing Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., a victory in her six-year effort to crack down on procurement waste in war zones.
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On ‘Fiscal Cliff,’ Both Sides Lay Groundwork for Debate’s Next Phase
— November 27, 2012
Private talks between President Obama and top congressional leaders in search of a deal to avoid the year-end “fiscal cliff” are accelerating, officials said Monday, even as the president began ramping up pressure on Republicans to extend tax cuts for the middle class.
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What’s Needed for More Effective IT, Transparency
— November 26, 2012
There now is a unique convergence between current challenges, the need for government leaders to act in a fundamentally different way, a generational shift in executive ranks, a changing workforce and workplace, and powerful new collaborative technologies.
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Procurement List Proposed Addition
— November 20, 2012
The Committee is proposing to add a service to the Procurement List that will be provided by the nonprofit agency employing persons who are blind or have other severe disabilities.
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GAO: Billions Spent on IT, But Efectiveness is Unclear
— November 19, 2012
Federal agencies are spending billions of dollars on legacy information technology systems without fully understanding if those systems are meeting their needs, according to a recent government report.
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New Campaign Encourages Companies to Hire Vets
— November 19, 2012
Evidence that employers are reluctant to hire veterans due to their potential physical and psychological injuries has prompted the Army to launch a new effort to educate businesses and encourage them to hire former service members.
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Sequestration Or Not, U.S. Firms, DoD Will Take a Hit
— November 18, 2012
Even if the U.S. Congress is able to hammer out a debt deal that avoids sequestration in January, the resulting agreement will likely result in billions of dollars in additional cuts to the Defense Department — perhaps as much as $25 billion — likely forcing the military to alter its roles and missions.
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Sequestration Threatens Cuts Everywhere
— November 18, 2012
The Pentagon is soaking up most of the attention around the looming budget cuts that would take place at the start of the new year, but there are a host of other national security programs caught up in the fiscal cliff debate, too.
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Troops Not Safe From Sequestration
— November 16, 2012
If Washington’s defense community has achieved one thing over the past year, it’s spreading the message of how the fiscal cliff could desecrate the military. Sequestration cuts of $55 billion would jeopardize weapons contracts, furlough civilian staff, and imperil national security, defense hawks say.
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Agencies Are Implementing New Fraud, Waste, and Abuse Requirements
— November 15, 2012
SBA issued revised policy directives for the SBIR and STTR programs in August 2012 that included new requirements designed to help agencies identify and prevent potential fraud, waste, and abuse in the SBIR and STTR programs--changes that SBA developed in consultation with agencies that participate in the programs and a working group of inspectors general. Among other changes, the revised SBIR and STTR policy directives each include a new section on preventing fraud, waste, and abuse in the programs.
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Experts Applaud DOD Better Buying Plan
— November 15, 2012
Defense officials want to avoid a repeat of the aftershocks of the 1990s Defense Department budget cuts, which hit the department’s acquisition workforce hard, taking away expertise while putting an increasing workload on the shoulders of fewer employees.
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Management Improvements Needed to Achieve Greater Efficiencies
— November 15, 2012
The Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) has not developed or implemented a plan to guide joint bases in achieving cost savings and efficiencies. The Department of Defense (DOD) originally estimated saving $2.3 billion from joint basing over 20 years, but in the absence of a plan to drive savings, that estimate has fallen by almost 90 percent.
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Incentives, Opportunities, and Testing Needed to Enhance Spectrum Sharing
— November 14, 2012
Some spectrum users may lack incentive to share spectrum or otherwise use it efficiently, and federal agencies and private users currently cannot easily identify spectrum available for sharing. Typically, paying the market price for a good or service helps to inform users of the value of the good and provides an incentive for efficient use.
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OPM to Clarify Language on Federal Closures
— November 13, 2012
The government will clarify its language on federal office closures to prevent confusion among employees, according to a report from Federal News Radio.
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Deficit Cutters Look to Pentagon Budget
— November 12, 2012
One war is done, another is winding down and the calls to cut the deficit are deafening. The military, a beneficiary of robust budgets for more than a decade, is coming to grips with a new reality — fewer dollars.
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Firms Help Vets Move into Manufacturing Careers
— November 11, 2012
General Electric, Alcoa, Boeing, Lockheed Martin and a national industry group are joining forces to gets thousands, perhaps tens of thousands, of veterans into high-paying manufacturing careers.
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How to Tackle Challenges When Government is Polarized
— November 11, 2012
In the U.S., as in many countries, leaders are grappling with fundamental questions about the size and role of government, the best way to stimulate economic growth, and the nature and form of regulations and entitlements. While these challenges would be difficult under any circumstance, the increasingly polarized environment has meant solutions and progress have become elusive.
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How Workplace Conflict Is Killing Your Bottom Line
— November 9, 2012
Failure to speak up about concerns, or inability to properly deal with conflict, can have real financial consequences. Encouraging candid dialogue can reduce tensions and boost productivity.
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Congress Sees Rising Urgency on Fiscal Deal
— November 8, 2012
Senior lawmakers said Thursday that they were moving quickly to take advantage of the postelection political atmosphere to try to strike an agreement that would avert a fiscal crisis early next year when trillions of dollars in tax increases and automatic spending cuts begin to go into force.
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Consensus Forming for Lame Duck Deal To Delay Sequester Cuts
— November 8, 2012
Lawmakers hear the clock ticking toward deep defense and domestic spending cuts, and senior members of both parties appear poised to pass a measure during a lame duck session that would add additional time to that clock.
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Rep. Berman Rumored for Secretary of State Job After Losing California Seat
— November 8, 2012
The list of rumored replacements for secretary of State Hillary Clinton has a new name following Rep. Howard Berman's (D-Calif.) defeat Tuesday night.
Berman, a 15-term lawmaker who lost his reelection bid in California's redrawn 30th Congressional District, is drawing support from an array of lawmakers — including the Democrat who beat him, Rep. Brad Sherman.
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Warner: There are 70 Votes in US Senate for Debt Deal
— November 8, 2012
A comprehensive deal that would dramatically lower America’s massive federal debt and stave off massive defense cuts would get 70 votes in the Senate, says a key member of that chamber’s Budget Committee.
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Obama Win Means Continued Technology Focus at the Pentagon
— November 7, 2012
Defense Department cyber, space and network systems will help anchor development of leaner and more agile forces powered by technology during the next four years if President Obama sticks to Pentagon plans unveiled early this year and follows his campaign rhetoric with action.
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Frank Kendall Predicts Sequestration Delay
— November 6, 2012
The Defense Department has begun the early stages of planning for sequestration but the Pentagon’s top acquisition official believes Congress will reach a deal to delay the cuts before January, Reuters reports.
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US Clears Sale of Lockheed Missile Defense System to UAE, Qatar
— November 6, 2012
Qatar and the United Arab Emirates have requested the sale of up to $7.6 billion in Lockheed Martin Corp missile-defense systems to counter perceived threats and lower their dependence on U.S forces, the Pentagon announced on Monday.
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What Obama’s Victory Will Mean for Feds
— November 6, 2012
President Obama’s victory in Tuesday’s election dramatically lessens the odds of any successful push for major reductions in federal pay and benefits. But in his second four-year term, the Democratic incumbent will confront a long-term budget outlook certain to keep a tight lid on employee compensation and agency spending, experts said.
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Pentagon Arms Buyer Sees Deal by Congress to Delay Spending Cuts
— November 5, 2012
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Pentagon's top arms buyer on Monday said he expected U.S. lawmakers to agree in coming weeks to delay implementation of an additional $500 billion in automatic defense spending cuts that are due to start taking effect in January.
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Report Downplays Effects of Sequestration
— November 5, 2012
Federal agencies and the White House have a variety of short-term stratagems to delay employee furloughs and other effects of budget cuts set to begin early next year, a liberal-leaning research and advocacy group says in a new report.
