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The Department of Veterans Affairs wants to reprogram $243 million from Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act funds to overhaul yet another series of legacy IT systems.
It's been a topsy turvy year for federal contracting. All the while contractors are figuring out how to support their customers while also responding to new compliance demands.
The acquisition regulations have a lot to say about when it's okay or not okay to specify brand names in solicitations. Two recent protest cases illustrate the point.
Congress did not delay the deadline for delivering population and apportionment information, but the Bureau did get a late start on the 2020 count because of the pandemic.
Becoming proficient, employable and promotable in cybersecurity takes a lot of skill and knowledge. Notwithstanding the demand for good cyber people, it's not easy.
The focus may be about to turn from whether its supply chains are cyber secure to how reliant contractors are on foreign sources of supply.
Politicians, and many voters, have been fretting over whether large scale voting by mail can be done in a trustworthy manner.
In today's Federal Newscast, a final rule from the Environmental Protection Agency gives the public a platform to request changes or removal of agency guidance documents.
Nearly every agency technology modernizing effort runs into the same hill: How to replace legacy code. Now the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has launched a project to discover ways to replace this code incrementally but steadily.
The House joins the Senate this week in getting back to work in Washington. The prospects for a continuing resolution to take effect October 1 are looking good. But that's about all that looks good.
In today's Federal Newscast, a survey from the General Services Administration and Office of Personnel Management employees spend an average of 13% a week on work they consider to be low-value.
Joe Biden has a new office in Washington, D.C., because as a major party nominee for president, he and his advisors are entitled to not only office space, but also computers, phones and support.
If the pandemic has been hard on families with kids in school, it's been especially hard on military families.
The Promote Act now pending in Congress would expand the Defense Department's support education for students in the Junior Reserve Officer Corps program.