GovLoop

Could Agencies Have Spending Bills Soon? Plus the DorobekINSIDER’s 7 Stories

On GovLoop Insights’ DorobekINSIDER:

But up front: Could agencies have spending bills soon?

The SEVEN headline stories that impact your life

  1. The Washington Post: Hoyer expects, but can’t promise, no federal employee furloughs in 2014. Rep. Steny Hoyer says agency budgets are tight, but he plans to seek a pay hike for wage-grade federal employees.
  2. Bloomberg News: Congress Makes NASA Finish Useless $350 Million Structure. NASA is completing a $350 million rocket engine testing stand at Stennis Space Center and then plans to mothball it because it has no useful purpose.
  3. Federal News Radio: GSA losing four key senior executives. They include CIO Casey Coleman, who is joining AT&T; GSA Deputy Administrator Susan Brita will retire March 14 after more than 30 years of government service; Sheila Campbell, GSA’s director of the Center for Excellence in Digital Government in the Office of Citizen Services and Innovative Technologies, who is leaving to join the Peace Corps as its director for strategic and digital integration; and Kelly Olson, director of strategic initiatives and outreach in the Office of Citizen Services and Innovative Technologies, who will be joining Atlantic Media’s Government Executive to lead events.
  4. FCW: IG nominee faces ‘warring camps’ at DHS. John Roth, President Barack Obama’s pick to fill the vacant inspector general post at the Department of Homeland Security, is set to take the reins in a house divided, according to senators who quizzed him at a Jan. 8 confirmation hearing.
  5. Federal Times: Air Force seeks mobile security innovations. The Air Force is looking for innovative ways to secure smartphones and tablet computers without diminishing the devices’ nifty features and apps.
  6. NextGov: NIST PAID $16,500 FOR SPACE AT NOW-BOYCOTTED RSA CONFERENCE. The National Institute of Standards and Technology purchased a $16,500 booth at an RSA event that technologists are pulling out of in protest of the encryption company’s alleged deal with the National Security Agency to weaken products using a NIST-approved trapdoor.
  7. Federal Times: GAO knocks down OASIS protest. The Government Accountability Office has shot down a protest to the General Service’s Administration 10-year, multibillion dollar OASIS contract.

DorobekINSIDER water-cooler fodder

Exit mobile version