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IT, HR Must Collaborate to Attract, Keep Cyber Talent
— November 4, 2012
Few commercial enterprises, critical infrastructure entities and government agencies have a comprehensive cybersecurity workforce planning strategy in place. In fact, the increasingly sophisticated threat environment makes cyber workforce planning a formidable challenge and a mission-critical priority.
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Washington Area Contractors Plan for Sequestration Delay
— November 4, 2012
As mandatory federal spending cuts of nearly $1 trillion loom larger, many Washington area government contractors are making bets the cuts will be delayed, and they are holding back on lowering their financial guidance to Wall Street.
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Two Win Public Sector Partnership Awards
— November 2, 2012
Two federal acquisition officials—on opposite ends of the career spectrum—received awards Nov. 1 for their efforts to strengthen the federal contracting community.
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Hurricane Sandy Emergency Contracting ToolKit
— November 1, 2012
In the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, federal agencies must be able to acquire goods and services quickly to aid in the recovery. Emergencies such as this one trigger a variety of changes, and a lot of flexibility, in the federal contracting process. Those responsible for doing the contracting must have the know-how and tools to react quickly to acquire critical supplies and services.
October
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GSA Chief Touts Agency’s Response to Hurricane Sandy
— October 31, 2012
As Hurricane Sandy lashed New York City this week, employees from the General Services Administration braved the storm to open up the Brooklyn Courthouse to serve as a shelter for emergency workers.
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Managing Under the Specter of Sequestration
— October 31, 2012
A lot of people don’t really believe a budget sequester will happen. The hope is that, similar to government’s near shutdowns in 2011, Congress and the White House will find a way to avert massive across-the-board spending cuts before they take effect in January 2013.
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Pentagon Sees Further Use of BlackBerry as Door Opens to Others
— October 31, 2012
The Pentagon on Wednesday said it would continue to support "large numbers" of BlackBerry phones made by Research in Motion Ltd even as it moves forward with plans that would allow the U.S. military to begin using Apple Inc's iPhone and other devices.
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DOD IG Report May Reveal a Need for Self-Policing
— October 30, 2012
A new Defense Department inspector general report may have exposed a potential need for a self-policing system to keep task order competitions impartial, a procurement expert wrote Oct. 29.
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DOD Begins Mobile Device Management Procurement
— October 29, 2012
The Defense Information System Agency has issued a request for proposls seeking mobile device management (MDM) capabilities and a dedicated mobile application store (MAS), according to a procurement notice.
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Contracting Program Must Keep Offering Open Seasons
— October 28, 2012
The Multiple Award Schedule program is the most successful commercial item contracting vehicle in the federal government, accounting for $50 billion in annual purchases through General Services Administration and Veterans Affairs Department federal supply schedules
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Federal Workforce Critical to President’s Success
— October 28, 2012
Public servants make the diverse array of federal programs happen. Accordingly, addressing workforce challenges should be a priority, regardless of the outcome of the election.
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GSA to Pare Back Supply Schedules, Grow Strategic Sourcing
— October 25, 2012
GSA has floated the idea to industry groups and customer agencies of reorganizing the supply schedules program to make it easier for government buyers to navigate, Jeff Koses, GSA’s director of acquisition operations, said at a conference of the Coalition for Government Procurement.
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Reeling Agencies Hit by Rising Fuel Prices
— October 25, 2012
Agencies already struggling with budget cuts are getting squeezed by higher fuel prices — to the tune of $6 billion in added costs in fiscal 2011, according to preliminary data from the Energy Department.
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K Street Ready for Sequestration Battle
— October 24, 2012
A variety of interests on K Street have amassed their forces to stop the dreaded $1.2 trillion budget sequester, new lobbying disclosures reveal.
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U.S. Military Hypersonic Aircraft Trial Set for 2013
— October 24, 2012
The last of four unmanned experimental U.S. military aircraft designed to fly at six times the speed of sound is expected to be tested next year, the program manager said on Wednesday, months after its predecessor broke up during a trial.
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Former OMB Officials Push for Cybersecurity Workaround
— October 23, 2012
Cybersecurity legislation might have failed, a potential cyber executive order might be facing opposition, budgets might be stretched thin, but that doesn’t mean that federal cybersecurity can’t be greatly improved.
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U.S. Army Vehicle Contracts May Escape Automatic Budget Cut Axe
— October 23, 2012
The U.S. Army on Tuesday said its ground vehicle procurement programs may escape significant impact from mandatory additional budget cuts due to start taking effect in January, since most of the programs are only in the developmental phase at the moment.
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The New Small
— October 22, 2012
Under a rule change in March, the Small Business Administration qualified larger businesses, based on revenue, for small-business contract awards. Among the changes for professional services companies by industry group:
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Experts Predict Billions Less in IT Spending
— October 21, 2012
Deficit reduction measures — whether automatic sequestration cuts or a bipartisan cost-cutting agreement — will leave agencies with billions of dollars less to spend on information technology over the next five years, according to an annual industry forecast.
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Task Force to DHS: Keep Mission-Critical Jobs In House
— October 18, 2012
Department of Homeland Security contractors, not DHS employees, have most of the “cool” jobs in cybersecurity — hacking into systems and networks and assessing whether they can withstand sophisticated attacks, “the jobs that are right at the interface between the bad guys and the good guys.”
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Billions Less in IT Spending, Experts Predict
— October 17, 2012
An annual industry forecast projects agencies will spend billions of dollars less on information technology over the next five years than it projected a year ago.
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Boeing Opens Seattle Plant to Build Tanker Booms
— October 16, 2012
Boeing this week begins assembling the first refueling boom for the Air Force’s new aerial tanker aircraft, the KC-46, which is a modified 767-200ER and will be produced in Everett.
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DOD Requires Faster Payments to Subcontractors
— October 16, 2012
Defense procurement officials have added a clause to their contracts to get prime contractors to pay their small subcontractors faster, an effort the Obama administration is pushing.
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What Makes a Win-Win Negotiation? Try Conversation.
— October 15, 2012
Linkage Principal Consultant Susan Healy knows first-hand that negotiation is a critical skill that, when done right, can lead to mutually beneficial outcomes or, when done wrong…. collateral damage. Here, Susan shares a valuable lesson about building trust and some tips on how to communicate effectively and negotiate with power.
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Economists Argue About Sequestration’s Effect on Jobs
— October 14, 2012
As a prominent analyst of the local economy, Stephen S. Fuller of George Mason University’s Center for Regional Analysis attracted plenty of attention when he estimated that the mandatory budget cuts coming in January could cost more than 2 million jobs nationwide, including nearly 450,000 in the District, Maryland and Virginia.
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Firms Press to Hire Young Veterans
— October 14, 2012
The unemployment rate among younger U.S. military veterans, long a source of worry, is declining as companies step up efforts to hire them.
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For Some Senior Feds, A New Passion: Mentoring
— October 14, 2012
As a federal employee for more than 30 years, Larry Koskinen has racked up hard-earned lessons to pass along: Worry less about your job title and corner office, and more about the challenges you face and the problems you solve.
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Smaller Contracts On Tap For 2013
— October 14, 2012
The new contracts agencies plan to put up for competition in the coming year will be significantly smaller than in past years, a new analysis has found.
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Closing the Great Skills Divide
— October 12, 2012
Organizations are struggling to fill mission-critical positions with the skilled talent they require. Here are seven strategies to help close the skills gap.
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Issa Presses Defense Companies on Budget Layoff Notices
— October 12, 2012
The Republican chairman of a House panel asked defense contractors if they discussed with the Obama administration whether to issue layoff notices to workers days before the Nov. 6 election because of pending defense-spending cuts.
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KBR Gets Army Logistics Contract
— October 11, 2012
Defense contractor KBR Inc. said Thursday that it has been picked as one of the main contractors on a project that gets Army equipment ready for deployment.
