When you think of fine arts and the federal government, you probably think of the National Gallery, not the General Services Administration.
Pentagon officials also suggest to cut 10 percent of the contractor workforce by 2011. The proposal to eliminate JFCOM comes as the Defense Business Board outlines several areas where DoD can reduce its expenses.
Think you can either be sustainable or secure, but you can\'t be both? Oh nay nay! says GSA\'s Ed O\'Hare.
The federal database of contractor integrity information is about to go public. Rob Burton, the former deputy administrator of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy.
Among other issues, the GAO finds Facility Security Committees have operated since 1995 without procedures that outline how they should operate or make decisions, or that establish accountability. Mark Goldstein, Director of Physical Infrastructure Issues at GAO has more details.
A top App for Army is the Disaster Relief app for an Android
Two major defense contractors are joining forces to compete for the Missile Defense Agency\'s Ground-Based Midcourse Defense development and sustainment contract.
Military downsizing, contracting, and \"inherently governmental\" debates aren\'t new - they\'ve been around for years.
Some federal agencies might be gearing up for year-end spending sprees, which means contractors should look out. Ray Bjorklund of FedSources tells the DorobekInsider about his new report, and what both agencies and contractors can glean from it.
CDW\'s IT Monitor, which has been tracking IT sentiment since the beginning of the recession, reveals stronger IT budget expectations over the next six months and a renewed confidence in the IT job market for the first time in 2010. CDW\'s vice president of product and partner management, Matt Troka, explains.
Get tips for end of year ordering from the program manager of the NASA SEWP program, Joanne Woytek
The Department of Veterans Affairs has a new strategy.
Co-chair Steve Kelmen, former OFPP administrator, explains what was discussed.
The General Services Administration took an unorthodox approach to getting rid of unwanted grasses and weeds at one federal building in California - it hired goats.