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Budget wrangling continues on Capitol Hill. The Hill newspaper\'s Erik Wasson brings us up to speed.
The latest markup of the 2012 Defense Authorization lays out how DoD can carry out secret operations in cyberspace.
Lockheed has officially opened a new cyber lab devoted to cyber security research, and will work closely with CMU faculty.
In the latest installment of BRAC Impact: A Federal News Radio and WTOP In-Depth Series, Jack Penkoske discusses about the telework option to help with the transportation challenges brought on by BRAC.
For military bases in the national capital region, forget the \"closure\" part of Base Realignment and Closure. The 2005 BRAC round means huge growth at bases around Washington, and along with it, a need for new infrastructure and creature comforts for the growing workforce.
Al Burman, president of Jefferson Solutions and Chair of the Procurement Round Table, joins host Roger Waldron to talk about the work his group is doing. May 10, 2011
Adam Tuss from our sister station WTOP explains which areas to look out for in terms of increased traffic congestion.
Most of these employees are coming from Ft. Monmouth, a base in New Jersey that is closing under BRAC.
The work by Dr. Paul Hsieh has led to a nomination for a Service to America Medal in the Science and Environment category.
Appian CTO and co-founder Michael Beckley discusses success stories and how they happened.
Clandestine operations in cyberspace included in 2012 Defense Authorization bill.
The health care of wounded warriors, military members and their families in the area is about to change forever, and the change is historic. And, after 102 years, Walter Reed Medical Center will close.
In a column for Federal News Radio, Ft. Meade Commander Col. Dan Thomas says, \"By this fall, the official worker population of Fort Meade will have grown to more than 48,000. This is 13,000 more personnel than we had three years ago - you do the math: if BRAC growth is 5,400, who are all these other people?\"
Traffic in the Route 355 corridor around NIH is only expected to get worse after the transition of employees from Walter Reed to the National Naval Medical Center.