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Lawmaker Warns of Staffing Cuts, Mass Furloughs Under Sequestration
— October 11, 2012
Across-the-board budget cuts scheduled to take effect in January could put tens of thousands of federal workers on the unemployment line and imperil government missions ranging from nuclear weapons modernization to providing Indian health care, the top Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee said in an analysis this week.
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Report: Contract Fraud Puts U.S. Troops at Risk of IEDs
— October 11, 2012
Afghan contractors responsible for preventing culverts from being used to hide roadside bombs on a major highway have falsely reported completing the work, putting American troops at risk, U.S. investigators revealed Thursday.
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Boards Meet to Consider EADS Deal
— October 9, 2012
The boards of Airbus parent European Aeronautic Defence & Space Co. EAD and British defense giant BAE Systems met late Tuesday to discuss their proposed merger before a critical deadline, as senior European officials cited progress in government talks on how the deal would be structured.
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Defense Budget Cut 'Equals Devastation,' Bell Chief Says
— October 9, 2012
Bell Helicopter Chief Executive John Garrison on Tuesday joined the chorus of defense industry executives sounding the alarm about the likely consequences if Congress doesn't act by early January to block huge defense spending cuts from automatically taking place.
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DoD Carries Weight of Governmentwide Small Business Goal
— October 9, 2012
For the federal government to finally hit its 23 percent small business goal, the Defense Department will have to step up its efforts to contract with small firms. But the nature of DoD's large contracts often leave out small companies.
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Military Services Falter on Single-Bid Contract Guidance
— October 9, 2012
The military services have missed out on savings in recent years, the Defense Department inspector general has found, because defense agencies often did not resubmit solicitations when they received only one bid.
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Lockheed to Split Electronic Systems Business in Two
— October 8, 2012
The largest U.S. weapons maker, Lockheed Martin Corp (LMT.N), said it plans to split its electronic systems business into two separate operations focused on missiles and training, a move it said would save $50 million and eliminate 200 jobs.
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Three Keys to Making Do Not Pay Program a Success
— October 7, 2012
Eliminating improper payments has been a key objective of the federal government for the past 10 years, beginning in 2002 with the issuance of the Improper Payments Information Act and Recovery Auditing Act.
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Small Business Update from Wolters Kluwer Law & Business
— October 3, 2012
A proposed rule issued by the Department of Defense, General Services Administration, and National Aeronautics and Space Administration would amend the Federal Acquisition Regulation to clarify that acquisitions for research and development shall be set aside when there is also a reasonable expectation that there are small businesses capable of providing the best scientific and technological approaches.
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Congress Keeping Mum on Defense Merger
— October 2, 2012
U.S. officials have been keeping quiet in the weeks since news broke of a potential $45 billion merger between BAE Systems and EADS that would create the world’s largest defense and aerospace company.
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US, Lockheed Talks For More F-35s Move to Senior Level: Sources
— October 2, 2012
Talks between the Pentagon and Lockheed Martin Corp (LMT.N) about a fifth order of F-35 fighter planes have been elevated to a senior level as the two sides debate the last $100-million-plus dividing them, according to multiple sources familiar with the discussions.
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GSA Can’t Verify Cloud Email Savings, IG Says
— October 1, 2012
The General Services Administration has estimated its cloud email system will save $15 million over five years, but a new inspector general report found that GSA could neither verify those savings nor clearly determine if the cloud migration is meeting agency expectations.
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Leaders at Work on Plan to Avert Mandatory Cuts
— October 1, 2012
Senate leaders are closing in on a path for dealing with the “fiscal cliff” facing the country in January, opting to try to use a postelection session of Congress to reach agreement on a comprehensive deficit reduction deal rather than a short-term solution.
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VA’s Top HR Official Resigns
— October 1, 2012
The top human resources official for the Department of Veterans Affairs has resigned and two other employees were placed on leave after an investigation into two conferences in Orlando found that department conference planners allowed up to $762,000 in unauthorized or wasteful spending and accepted gifts including spa treatments and entertainment.
September
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Agencies Making Switch to Green Products
— September 28, 2012
The Defense Logistics Agency is going green by switching to maintenance lubricants that are made with plant materials instead of petroleum.
President Obama directed agencies in 2009 to ensure that new contracts require that 95 percent of products and services supplied or used are energy-efficient, water-efficient, bio-based, environmentally preferable, non-ozone depleting, recyclable, or non-toxic or less toxic alternatives.
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Federal Efforts to Assist Small Minority Owned Businesses
— September 28, 2012
What GAO Found: While their views varied to some degree, federal agency officials and advocacy groups GAO contacted identified a number of challenges that small, minority-owned businesses may face in pursuing federal government contracts.
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Official Warns Pentagon Managers Not to Plan for Budget Cuts
— September 27, 2012
The Pentagon’s No. 2 official has issued a new warning to Defense Department civilians and commanders not to make any plans for automatic budget cuts that are set to take effect Jan. 2, even as Congress and the White House show no sign of halting the cuts.
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Petraeus Eyes Presidency of Princeton, Article Says
— September 27, 2012
Might David H. Petraeus, the most prominent military leader of his generation, leave his job as director of the Central Intelligence Agency to become the president of Princeton University?
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An Overview of Federal Funding Levels and Selected Challenges
— September 25, 2012
What GAO Found: Federal outlays for grants to state and local governments totaled more than $606 billion in fiscal year 2011. Over the last three decades, these grants have consistently been a significant component of federal spending, but the focus of this spending has changed over time.
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CR Means Problems for DHS HQ, GSA
— September 25, 2012
The planned headquarters campus for the Department of Homeland Security in Southeast Washington appears likely to be sidelined yet again.
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Senate Conservatives May Block Sequester Solution
— September 25, 2012
Not everyone in Washington is so desperate to avoid sequestration.
A handful of Senate conservatives have been gaming out ways to block a deal, if they consider it a bad one — even if it means letting billions in across-the-board cuts go through, according to GOP sources on Capitol Hill.
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Six Senators Sound Bipartisan Alarm Over Sequester
— September 24, 2012
Six Republican and Democratic senators are urging their party leaders to find a way to avert the spending cuts slated begin Jan. 2, a rare bipartisan warning that that the so-called sequester could have a “devastating impact’’ on defense and domestic programs.
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What Federal Acquisition Professionals Need to Know About the New IT Landscape
— September 24, 2012
Most of the Federal government’s acquisition systems are commercial off-the-shelf applications that have been “force-fitted” to make them fit government needs with poor results. This paper provides an education on new technology that allows the government to get affordable tailor-made acquisition systems.
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Why is Contract Management Training Necessary?
— September 24, 2012
Today’s increasingly competitive business market drives competition for limited government resources to incredible lengths. This creates new scrutiny for both buyers and sellers as they work to leverage limited resources to accomplish mission specific goals and outcomes.
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New System to Select Manager Candidates
— September 21, 2012
The Office of Personnel Management by January hopes to roll out a new, standardized system of assessing and selecting supervisory candidates.
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Budget Cuts Threaten 1 Million at Small U.S. Firms: Report
— September 20, 2012
Small businesses in the United States could lose nearly 1 million jobs in 2013 if federal lawmakers do not avert $1.2 trillion in across-the-board budget cuts due to begin taking effect in January, a new study showed.
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Pentagon Does Not See Big Cancellation Fees From Cuts
— September 20, 2012
The Pentagon's top money man again urged Congress to stop across-the-board budget cuts that he said would devastate the U.S. military, but downplayed the prospect of billions of dollars in contract termination fees forecast by some in industry.
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Top Dems Urge GOP to Cancel Recess, Address Sequestration
— September 20, 2012
Top Democratic leaders are pressing U.S. House Speaker Rep. John Boehner to cancel a six-week recess, saying the lower chamber should stay in Washington and pass legislation that would avoid deep federal spending cuts.
