Taking a hit
Few acquisition proposals in recent memory have generated as much grumbling as the General Services Administration's SmartBuy. At the recent Executive Leadership Conference in Hershey, Pa., it was a leading topic'of complaint.
Conferencing apps keep road warriors at home
Many agencies use mobile and remote-computing technologies, but government IT managers are concerned about their security, a GCN telephone survey found.
Net-centric goal: a different military
Arthur K. Cebrowski's job is to develop technological concepts that will revolutionize the culture of the military and warfare.
GSA's Safavian tapped to head OFPP
President Bush yesterday announced his intentions to nominate David Safavian to become the next administrator of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy. <br>
IRS' Grams: CADE release 'sometime in 2004'
The initial phase of the much-delayed Customer Account Data Engine, the centerpiece of the agency's modernization effort, won't be released until 'sometime in 2004,' IRS CIO W. Todd Grams said today.<br>
FBI's Trilogy rollout delayed; CSC misses deadline
The FBI must delay taking Trilogy, its enterprisewide investigative system, fully live because Computer Sciences Corp. has missed a delivery deadline.<br>
Bush nominates replacement for Defense CIO
Although Defense Department CIO John Stenbit has yet to set a specific date for his retirement, Francis Joseph Harvey has been nominated to replace him.
DOD overpays for satellite services, panel says
The Defense Department accounts for more than half of the $500 million yearly market for commercial satellite services, but it pays a premium because its needs surge unexpectedly. <br>
FAA says new radar will help avoid runway crashes
The Federal Aviation Administration officially began operating a ground radar system at Milwaukee-Mitchell International Airport designed to prevent runway collisions.<br>
DOD extends Common Access Cards deadline
The Defense Department has extended by six months its deadline for issuing Common Access Cards to its more than 4 million users.
Without precise planning, metrics can be a minefield
In 1991, when Allan Burman was administrator of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy, he issued a bulletin starting the push for performance-based contracting. Since then, this contracting technique has had some success but proponents are still dissatisfied. In their view, agencies are missing many opportunities to use it.
OMB loosens up on performance-based goals
The Office of Management and Budget's Office of Federal Procurement Policy is softening its stance on goals for implementing performance-based contracting across the government.
Agencies work to get a handle on contracting for results
Only a quarter of government procurement managers in a special GCN Management e-mail survey said they fully understand what procurement-based contracting is and how to write a performance-based contract.
The key ingredient: discipline
While performance-based contracting is hardly a new tool for agencies, the Veterans Affairs Department is one of the few having success.
Chicago adjusts on the fly to make its contract perform
What's one way to make performance-based IT acquisition work? Keep it simple.
It's what's up front that counts
On paper, performance-based IT services acquisition looks like a piece of cake: You tell the contractors what you want and let them find the best way to do it.
It all comes down to the mission
The goal of performance-based IT services contracting is, ultimately, to improve the bottom line. And for government agencies, the bottom line is mission.
Missile-tracking project beset by software troubles, GAO says
The $4.4 billion sensor system the Air Force is developing to track ballistic missile attacks suffers from software deficiencies, cost increases and schedule overruns, the General Accounting Office has concluded.<br>
New e-gov committee chairman moving to Treasury
Samuel W. Bodman, new chairman of the E-Government Committee of the President's Management Council, has been tapped to move from his No. 2 job at the Commerce Department to the same post at the Treasury Department.<br>
CDC awards contracts for IT services
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last month awarded contracts worth up to $465 million jointly to Lockheed Martin Corp. and Northrop Grumman Corp. for a variety of IT services. <br>
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