In his new dual role, Dawkins will oversee the management and operating functions of NNSA missions and programs at the Department of Energy’s Savannah River Site. This includes the Tritium operations, the Savannah River Plutonium Processing Facility and the Surplus Plutonium Disposition Project located in the K Area.
Prior to joining SRNS, Dawkins was the VP of nuclear operations for the nuclear and environmental group at Huntington Ingalls Industries. In this role, he supervised the project leadership teams for NNSA national laboratories, production plants and test sites, and the DOE’s legacy cleanup sites.
Dawkins served in various leadership roles in the U.S. Air Force, including commander of the Eighth Air Force and Joint Global Strike Operations Center, director of Global Power Programs for the Secretary of the Air Force for Acquisition, Global Power and deputy chief of staff for Strategic Deterrence and Nuclear Integration.
His career also includes serving as the deputy director of Nuclear, Homeland Defense and Current Operations for the Joint Staff, director of Strategic Capabilities Policy for the National Security Council and principal assistant deputy administrator for military application for the NNSA and DOE.
HomeCivilianMetis Books $177M NASA Contract for Aerospace R&D Simulations
Metis Technology Solutions, a technical services company specializing in software engineering, aerospace engineering and systems development, has been awarded a potential $177 million contract by NASA to provide engineering services for the development and maintenance of software and hardware for aerospace research and development simulations.
NASA said Thursday the Aerospace Research, Technology and Simulations contract covers services necessary for developing, operating and maintaining existing and future simulators, including simulation work areas, integration laboratories and aircraft research systems.
The ARTS hybrid cost-plus-fixed-fee and firm-fixed-price contract with an indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity component, Metis will also develop, test and conduct validation of advanced air traffic management automation tools, including advanced concepts for aviation ecosystems.
Metis will work on the project at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California and Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia and at other agency or government locations, if necessary.
The project has a one-year base period and will commence on Dec. 1. It also comes with options that, if exercised, can extend the contract until November 2029.
HomeContract Awards8 Companies Win Spots on $738M Army Contract for Medical Facilities Support
The U.S. Army has awarded eight companies positions on a potential $737.8 million contract to support the Defense Health Agency’s medical facility projects.
According to award notices published in September on SAM.gov, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers competed the Medical Facilities Support Services IIIa contract as a total small business set-aside program.
The awardees are:
Davenergy-VCI JV
Health Facility Solutions
LRS Hill JV
Polu Kai Services-Tidewater JV
Seven Generations Architecture & Engineering
Spectrum Solutions
The OutFit Inc.
VW International
MFSS IIIa Contract
MFSS IIIa is a multiple-award task order contract that covers non-personal services, including general project services, facility operation and maintenance services, project development, commissioning, quantity verification and analysis, occupancy support and facilities system services.
In November 2023, three vendors secured spots on the contract.
Join the Potomac Officers Club’s 2024 Healthcare Summit on Dec. 11, and explore the transformative trends and innovations shaping the future of the U.S. health care sector. Register now!
“Seal of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA)”, by U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency, Licensed under Public Domain
The Defense Intelligence Agency plans to launch an on-ramp process for the third iteration of the Solutions for Intelligence Analysis contract to give small businesses an opportunity to compete for the acquisition vehicle.
According to a presolicitation notice published Thursday, DIA’s Virginia Contracting Activity intends to issue a request for proposals for the SIA 3 contract’s small business on-ramp in the first quarter of fiscal year 2025.
SIA 3 is an indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract that provides intelligence analytical support services for DIA and the defense intelligence enterprise within and outside the continental U.S.
In August 2019, DIA awarded 16 companies spots on the potential 10-year, $17.1 billion SIA 3 contract.
The agency said all subsequent information related to the IDIQ contract’s on-ramp will be issued through the classified side of the National Reconnaissance Office’s Acquisition Research Center.
HomeM&A ActivityFTC OKs Final Rule to Update Premerger Notification Process
The Federal Trade Commission has approved through a unanimous vote a final rule that will require parties to certain mergers and acquisitions to provide more information to help FTC and the Department of Justice’s antitrust division better screen M&A transactions for potential competition issues.
FTC said Thursday the final rule seeks to update the premerger notification form required under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act and will take effect 90 days following its publication in the Federal Register.
“Premerger review is a critical task for the antitrust agencies and to do it well, we need information about each deal’s potential antitrust risk,” said Shaoul Sussman, associate director for litigation of the FTC’s Bureau of Competition.
“This rulemaking is a much needed update to address changes in the marketplace that have undermined the agencies’ ability to detect and prevent illegal mergers, while at the same time creating a more efficient review process,” Sussman added.