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A Comedown for America's Defense Lobby
— September 19, 2012
To grasp how much the budget wars have altered the natural order of things in Washington, consider this: One of the most powerful lobbies in town, the defense industry, is feeling a bit powerless.
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Boeing Defence CEO Says BAE-EADS Merger Needs Scrutiny
— September 19, 2012
A merger of Europe's EADS and Britain's BAE Systems Plc would raise national security and industrial questions and should be reviewed carefully by government regulators, the head of Boeing Co's defence operations said on Wednesday.
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Nominated F-35 Program Head Raps Relations with Lockheed
— September 18, 2012
The general tapped to head the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter effort called the relationship between contractor Lockheed Martin and the program office “the worst I have ever seen,” expressing frustration with the company’s continued performance and production woes.
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U.S. Air Force Says Vigilant on Boeing Tanker Program
— September 18, 2012
The U.S. Air Force said on Tuesday it was optimistic about Boeing Co's (BA.N) work on the new $51.7 billion KC-46 refueling tanker program but remained vigilant about possible problems, even as officials examined an initial possible export request.
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GSA Reforms are Improving Efficiency, Customer Service
— September 17, 2012
More than 60 years ago, the General Services Administration was founded in the wake of World War II to deliver consistent and responsive services to federal agencies, services which would also ensure value to taxpayers. Today, everyone at GSA continues to take enormous pride in that mission and since April of this year, we have been engaged in an effort to refocus this agency on our core objective of providing effective and efficient service for the entire federal government.
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OFPP Lets DoD Deal With Pricing Complexities First
— September 17, 2012
The Defense Department has many roles in government, but it's not often considered a guinea pig. But that is what's happening as the Office of Federal Procurement Policy looks to DOD's experience for guidance on the balance of price against value in contract awards.
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OFPP Lets DoD Deal with Pricing Complexities First
— September 17, 2012
The Defense Department has many roles in government, but it's not often considered a guinea pig. But that is what's happening as the Office of Federal Procurement Policy looks to DOD's experience for guidance on the balance of price against value in contract awards.
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Sequestration Might be Manageable, Experts Say
— September 16, 2012
Devastating. Catastrophe. Disaster.
That is how Pentagon officials, lawmakers and industry executives have described $500 billion in automatic military budget cuts set to kick in Jan. 2 unless Congress comes up with a solution.
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Continuing Resolution Heads to House Floor for Vote
— September 15, 2012
The House Rules Committee on Wednesday approved the six-month continuing resolution that will keep the government up and running until March 27. The bill now heads to the House floor for a vote, which could come as early as Thursday.
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Battlefield Rotations Could be Bad for Contract Management
— September 14, 2012
As defense officials have tried to get a grasp on its mismanaged contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan through the years, one factor that has emerged is the rotation of federal and contractor personnel into and out of the war zone.
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DHS Defends Acquisition Plan for Bioweapon Detectors
— September 14, 2012
The Obama administration on Thursday defended plans to press ahead in vetting and acquiring a new generation of sensors designed to provide early warning of a biological weapons attack, even as auditors and some lawmakers urged it to pause and reassess the effort.
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EADS, BAE Deal Could Roil U.S. Defense Industry
— September 14, 2012
The European Aeronautic Defense and Space Co. and BAE Systems of Britain are in merger talks to create the world's largest aerospace and defense company, the Wall Street Journal reports.
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Report Confirms Feds Would Feel the Effects of Sequestration
— September 14, 2012
Using language protesting Republican budget tactics, the Office of Management and Budget on Friday released a congressionally mandated report detailing the impact of across-the-board budget cuts looming in January 2013 and provided a set of numbers that would affect nearly every agency and most of the federal workforce.
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WH: Sequestration Would Cost $54.7B in 2013 for DoD
— September 14, 2012
The U.S. military services would be forced to slash the accounts they tap to buy aircraft, vehicles, ships and ammunition by 9.4 percent each if Congress and the White House fail to reach a deficit-reduction accord, according to a White House report to Congress released Sept. 14.
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White House Details ‘Devastating’ Cuts Under Sequestration
— September 14, 2012
Scientific research would be curtailed, the ranks of federal law enforcement officers slashed, and military procurement funding whacked if Congress fails to prevent automatic budget cuts from occurring in January, the Obama administration said in a Friday report.
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Data-sharing is Good ... When Agencies Do it Right
— September 13, 2012
Homeland Security Department officials are improving their coordination on department-wide purchasing efforts, but they aren’t sharing the changes through policy guidance, according to a Government Accountability Office report.
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GSA to Cut Fees on Agencies’ Use of its Contracts
— September 12, 2012
The General Services Administration said it will reduce fees it charges other agencies to use some of its services contracts, potentially saving agencies millions of dollars a year.
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House Set to Extend Federal Pay Rate Freeze
— September 11, 2012
A temporary spending measure before the House would lift the threat of a partial government shutdown due to a budgetary stalemate, while keeping federal employee salary rates frozen at least until April.
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Hub Firm Taps Military Research
— September 11, 2012
The list of groundbreaking technologies that have been developed by US-funded research laboratories is long and illustrious: the Internet, global positioning systems, lithium ion batteries, and many wireless communications breakthroughs.
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Navy Arms Buyer Sees Funding Challenges For Shipbuilding
— September 11, 2012
(Reuters) - The U.S. Navy will run out of money in January or February for the refueling of the USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier, unless Congress enacts a special measure to allow the work to continue, the Navy's top arms buyer told lawmakers on Tuesday.
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Top Navy Negotiator Oversees Billions in Contracts
— September 11, 2012
The Navy and the Marine Corps each year award about $90 billion dollars in contracts for everything from submarines and battleships to fighter jets, helicopters, complex weapons systems, trucks, uniforms and body armor.
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USDA and SBA Could Do More to Help Aquaculture and Nursery Producers
— September 11, 2012
What GAO Found: The U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Farm Service Agency (FSA) and the Small Business Administration (SBA) have 10 disaster assistance programs that small agricultural producers and businesses that support agriculture can use to recover from natural disasters.
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Defense Firms Confirm Layoff Warnings
— September 10, 2012
Major defense contractors have confirmed they’ll send tens of thousands of employee layoff warnings shortly before Election Day, according to correspondence released Monday by Arizona Sen. John McCain.
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White House Seeks Unified System to Manage Interns
— September 10, 2012
The Executive Office of the President wants to retire the mélange of different programs it uses to manage internship hopefuls into a single unified system, according to solicitation documents released Saturday.
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CFOs Needed to Steer Ship in Rough Budget Seas
— September 9, 2012
Agency budgets are shrinking, but not as much as they will when Congress and the president agree on steps to reduce the deficit and take us back from the fiscal cliff.
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Contractors Wary as DCAA Seeks More Internal Documents
— September 9, 2012
The Defense Contract Audit Agency has issued new guidance meant to help its auditors access contractors’ internal documents, a move that industry advocates say could worsen an already tense relationship.
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Defense Vendors Threatening Layoff Warnings
— September 9, 2012
Dismayed at a returning Congress still struggling to avert automatic budget cuts, defense contractors could soon alert thousands of employees their jobs are at risk.
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Sign of the Times: Shorter Leases
— September 9, 2012
The General Services Administration is hoping to extend its 15-year lease for a 142,000-square-foot building in Lakewood, Colo., for the Interior Department — but only guarantees it will remain there for two years, according to the lease prospectus.
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Top Navy Negotiator Oversees Billions in Contracts
— September 9, 2012
The Navy and the Marine Corps each year award about $90 billion dollars in contracts for everything from submarines and battleships to fighter jets, helicopters, complex weapons systems, trucks, uniforms and body armor.
