You are currently browsing the GWOT - the Global War on Terrorism blog, by the Jewish War Veterans weblog archives for August, 2008.
- job opportunities (7)
- JWV (13)
- links (1)
- Uncategorized (25)
- Veterans Business Opportunities (3)
- December 12, 2008: Defense launches personal health record application test
- December 8, 2008: Special Announcement
- December 5, 2008: Requirements identical for Defense, VA health record system
- November 22, 2008: Today's Acquisition News - Friday, November 21, 2008
- November 21, 2008: Defense finds wikis a boon during crises
- October 30, 2008: VA hires Navy to build claims processing system
- October 16, 2008: VA suspends prostate cancer treatment programs at four hospitals
- October 16, 2008: Pick of the Day:
- October 16, 2008: Senator urges suspension of Iraq publicity contracts
- October 16, 2008: The Week Ahead
Archive for August 2008
Updates
August 26, 2008 by admin.
- Rule change to provide more contracting opportunities for vets
By Robert Brodsky
The Veterans Affairs Department wants to put companies owned by veterans at the top of the pecking order for agency contracting opportunities.
VA published a proposed rule change on Wednesday in the Federal Register that would establish a set-aside program for veteran-owned and service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses.
“Supporting service-disabled veterans who own businesses contributes significantly in restoring their quality of life while enhancing transition from active duty to civilian life,” the rule stated. “Such acquisitions maintain the socioeconomic well-being of the nation and carry out VA’s strategic goals.”
Full story: http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=40788&dcn=e_wfw
The White House on Tuesday designated Jim Williams acting administrator of the General Services Administration, effective Aug. 30.
Williams, currently the commissioner of GSA’s Federal Acquisition Service, was nominated to succeed Lurita A. Doan as GSA administrator on June 25, but the Senate has yet to confirm him. After a heated July 25 confirmation hearing in which Williams was grilled on his involvement in a controversial information technology contract, Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, blocked the nomination, which cleared the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee on July 30.
Grassley has expressed concern that Williams did not properly protect taxpayers in the renewal of a contract with Sun Microsystems, an IT company with which GSA renewed a contract over the objections of some contracting officers. Doan, and now Williams, had taken heat for allegedly influencing contracting officers to renew the award. The GSA inspector general determined the firm broke an agreement with the government that would have offered the agency discounts based on reductions given to private buyers. The Justice Department later sued Sun for fraud.
Full story: http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=40775&dcn=e_wfw
The Veterans Entrepreneurship Task Force signed an agreement on Tuesday with the General Services Administration to help the agency reach its goal of spending 3 percent of contracting dollars with companies owned by service-disabled veterans.
Under the memorandum of agreement, VET-Force will use its network of veterans to expand training and information on federal opportunities for these firms.
VET-Force is composed of more than 200 organizations and affiliates — many small businesses — representing thousands of veterans. It was organized in 1999 to lobby for the Veterans’ Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development Act, which became law, and provide assistance to veterans who are starting businesses.
Full story: http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=40779&dcn=e_wfw
Presumptive Republican nominee John McCain on Monday repeated his pledge to provide veterans with the option of seeking medical care outside the Veterans Affairs health system if they do not have convenient access to a VA facility.
In a speech before the National Convention of Veterans of Foreign Wars in Orlando, Fla., the Arizona senator said a veterans’ care access card is necessary for low-income vets and those with injuries or illnesses incurred during military service.
“This card will provide those without timely access to VA facilities the option of using high-quality health care providers near their homes,” McCain said. “For many veterans, the closest VA facility isn’t close enough.”
Full story: http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=40768&dcn=e_wfw
In late June, the Army announced that it was rewriting the plans for its massive Future Combat Systems program to focus its near-term efforts more heavily on infantry brigades that have been in high demand in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The decision marks a significant shift for the $160 billion FCS program, the most expensive and ambitious technological undertaking in the Army’s history.
Rather than first fielding so-called spinout technologies to heavy brigades, as had been long planned, the Army now wants to get those technologies to deploying infantry brigades beginning in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2011 –three years earlier than previously scheduled.
Full story: http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=40789&dcn=e_wfw
After a rare decrease in travel spending in 2006, agencies got back on track in 2007, with expenditures jumping $700 million to $14.8 billion, according to the Office of Management and Budget. The Defense Department continues to lead the pack in travel spending and was responsible for $543 million of the $745 million spending increase last year.
The relatively stable spending at Defense in 2007 belies the pendulum swings of the past few years. A $2.2 billion rise in Defense travel expenditures in 2005 was followed by a $1.8 billion drop in 2006. This year’s upswing was caused more by moderate increases across agencies than by major changes in the military sector. The Homeland Security Department, the distant second in travel spending, saw expenditures rise $121 million. The third-place Justice Department spent $18 million more on travel in 2007 than in 2006. The State Department increased spending by $34 million to edge into the top five, nudging out the Agriculture Department, which spent $12 million less than it did in 2006.
Agencies spent $3.5 billion on flights in 2007, up about $200 million from 2006, according to the General Services Administration. They spent $2.5 billion on hotel rooms, also up $200 million. Spending on car rentals dipped $11.6 million to about $411 million.
Full story: http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=40760&dcn=e_wfw
The Air Force is finding itself on an unsteady course as it recovers from a string of public embarrassments surrounding the security of its nuclear arsenal that led to the ousting of its top civilian and military leaders in June.
While it tries to correct deficiencies in the handling of its nuclear weapons, the service is grappling with other problems and is facing uncertainty as it charts its path for the future.
For one, Air Force officials are clinging to the hope that the next administration keeps alive its prized F-22 Raptor fighter jet program for the foreseeable future. The service has made no bones about wanting to buy 381 of the fighter jets — nearly 200 more than currently planned.
Full story: http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=40790&dcn=e_wfw
“You won’t see any more traffic lights in government after January 20, 2009.”
– Paul Light, Paulette Goddard Professor of Public Service at New York University’s Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service, on the fate of the Bush administration’s traffic-light scoring system measuring agencies’ compliance with the president’s management agenda.
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My HealtheVet releases a new Healthy Living Center
August 25, 2008 by admin.
NEW FEATURE!
My HealtheVet released a new Healthy Living Center, Separation from Active Duty. This Center is designed for service members who are leaving active duty, to include veterans of Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) and Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF).
Understanding that moving from military to civilian life can be difficult, this Separation from Active Duty Center offers information that can help the new veteran adjust to the changes. Included is a section which provides specific information for the care giver, and tips on how family and friends can provide support to returning soldiers. The information found on My HealtheVet and the new Separation from Active Duty Center encourages healthy living by learning to adopt healthier
behaviors that can last a life time! You can access this new Separation from Active Duty center by logging into My HealtheVet, go to RESEARCH HEALTH, to HEALTHY LIVING CENTERS then click on the SEPARATION FROM ACTIVE DUTY center. It’s convenient, informative and just for our youngest Veterans, or those Transitioning from Active Duty to civilian life! Check it out today at :
https://www.myhealth.va.gov/
pageLabel=healthyLiving&
Log on today and access VA’s award-winning Personal Health Record at www.myhealth.va.gov
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