DOJ concurred with FTC’s move to finalize changes to the premerger notification procedures.
“Access to better information at the beginning of the merger review process ensures that the antitrust agencies can devote our resources to the most important issues and reduces the burden on filers, third parties, and other market participants,” Jonathan Kanter, assistant attorney general of DOJ’s antitrust division, said in a statement published Thursday.
Key Premerger Notification Reforms
Under the final rule, the supervisor of each merging party’s deal group should provide additional transaction documents and a small set of high-level business plans related to competition.
Companies should also include in their notification forms descriptions of their business lines to reveal existing competition areas between the merging parties.
The forms should also disclose investors in the acquirer, including those with management rights, and include information on subsidies secured from certain foreign governments or entities that pose economic or strategic threats to the U.S.
In June 2023, FTC and DOJ proposed the rule to update the premerger notification form, which has been in use since 1978.
The Chief Digital and Artificial Intelligence Office wants small businesses to get a piece of a 10-year, $15 billion indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract supporting Advana, the Department of Defense’s enterprise-wide data analytics platform.
Announced at an industry day in September, the plans to bring small businesses into the Advana fold are designed to help nontraditional vendors showcase their individual capabilities.
“You don’t have to do every part of the tech stack … if you do a single piece and you do it really well, you can have a contract,” Bonnie Evangelista, deputy chief digital and AI officer for acquisition, told Breaking Defense at the event.
Find out more about the ways in which the DOD is leveraging data to transform its decision making capabilities at the Potomac Officers Club’s 2025 Defense R&D Summit on Jan. 23. Secure your spot at the 2025 Defense R&D Summit to meet public and private sector defense technology experts and help pave a pathway for future mission success.
What is Advana?
Managed by the CDAO, Advana is a DOD-wide, multi-domain data analytics and artificial intelligence platform that delivers information to both military and civilian analysts and decision makers. With data drawn from over 400 DOD business platforms, Advana is currently the department’s largest enterprise data system.
Through the upcoming IDIQ, the CDAO aims to scale the platform to reach a wider range of users and cater to new demands that have sprouted from its expansion.
An Evolving Approach to Advana
The introduction of this IDIQ marks a shift toward a new way of contracting for Advana. For the past seven years, Booz Allen Hamilton was the sole company operating the platform, but a senior defense official told Breaking Defense that a single-provider strategy can no longer support Advana’s expanding service offerings and user base.
The new contract will embrace the principles set forth by CDAO’s Open Data and Applications Government-owned Interoperable Repositories, known as Open DAGIR, a “multi-vendor ecosystem with supporting business models that enables industry and government to integrate data platforms, development tools, services and applications in a way that preserves government data ownership and industry intellectual property.”
Announced in May, Open DAGIR’s current objective is to support the Combined Joint All-Domain Command and Control initiative — the Pentagon’s comprehensive effort to elevate communications capabilities across the U.S. military, allies and other partners.
“Open DAGIR ensures the department can leverage the innovative solutions from the world-class software developers in both the traditional and nontraditional industrial base to create capabilities for our warfighters and decision makers,” CDAO Radha Plumb said.
According to the DOD, the upcoming Advana IDIQ will follow the ideals of interoperability and vendor competition that have characterized Open DAGIR.
Plumb called the contract the “largest acquisition of digital and AI enabling capabilities” in DOD history and an “unprecedented opportunity for industry to get involved.”
HomeCybersecurityNSA’s Kristina Walter on How Cyber Has Changed the Battlefield
The nature of global conflict has changed, extending the battlefield beyond the physical realm and into the cyber domain. As physical barriers continue to fall and global tensions rise, the United States has recognized the need to master cyber combat, but so have its adversaries.
“Russia is a hurricane — you see them coming, you feel them. China is climate change. We are all starting to feel that now when you look at what’s happening in the world,” Kristina Walter, chief of the Cybersecurity Collaboration Center within the National Security Agency, said of today’s cyber threat landscape in her opening keynote address at the Potomac Officers Club’s GovCon International Summit on Thursday.
Today, Walter said, these competitors are leveraging the digital space to disrupt critical infrastructure, steal technologies from U.S. businesses, discover new cyber vulnerabilities in U.S. systems and conduct information warfare.
China, she said, is “unequivocally” the largest and most sophisticated threat in the cyber arena.
“We have seen over the last decade, while we were focused on counter-terrorism, that they have used cybersecurity as a means to an end that goes just below the threshold of war,” she continued.