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New Center at Base to Help Reduce Costs
— September 8, 2012
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base — The Air Force Institute of Technology has launched an “acquisition center of excellence” to reduce costs and better manage the test and evaluation of U.S. military weapons and programs from the KC-46 aerial refueling tanker to anti-missile defenses, a program leader said.
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American Systems to Buy SAIC Test and Evaluation Unit
— September 7, 2012
In a bid to expand its customer base and technical support team, American Systems is buying the Test and Evaluation unit from Science Applications International Corp. for an undisclosed sum, the government contractor announced.
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Spending Cuts Likely to Trigger Furloughs
— September 6, 2012
Federal agencies will have to consider furloughing employees if Congress and the White House cannot reach a deal before the end of the year to stave off the governmentwide automatic spending cuts scheduled to take effect in January 2013, according to a former top budget aide on Capitol Hill.
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Defense Department to Hill: Save Us From Budget Ax
— September 5, 2012
Washington’s defense community may be eagerly awaiting a report from the White House to detail how it would implement across-the-board budget cuts early next year, but the Pentagon’s top weapons buyer already can describe how they’d work.
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More Cuts Could Change Pentagon View on Mergers
— September 5, 2012
Further big budget cuts could make the U.S. Defense Department rethink its current wariness about additional mergers among top-tier companies in the weapons industry, a top Pentagon official told Reuters on Wednesday.
August
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SAIC to Split Into Two Public Companies
— August 30, 2012
McLean-based Science Applications International said Thursday it plans to split itself into two public companies, taking a major step to unwind a strategy that attempted to more tightly integrate its historically independent units.
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Compliance With Wiretap Law is Transparent, NSA Says
— August 29, 2012
U.S. companies that make infrared detection technology used in night-vision devices and weapons sights are fighting a Pentagon effort to impose the government’s most stringent export rules on their products.
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Low Cost Spy Plane Takes Off as Military Budgets Squeezed
— August 29, 2012
Northrop Grumman Corp, maker of the B-2 spy plane and the Global Hawk unmanned drone, will demonstrate a smaller, cheaper surveillance plane this week it hopes will be attractive to budget conscious U.S. law agencies and foreign countries.
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'Bring Your Own Device' for Beginners
— August 27, 2012
Telework is rapidly changing the way the federal government works, and now federal agencies have a few new tools to expand mobility options for employees, thanks to the new “Bring Your Own Device,” or BYOD, guidance released by the White House on Thursday.
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Federal Programs to Aid Entrepreneurs Overlap
— August 27, 2012
Agency efforts to support private entrepreneurs are ineffectual and fragmented, according to Government Accountability Office research on 52 programs in such departments as Agriculture, Commerce and Housing and Urban Development.
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U.S. Arms Sales Make Up Most Of Global Market
— August 26, 2012
Weapons sales by the United States tripled in 2011 to a record high, driven by major arms sales to Persian Gulf allies concerned about Iran’s regional ambitions, according to a new study for Congress.
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'Badass Innovators’ Get Down to Work
— August 23, 2012
Eighteen Presidential Innovation Fellows, sworn into government service by Office of Personnel Management Director John Berry on Thursday, have six months to get five major government initiatives up and running.
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Congressman Demands Investigation into Army Acquisition Process
— August 23, 2012
Rep. Duncan Hunter of California has asked Army Secretary John McHugh to launch an investigation into how and why requests from Army units in Afghanistan for intelligence gathering software were ignored in favor of the Army’s preferred system, which some claim is less effective.
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FCC Suspends Deregulation of Special Access Telecom Markets
— August 23, 2012
The Federal Communications Commission issued an order Wednesday night that suspends the rules under which telecommunications companies can request the deregulation of special access markets, on a 3-2 vote that followed party lines.
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Three Contractors Tapped to Develop Smart Humvee Replacements
— August 23, 2012
The Army and Marine Corps awarded three companies development contracts Wednesday for their next generation of wheeled tactical vehicles, which will require a gigabit speed local area network to support onboard computers, communications and electronic warfare systems.
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First Lady Announces New Hiring Push for Vets
— August 22, 2012
First lady Michelle Obama chose a naval station in the electoral battleground of Florida to announce Wednesday that 2,000 businesses around the country have hired or trained more than 125,000 military veterans and spouses in the past year, exceeding a White House goal of 100,000 by the end of next year.
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Report Shows Business Impact of Defense Cuts
— August 22, 2012
A pro-defense think tank has issued a new report that shows by congressional district the impact on local businesses of the potential $500 billion in across-the-board budget cuts looming in January.
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Public Wants More Government Spending
— August 20, 2012
A majority of Americans want government to spend more on certain federal programs ranging from veterans’ assistance to food safety, according to a new survey by a global polling firm.
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DoD Turns to Landfill Gas to Meet Renewable Energy Goal
— August 17, 2012
At Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Alaska, the military is turning landfill gas into electricity as part of efforts to reach its renewable energy goals.
The $26 million project will pipe methane from the Anchorage regional landfill and process it at a refinery on the installation — producing about 6.5 megawatts of power.
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CR Deal Would Set Back Critical Projects
— August 14, 2012
A tentative deal for a six-month continuing resolution would, if approved, avert the threat of a government shutdown until March — but it also would set back plans for new and expanded programs.
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Helping Veterans With Transition and Jobs
— August 14, 2012
As we approach the 11-year anniversary of Sept. 11, 2001, America’s armed forces have returned by the thousands from Iraq and we are in the early stages of the drawdown in Afghanistan.
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Proposed Rule Clarifies Market Research Requirements for R&D Contract Set-Asides
— August 14, 2012
A proposed rule published in Friday's Federal Register would amend Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) 19.502-2(b)(2) to clarify that contracting officers shall set aside research and development (R&D) acquisitions above the simplified acquisition threshold when market research indicates there are small businesses capable of providing the best scientific and technological approaches.
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Study: Noncompliance Expenses Add Up
— August 14, 2012
According to a May 2012 study among midsized business owners and senior executives conducted by the ADP Research Institute (ADP RI), 33 percent of U.S.-based midsized companies incurred unintended expenses related to noncompliance with government regulations in the past year.
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How to Connect Your Team with the Mission
— August 13, 2012
One of the best ways to get team members excited and engaged about their work is to help them see how what they do matters. Indy had a great example of how he did that when he was the commander of a squadron of F-15’s.
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Defense Contractors Downsized in Good Times, Report Finds
— August 8, 2012
The defense industry and Republican lawmakers have for months complained that sequestration -- across-the-board budget cuts scheduled to begin on Jan. 2, 2013, and expected to hit the Defense Department especially hard -- would devastate private contracting companies, forcing mass layoffs when the economy could least afford them.
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It’s Official: White House Must Share Sequestration Specifics
— August 8, 2012
President Obama has signed a law that requires his administration to provide a report to Congress "relating to funding reductions" scheduled to take place on Jan. 2, 2013, as a result of sequestration, the White House announced Tuesday.
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With Sequestration, Pain For All
— August 4, 2012
The $109 billion in sequestration budget cuts scheduled to go into effect Jan. 2 would likely mean hiring freezes, furloughs and staffing reductions at the Defense Department, FBI, Border Patrol and Transportation Security Administration, the Obama administration said this week.
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Administration Spells out Doom of Sequestration Cuts
— August 3, 2012
The $109 billion in sequestration budget cuts scheduled to go into effect Jan. 2 would likely mean hiring freezes, furloughs and staffing reductions at the Defense Department, FBI, Border Patrol and Transportation Security Administration, the Obama administration said Wednesday.
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Cancellation of the Army's Autonomous Navigation System
— August 3, 2012
What GAO Found: Almost all ANS hardware and most software development were completed prior to its cancellation, according to the Army and GDRS. The software for the most advanced capabilities was not completed, which potentially presented the greatest complexities.
