75,000 jobs could be outsourced, OMB says
The Office of Management and Budget yesterday released a list of more than 75,000 federal jobs that are not inherently governmental and could be subject to competition under OMB Circular A-76. The list, which came 17 days after fiscal 2002 ended, detailed 242,843 positions at 22 agencies, of which 75,404'31 percent'are commercial in nature.<br>
Government IT spending will grow 9.7 percent, GEIA predicts
Federal IT spending will increase 9.7 percent in fiscal 2003, an industry trade group reported in its annual survey. Total agency IT spending will reach $53.1 billion, split almost evenly between Defense Department and civilian agencies, according to figures released this week by the Government Electronics and Information Technology Association of Arlington, Va.
Matchup: Who said What?
Match these quotes from GCN's past year with the famous people who said them. The issues in which the quotes appeared are in parentheses.1. 'Asking a garrison to do an A-76 is like giving a pig a knife and asking it to make pork chops.'2. 'Prepare for the worst thing you can imagine. Drill and exercise. Overprepare. Even if your plans aren't exactly right, it gives you an advantage.'3. 'I keep hearing 'integration via middleware, integration via middleware, integration via middleware.' This is the stupidest thing I've ever heard. It's absurd. It's a nitwit idea, but it's the conventional wisdom.'
PACKET RAT: Rat dodges the Three Bears'baby, market, virus
'Again! Bear!' shouted the Rat's 20-month-old daughter as her 'Bear in the Big Blue House' DVD ended for the 20th time of the day.
'Did you hear...'
<b>Tie Man.</b> The Social Security Administration has launched a nationwide search for the identity of a man wearing a bow tie in a photograph made on Aug. 14, 1935, standing behind President Franklin D. Roosevelt at the signing of the Social Security Act. Visit <a href= "http://www.ssa.gov/history/bowtieman.html">www.ssa.gov/history/bowtieman.html</a> and tell all.
CIO Council has new members from agencies, NASCIO
The CIO Council this month announced new appointments to the council, some of them reflecting changes in agency leadership.
Conference puts the EA pieces on the drafting table
A lot of the government's best plans for electronic services hinge on one thing: developing an enterprise architecture. But that one thing has many facets, and they got a thorough going-over this month at a two-day conference in Washington.
DOD civilians get one-stop human resources info
The Defense Department has finished its phased-in deployment of a modern human resources system that has been in the works since October 1999. The Defense Civilian Personnel Data System is now in use by more than 800,000 civilian employees worldwide to handle all personnel transactions, including benefits inquiries.
People on the Move
Ron Turner, Navy deputy CIO for infrastructure, systems and technology, will retire Jan. 3 after, by his estimate, 'roughly 29 years, 11 months, 21 days of service with the Department of the Navy and uniformed service.'
Army plans to cut programs, privatize jobs
Army secretary Thomas White has said the service will 'privatize every noncore function' as it transforms itself into an agency that relies on information systems as much as manpower.
STARS inches toward its next phase at FAA
The Federal Aviation Administration says it has solved a serious problem with its Standard Terminal Automation Replacement System and is ready to proceed with the rollout of the system at other airports.
Defense CIO will set security rules
In a few weeks, Defense Department CIO John Stenbit will release a directive that sets standards to guide Defense agencies on how to secure their networks.
Clarke stumps for Net security center
Presidential adviser Richard Clarke has asked industry to support an Internet operations center that could give early warning of global network threats.
NIST guidebooks advise agencies to get on the same security page
Keep up. That's how the National Institute of Standards and Technology advises agencies to safeguard their systems.
Sniper victim was FBI analyst
FBI employees last week reacted with shock and grief to the murder of their colleague, Linda Franklin, 47, by a sniper attack. FBI headquarters confirmed that Franklin was an analyst there, and an FBI source added that she worked in the Cyber Crime Division.
Working group outlines e-gov architectures
The Office of Management and Budget's Solutions Architect Working Group is working closely with officials from 11 of the 25 Quicksilver e-government projects to develop a tool to help agencies plan, develop, implement and maintain their projects.
EPA, FAA officials aim to build 'logical, uncomplicated' tools
The Environmental Protection Agency and the Federal Aviation Administration are building online tools to plan their enterprise architectures.
Post Newsweek names several new executives
Tom Trezza Jr. this month was named senior vice president and publisher of Government Computer News and its sister publication, Washington Technology.
Interior goes for Windows XP departmentwide
In a bid to bring order to its IT infrastructure, the Interior Department has signed an enterprise agreement with Microsoft Corp. under which it will adopt Windows XP Professional and the Office XP Professional applications suite for almost all its desktop systems.
Satellites draw a bead on trouble
The Earth Observatory at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., daily pinpoints global hazards such as wildfires, volcano eruptions and large-scale storms on a world map, which is posted at <a href= "http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards">earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards</a>.
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