What NSA has seen with Russia is the use of cyber means to enable kinetic effects, a tactic that has been displayed throughout the conflict with Ukraine, said Walter.
The nation has also been “heavily involved in information operations,” such as attempts to interfere with U.S. elections. Iran, she said, has conducted similar activities, and the physical separation between conflict in the Middle East and U.S. borders has become much less relevant.
“We are all being impacted by the conflict of the Middle East, and we are all being impacted by Russian and Ukraine, even if we don’t have boots on the ground, which means we have to change the way we understand the cyber activity that’s happening, understand what could overflow into the United States or our critical infrastructure and counter against that,” she said.
Cyberattacks against infrastructure and businesses can cause major national security threats. Walter emphasized that it is the U.S. government’s job to help companies secure their digital assets to prevent ransomware attacks or extortion, which are “a threat to all of us.”
Russia, China and Iran are just a few of the many actors the U.S. is “playing whack-a-mole” with across the cyber domain. The way to address this vast array of threats, said Walter, is partnerships.
While NSA has had cybersecurity on its radar for years, what was missing until recently was the ability to take the intelligence it has on attacks against the defense industrial base and share it with industry partners directly. Information on how these attacks were carried out was present, but in the past, the agency was unable to make it available to partners.
“If we can’t see all the pieces, we can’t connect all the dots and we can’t understand this activity,” Walter said.
NSA established the CCC four years ago as an unclassified center of collaboration to help change the culture surrounding information sharing. Since then, the organization has gathered 1200 industry partners and released over 70 public cybersecurity advisories with detailed information on what China, Russia, Iran, North Korea and ransomware actors are doing against U.S. companies, according to Walter.
As the future unfolds, Walter hopes to sharpen NSA’s focus on artificial intelligence, which —- has major implications for cybersecurity — and counter China’s attempts to degrade international internet protocols.
Learn more about the U.S. government’s top national security priorities at the Potomac Officers Club’s 2024 Homeland Security Summit on Nov. 13, where public and private sector leaders will come together to weigh in on the nation’s most important homeland security objectives. Secure your spot at the 2024 Homeland Security Summit to gain access to all the insights these experts have to offer.
Jane Cys Zentmyer, the former director and chief enterprise architect at the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General, or OIG, has been appointed as the chief technology officer of the Department of the Interior’s OIG. Zentmyer announced her appointment in a LinkedIn post on Wednesday.
According to the Interior Department’s CTO recruitment notice earlier published in the website usajobs.gov, the position’s major duties include serving as a senior OIG adviser on organizational strategies for systems technology and infrastructure modernization. The role also calls for extending technical expertise to the assistant inspector general for management.
Before her six-year stint at HHS, Zentmyer worked in the private sector, which included serving as content strategist for digital services provider DMI and as senior communications specialist, web content strategist at information technology company NCI.
Her previous private sector experience also included writing for American Medical News, the American Hospital Association and the Illinois State Medical Society.
A B.S. Journalism graduate from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Zentmyer holds a master of arts in public affairs reporting from the University of Illinois Springfield.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology said Wednesday the new appointments come on the heels of the addition of five new members and the return of five others to a second term with the IAC.
Scott DeBoer, the executive vice president of technology and products at Micron Technology, was elevated from his previous vice chair role, where he oversaw the company’s global technology development and engineering efforts. He succeeds Mike Splinter who has served as chair since 2022.
DeBoer has been with Micron for almost 30 years having joined the company in 1995 as a process technology engineer. He also served in various leadership roles including vice president of process research and development. He also serves as site leader for Micron’s Boise area facilities.
Papermaster is the executive vice president and chief technology officer at Advanced Micro Devices, where he spearheaded the development of the Zen x86 CPU family, Infinity Architecture, and the re-design of AMD’s engineering processes.
The purpose of the document is to ensure that the U.S. maintains its leadership in spectrum R&D by providing shareholders a common reference, shaping private sector efforts and guiding decisions regarding spectrum-related research, the White House said Wednesday.
The document will also help ensure that the benefits of the radio frequency spectrum, deemed by the White House as an important resource, are enjoyed by everyone in the U.S.
The document proposes four categories for spectrum-related R&D: fundamental research, like agile front ends and antennas and spectrum utilization optimization; research accelerators, like public datasets and testbeds and testing frameworks; organizational improvements, like focused research to inform regulatory decisions; and current or likely operational spectrum use cases, like advanced spectrum management processes and regulatory options.
The National Spectrum Research and Development Plan was prepared by the Wireless Spectrum R&D Interagency Working Group within the Subcommittee on Networking & Information Technology Research & Development of the National Science and Technology Council.