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Congress Urged to Avert Looming Budget Cut
— August 2, 2012
In a hearing punctuated by partisan anger, acting White House budget director Jeff Zients rejected assertions that President Barack Obama was responsible for the stalemate over the looming budget cuts.
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IT a Low Priority for Many Federal Execs
— August 2, 2012
Despite the federal government’s goal to expand telework, mobility and other IT initiatives for the federal workforce, IT doesn’t seem to be a top priority for most federal executives, according to a new study.
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Lawmakers Face Off On Pentagon Spending Cuts
— August 2, 2012
The battle over sequestration is getting louder, as the defense industry mobilizes to prevent across-the-board cuts to Pentagon spending. Non-defense groups are trying to avoid being drowned out.
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TSA, Union Reach Agreement on Labor Contract
— August 2, 2012
The Transportation Security Administration and the American Federation of Government Employees have reached agreement on the first-ever labor contract for TSA officers.
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Vulnerability to Fraud and Abuse Remains
— August 2, 2012
What GAO Found: The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB) program remains vulnerable to fraud and abuse.
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Collaboration Boosts Talent Mobility
— August 1, 2012
Effective talent mobility is a strategic necessity in global business. Collaboration between the public and private sectors is the key to managing it.
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DoD Sees Four Sequestration Scenarios
— August 1, 2012
Increasingly concerned that time is running out for Congress to avoid $500 billion in automatic defense cuts, the Pentagon is assessing all options, including the possible implications of a one-year, $100 billion, governmentwide, “mini-sequester” deficit-reduction deal, Defense Department and industry sources said.
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How to Ace Post-Award Contract Reviews
— August 1, 2012
Contracting officers oversee many moving parts in the complex procurement process. But perhaps no other element of contracting strikes fear into their hearts more than the debriefing.
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Report: Spending up on Multiple-award Contracts
— August 1, 2012
Federal procurement spending through multiple-award contracts increased 4 percent last year, despite an overall drop in contract spending, a new report by Bloomberg Government shows.
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Sequester Transparency Bill Headed for Enactment
— August 1, 2012
Federal agencies should know by early September how the White House plans to implement the across-the-board cuts scheduled to take effect in January under the Budget Control Act.
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Survey: Trust Among Co-Workers Strong
— August 1, 2012
Nearly three-quarters of employees report that they very much trust their work colleagues, according to a new survey by career transition and talent development consulting firm Lee Hecht Harrison.
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U.S. Firms: Key Positions Still Hard to Fill
— August 1, 2012
Despite the weak job market, two-thirds of more than 100 U.S. companies surveyed have found it difficult to fill key positions during the past year, according to Right Management, a talent and career management unit within workforce services firm ManpowerGroup.
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White House to Change Rules for Managing Grants
— August 1, 2012
The White House will change how the government’s $600 billion grant programs are managed in the coming months, Office of Management and Budget Controller Danny Werfel said this week.
July
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As ‘Fiscal Cliff’ Looms, Debate Over Pre-election Day Layoff Notices Heats Up
— July 31, 2012
The deep federal spending cuts scheduled to take effect at the start of next year may trigger dismissal notices for tens of thousands of employees of government contractors, companies and analysts say, and the warnings may start going out at a particularly sensitive time: Days before the presidential election.
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Congressional Leaders Near Budget Deal to Keep Government Running
— July 31, 2012
House and Senate leaders are nearing a temporary spending deal that would keep the federal government running for the first half of the next fiscal year, which will begin in October, aides in both parties said Monday, an effort to avoid a messy government shutdown fight on the eve of the November election.
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GSA Acquisitions Chief Goes on Medical Leave
— July 31, 2012
Just days before a House hearing scheduled to examine overspending at a 2010 conference he helped run, Steven Kempf, commissioner of the General Services Administration’s contracting division, announced he is taking a 60-day medical leave as of Monday.
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Sequestration Sets Up Sept. 18 Defense Deadline
— July 31, 2012
The Pentagon would have to notify Congress on Sept. 18 of sequester-induced layoffs of some of the Defense Department’s 764,682 civilian workers, said Frederick E. Vollrath, a Pentagon official responsible for personnel policy.
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McDonnell Targets Defense Spending, but Opposes Automatic Cuts
— July 30, 2012
Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell says that defense spending must be reined in if Congress is serious about getting the nation’s fiscal house in order but opposes the $500 billion in automatic defense cuts under last year’s debt deal, warning they would weaken national security, kill jobs and devastate his state’s defense industry.
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Agencies Need to Address Significant Weaknesses in Policies and Practices
— July 27, 2012
What GAO Found: While the eight agencies GAO reviewed—the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Defense, Homeland Security, Justice, Labor, and Veterans Affairs, and the Environmental Protection Agency—varied in the extent to which their cost-estimating policies and procedures addressed best practices, most had significant weaknesses.
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Exclusive: U.S., Lockheed Reach Deal on Israeli F-35s
— July 27, 2012
The Pentagon has reached an agreement with Lockheed Martin Corp on a $450 million program to enhance electronic warfare equipment on the F-35 fighter jet, and integrate Israeli-unique systems beginning in 2016, according to sources familiar with the negotiations.
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Five Takeaways From the London Olympics
— July 27, 2012
Tonight’s opening ceremony, “The Isles of Wonder,” marks the beginning of the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. The quadrennial sporting event captivates the world’s attention for its display of athletic prowess. But in between watching synchronized diving and pole vaulting, HR leaders can glean important management lessons from the London Games.
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Navy Lowballed Cost of New Ships by Billions
— July 27, 2012
The Congressional Budget Office says in a new report that the Navy's estimate for building new warships over the next 30 years is tens of billions of dollars lower than it should be, raising doubts about the number and type of vessels the government can actually afford.
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OPM Touts Progress on Disability Hiring
— July 27, 2012
The federal government now boasts more workers with disabilities than at any time in the past two decades, the Office of Personnel Management announced Wednesday.
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Report: Spending up on multiple-award contracts
— July 27, 2012
Federal procurement spending through multiple-award contracts increased 4 percent last year, despite an overall drop in contract spending, a new report by Bloomberg Government shows.
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White House to change rules for managing grants
— July 27, 2012
The White House will change how the government’s $600 billion grant programs are managed in the coming months, Office of Management and Budget Controller Danny Werfel said this week.
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Excluded Co-owner Keeps Ties to Pentagon Contractor
— July 26, 2012
The co-owner of the Pentagon's top propaganda contractor in Afghanistan continues to receive payments from the company despite the Army's effort to exclude him from receiving government contracts.
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DCMA ACOs Recognized for Commitment to Career Field
— July 24, 2012
The National Contract Management Association recently recognized Kenneth Meyer, a Defense Contract Management Agency supervisory administrative contracting officer, to receive the NCMA Excellence in Contracts Professionalism Award.
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President Obama Announces Job Training Services for Veterans
— July 24, 2012
Seeking the veterans' vote in hard economic times, President Barack Obama on Monday announced an overhaul of job training and transition services for the men and women returning from war, saying it's still too tough to find jobs despite the skills they learned in the military.
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Senate Must Pass Sequestration Transparency
— July 24, 2012
Our country is headed for a fiscal cliff. We're also headed for a national security crisis thanks to one large component of this fiscal cliff — the $1.2 trillion automatic budget sequestration due to go into effect Jan. 2, which would disproportionately cut funding for our defense needs.
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Analysis of 2011-2012 Actions Taken and Effect of Delayed Increase on Borrowing Costs
— July 23, 2012
On August 2, 2011, Congress and the President enacted the Budget Control Act of 2011, which established a process that increased the debt limit to its current level of $16.4 trillion through incremental increases effective on August 2, 2011; after close of business on September 21, 2011; and after close of business on January 27, 2012.
