Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
The Defense Contract Management Agency is reexamining several of its past decisions to reimburse contractors. That's after the DoD inspector general found DCMA overruled the findings of incurred cost audits without adequate explanation.
What was the mergers and acquisition climate in 2020 and what's the outlook for 2021? Find out wen Kevin DeSanto, managing director and co-founder of KippsDeSanto joins host Mark Amtower on this week's Amtower Off Center.
It's axiomatic that Defense spending will get cut with a Democratic Congress and White House, right? Not so fast.
Three departments are developing new electronic health records systems. At the heart of the efforts is commercial technology from the Cerner Corporation.
The federal contracting community has a month-old Buy American executive order to deal with. Federal Drive got a progress report from attorney Kelly Kroll.
Sens. Mark Warner (D-Va.) and Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) are pressing Senate leadership to extend 3610 authorities through Sept. 30.
In one recent case, a protester caused the agency to redo the whole award. But the protester didn't get any money back for legal fees.
The Competition in Contracting Act stay is only available when a protest is filed no later than ten days after contract award or no later than five days after a debriefing.
Wherever they operate in the world, the armed services rely on contractors for all sorts of support from fuel delivery to housing.
In today's Federal Newscast, mass vaccination sites staffed by active duty military members are now up and running in three more cities, with more set to come online in the next few days.
President Joe Biden has signed an executive order that is intended to boost manufacturing jobs by strengthening U.S. supply chains for advanced batteries, pharmaceuticals, critical minerals and semiconductors
In today's Federal Newscast, officials at the Justice Department are sending a warning to government contractors, they will be turning up the False Claims heat on cybersecurity fraud.
The Postal Service, in a press release Tuesday, said the vehicles can be retrofitted to keep pace with advances in electric vehicle technologies.
A form of contracting known as lowest-price technically acceptable, or LPTA, has long bugged federal contractors.