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Conservatives May Concede to Avoid Government Shutdown
— July 19, 2012
Conservatives hate the idea of the lame duck session so much that many of them are willing to support a six-month continuing budget resolution at a higher spending-level than called for in their sacrosanct Ryan Budget.
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Gen Y's take on a Career
— July 19, 2012
The one-company career is a relic of the past. Today's talent ecosystem is loaded with Gen Y talent bent on bouncing around and trying new experiences.
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US House Passes Huge Defense Spending Bill
— July 19, 2012
US lawmakers passed a sweeping $606 billion defense bill that exceeds a budget cap and faces a veto threat from the White House for failing to sufficiently rein in spending.
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Congress to White House: What’s the Sequestration Plan?
— July 18, 2012
The House passed a bill Wednesday requiring the White House to disclose details on how federal agencies will implement mandatory, across-the-board budget cuts if sequestration isn't averted before January.
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Defense Contractors Speak Out Against Budget Cuts
— July 18, 2012
Defense contractors warned Wednesday that across-the-board federal spending cuts posed a calamitous threat to their businesses and that thousands of jobs were on the line unless lawmakers find another way to shrink the deficit.
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Republicans Want to Spare Pentagon from Agreed-Upon Cuts
— July 18, 2012
Congressional Republicans have launched a drumbeat of opposition to Pentagon cuts they agreed to last summer as part of the debt deal with President Obama, and want to shift the burden of cuts to food stamps, school lunches and other domestic programs.
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Lawmakers Seize on Report Detailing Impact of Cuts
— July 17, 2012
Republicans and Democrats seized on a new report estimating that automatic budget cuts will cost the economy 2 million jobs to level election-year charges that underscored the deep political divide over how to avert the looming crisis.
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Military Contractors to Testify on Potential Defense Cuts
— July 17, 2012
House Republicans will call on the leaders of major military contracting firms Wednesday to detail how they plan to deal with the roughly $500 billion in defense spending cuts set to take effect over the next decade.
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Pentagon Official: No Plan To Counter Sequestration
— July 17, 2012
Despite the "dire consequences" to U.S. national security of congressionally-threatened budgetary sequestration, the Pentagon has no plans to mitigate anticipated damage to domestic and international cooperative programs, a DoD official said.
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Sequestration Will Cost 2.14 Million Jobs, Study Says
— July 17, 2012
Severe, across-the-board budget cuts slated to kick in January 2013 would cause a sharp uptick in both federal and private sector unemployment, according to an academic report commissioned by the Aerospace Industries Association and released Tuesday.
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Contract Fights to get Uglier as Budgets Shrink
— July 16, 2012
Contractors and their lawyers are bracing for an era of bitter legal fights, as severe budget cuts force agencies to reduce, scale down and terminate contracts, perhaps as early as this year.
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Staying Calm as Sequestration Looms
— July 15, 2012
Despite the concerns of larger defense contractors, smaller companies are taking a more measured and cautious approach to about $1 trillion in mandatory federal budget reductions set to start in January.
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Timing of Defense Cuts Worries Governors
— July 15, 2012
Health-care reform. Same-sex marriage. Illegal immigration. The social safety net. When it comes to some of the top issues facing the states, it might seem that the partisan divide among the country's governors is as wide as it has ever been.
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Contractor Distrust Costs DOD Billions, Study Says
— July 13, 2012
In a time when defense officials are hunting everywhere for savings, a new study has found what might be the missing element that could save the Defense Department billions of dollars: Trust.
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Congress Approves Faster Job Licensing for Veterans
— July 12, 2012
Congress has sent the White House a bill to promote faster hiring of veterans by generally crediting relevant military training toward occupational licenses issued by the federal government.
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Women a Minority in Six-Figure Government Jobs
— July 12, 2012
For government-sector positions paying up to $100,000, women trump men in filling these jobs--they hold approximately 57 percent of the positions. For jobs paying over $100,000, men dominate, with women holding only 42 percent of the positions.
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Budget-Cutters Eye DOD Civilian Workers
— July 11, 2012
Overshadowed by all the political posturing over the prospect of automatic cuts in defense spending, one thing seems certain: The Defense Department's huge civilian workforce will shrink.
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DISA Soars to Top of Defense Cloud
— July 11, 2012
The Defense Information Systems Agency said it has been designated the Defense Enterprise Cloud Service Broker, meaning any military outfit that needs such service needs to go through DISA.
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How to Build and Maintain Trust
— July 11, 2012
The ability to build and sustain high levels of personal and organizational trust is a critical competency for today’s leaders.
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Management Matters: Mix and Match
— July 11, 2012
One time-tested ingredient of success is the colleague who can teach you almost everything you need to know—a mentor.
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Rail Industry Aims to Hire 5,000 Veterans This Year
— July 11, 2012
Facing an aging rail industry workforce and an influx of returning military veterans, the U.S. Department of Transportation announced Tuesday an initiative in which the growing rail sector will hire more than 5,000 veterans this year, matching the same number hired in 2011.
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The Cuts No Cne Believes Will Come
— July 11, 2012
Amid all the chatter on Capitol Hill about looming defense cuts, there's one thing no one's saying out loud: The cuts will probably never happen.
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OMB Chief Warns of Job Cuts, Park Closures if Budgets Cut Jan. 2
— July 10, 2012
The FBI and Border Patrol would face job cuts and hundreds of national parks would close or reduce operations if across-the-board budget reductions take effect early next year, Jeff Zients, acting head of the Office of Management and Budget, warned Tuesday.
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Survey: Talent Management Challenged in Multinational Markets
— July 10, 2012
Emerging market multinationals are struggling to build effective international management teams as they grapple with cultural differences, conflicting internal perceptions of talent management, according to a new Ernst & Young survey of 810 business executives from all major growth markets.
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U.S. Weapons Makers Prepare for Decade-Long Downturn
— July 10, 2012
U.S. defense companies are trying to get creative as they gird for a decade of flat or declining military spending in Europe and the United States, eyeing more cooperation across borders, joint ventures, foreign sales and adjacent markets.
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Air Force Realignment Under Way
— July 9, 2012
The Air Force-wide consolidation of Materiel Command centers from 12 to five took an important official step on Monday, with the activation of the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio.
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Contractors Seek Changes in Bill to Curb Human Trafficking
— July 9, 2012
A bill to impose new requirements on overseas contractors to help prevent human trafficking in war zones cleared a key Senate panel Thursday, but at least one contractor group is arguing for adjustments before the bill goes to President Obama's desk.
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OMB Chief to Testify on Defense Cuts
— July 9, 2012
The acting White House budget director has agreed to testify before the House Armed Services Committee next month on the administration's plans for carrying out more than $1 trillion in across-the-board budget cuts that could roll out over the next 10 years.
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U.S. Arms Makers Cite Strong Demand from Foreign Buyers
— July 9, 2012
Military budgets may be under pressure in the United States and Europe but there is growing demand from the Middle East, Asia and other regions for new fighter jets, helicopters and surveillance equipment, top weapons industry executives say.
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Diversity May Help Raytheon Avoid Cuts
— July 8, 2012
Looming defense budget cuts - including the possibly of deep, automatic cuts come January - have raised the prospect of massive layoffs by defense contractors, including Tucson-based Raytheon Missile Systems.
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Analysis: Educating the Brass
— July 6, 2012
Professional military education has an inside baseball stigma that is hard to shake. The topic often receives a "so what" shake of the head when it comes up for discussion at conferences.
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Defense Cuts Starting to Pinch Economy
— July 4, 2012
Tighter defense budgets are starting to pinch the nation's economy, slowing a sluggish recovery even before sharper spending cuts could kick in next year.
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Pentagon Wants to Suspend Production at Nation's Only Tank Factory
— July 4, 2012
Rows of sand-colored armored vehicles ready for deployment are parked outside the nation's only tank plant.It's where welders and machinists for more than three decades have built the Abrams tank, which former President George W. Bush once called "the most effective armored vehicle in the history of warfare."
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Managing Difficult People
— July 3, 2012
Half the battle in dealing with tough office personalities is identifying their individual quirks. The rest requires a cool head and a sound, customized strategy.
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Small Business Share of Contracts Shrunk Slightly in 2011, SBA Reports
— July 3, 2012
The Small Business Administration on Tuesday released its annual score card on federal contract dollars won by small businesses, reporting that contractors meeting the eligibility criteria were awarded $91.5 billion in government work in fiscal 2011, or 21.65 percent of the total.
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Letting the Mission Govern a Company
— July 2, 2012
Three years ago, in front of my 300 colleagues at LRN, I ripped up our organizational chart and proclaimed that none of us would report to a boss anymore.
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OMB Defends its Progress Weeding Out Federal Websites
— July 2, 2012
The Office of Management and Budget is rebutting a charge from Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., that the Obama administration has fallen short on its promises to eliminate obsolete agency websites as part of its Campaign to Cut Waste.
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Recognize Veterans' Assets inWworkforce
— July 2, 2012
Summer carries with it a spirit of patriotism. Whether it's backyard barbecues or Fourth of July parades and fireworks, the season seems infused with a sense that we're lucky to be free.
June
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Civilian Workers Still Face Dangers in Iraq
— June 29, 2012
Volatile security conditions have forced the State Department to continue to employ a large number of contractors to protect personnel in Iraq after the shift from a military to civilian-led mission, several senior federal officials told a House committee Thursday.
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Workforce Cloud Could Help Manage Five Generations of Feds
— June 29, 2012
There's an interesting post on GovLoop by one of my top sources for input on generational issues, Andrew Krzmarzick, about a recent survey that found the majority of Baby Boomers and Gen Xers are expecting to work into their 70s.
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Pentagon targets supply chain for savings
— June 28, 2012
According to a report released by Deloitte Consulting LLP, military spending on maintenance of equipment, supplies and transportation is estimated to be close to $150 billion, causing some to research how those costs could be cut and the money reallocated for other areas.
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Defense Officials Plead Need for Agility
— June 26, 2012
The Defense Department needs to be more agile in the face of new and upcoming budget constraints, department officials and military experts said at a panel discussion Tuesday.
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Improvements Needed in Prompt Payment Monitoring and Reporting
— June 26, 2012
We found that while DOD has a process in place for monitoring and reporting on late-payment penalties, this process has significant flaws and omissions that result in incomplete and inaccurate data, thereby limiting the effectiveness of the process.
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Study: Across-the-Board Defense Cuts Could Cost 1 Million Jobs
— June 21, 2012
Across-the-board budget cuts set to hit the Pentagon in January would destroy nearly 1 million jobs by 2014, with Virginia, California and Texas absorbing the biggest hits, according to an analysis released Thursday by the National Association of Manufacturers.
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Budgeting and Management of Carryover Could Be Improved
— June 19, 2012
GAO's analysis of Marine Corps depot maintenance activity group (DMAG) reports showed that from fiscal years 2004 through 2011, reported actual carryover exceeded the allowable amounts in the most recent 6 years of the 8- year period, ranging from $59 million in fiscal year 2007 to $7 million in fiscal year 2011.
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Dempsey Maps Sequestration Cuts at Defense
— June 19, 2012
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Martin Dempsey said Tuesday that automatic cuts to the Defense Department's budget resulting from the sequestration deal struck by the Obama administration and Congress would have to come from military operations, maintenance, training and modernization.
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Agencies Falling Short of Green Standards
— June 18, 2012
Agencies are struggling to renovate their existing buildings or build new ones to meet green standards, according to scorecards released by the Office of Management and Budget Friday.
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Federal Drive Interviews -- June 15
— June 18, 2012
This is the Federal Drive show blog. Here you can listen to the interviews, find more information about the guests on the show each day and links to additional resources.
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Shrinking Staffs Imperil Missions at Key Agencies
— June 18, 2012
The 0.5 percent decline in the federal workforce last year — the first in five years — may not seem like much. But at the agencies where the cuts are most pronounced, the impact is big.
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GSA Leases Held up in Real Estate Power Play
— June 17, 2012
House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chairman Rep. John Mica, R-Fla., is holding up approval of 20 federal leases, affecting thousands of federal employees.
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Contractors Object to Parts of Defense Authorization Bills
— June 14, 2012
Both the House and Senate versions of the fiscal 2013 National Defense Authorization Act contain contracting provisions that are out of synch with competitive market forces, according to leaders of the Professional Services Council, a contractor trade group.
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Senate Armed Services Chair Thinks Sequestration Won’t Happen
— June 14, 2012
The Senate Armed Services Committee chairman predicted Thursday that Congress will find a way to avoid automatic budget cuts in January that could hurt national security, but he added that any ultimate budget agreement won’t leave the Defense Department unscathed.
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Competition in Contracting Act (1984)
— June 13, 2012
Congress is always active in the acquisition and procurement area. Every year, it enacts some provisions that are intended to improve the acquisition process.
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$20B GWAC Advances Federal IT Reform Goals
— June 12, 2012
The U.S. government is determined to find new and better ways of using information technology. As part of that effort, different approaches to IT contracting are in the offing for vendors providing hardware, software, consulting and other services, including social media and mobile device solutions.
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Afghanistan Drawdown Keeps Logistics Crews Busy
— June 11, 2012
The drawdown of U.S. forces in Afghanistan has required an expansive effort to sort, identify and ship unused equipment stored in theater as the Marine Corps withdraws thousands of troops from Helmand province this summer.
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DoD Contract Audits Plunge in Quest for Thoroughness
— June 11, 2012
Pentagon audits of its contractor costs have slowed to a trickle in recent years, prompting critics to charge that billions of dollars in questionable costs are likely being paid but not flagged by auditors.
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Hiring Veterans is Good Business, Study Reports
— June 11, 2012
Most companies canvassed in a study published Monday say it's good business to hire veterans because of their leadership and teamwork skills, but some negative perceptions about veterans persist among business leaders.
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Inside the World's Biggest Buyer
— June 11, 2012
The federal government has spent almost a billion dollars on lumber, plywood, millwork and veneer so far this year.
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Senate Panel Approves Cap on Contractor Pay
— June 6, 2012
Defense contractors could charge the government no more than the vice president earns — currently $230,700 — to pay most of their employees' salaries, under a provision in the Defense authorization bill approved Tuesday by the Senate Armed Services Committee.
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Will low-price contracting make us all losers?
— June 4, 2012
We are seeing a procurement strategy shift for technical and professional services bids brought about by procurement officials using lowest price, technically acceptable (LPTA) evaluation criteria rather than the more traditional best-value tradeoff criteria.
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2012 Membership Survey
— June 1, 2012
What do you value most about your membership? Tell us! We need to learn more about our members in order to better serve you. We want to maintain and improve the programs you love, and develop some of the programs you wish we had available.
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Budget Austerity Gives Financial Managers a Chance to Shine
— June 1, 2012
Defense Department leaders preparing for historic budget cuts should tap the expertise of their financial management executives, who see the current challenges as their moment to "step up to the plate and shine," stated a new survey conducted by the American Society of Military Comptrollers and Grant Thornton LLP.
May
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Senate Confirms Nominations to Key DoD Leadership Positions
— May 30, 2012
Before leaving for the Memorial Day recess, the Senate confirmed three key Department of Defense (DoD) leadership nominations: Frank Kendall to be Under Secretary of Defense (USD) for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics (AT&L), Dr. James Miller to be Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, and Erin Conaton to be Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness (P&R).
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Survey: Who are the Acquisition Rock-Stars?
— May 25, 2012
Federal News Radio would like your help! They want to know who the real movers and shakers are within the acquisition community. Take this short survey and tell them who you think is an acquisition 'rock-star.'