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#GovShutdown – Day 9 – VA running out of money for Vets – Plus the DorobekINSIDER’s 7 Stories

On GovLoop Insights’ DorobekINSIDER:

GovLoop’s DorobekINSIDER #GovShutdown Reader – Day 9:

The SEVEN stories that impact your life

  1. A federal judge ruled on Monday that IBM had no grounds to protest the CIA’s awarding of a cloud contract to Amazon and that Amazon and the CIA, therefore, should move forward in the execution of the project. The Federal Times reports that Amazon’s contract with the CIA is valued at $600 million.

  2. The bipartisan heads of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-GA) and Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) have almost reached an agreement on a cybersecurity bill that would promote cyber threat information sharing between the public and private sectors. Federal News Radio states that the two senators are confident that the bill will pass into law by the end of the year. Sen. Chambliss, specifically, believes that the legislation will find support in the House given that Sen. Feinstein had previously been working on a similar bill with Representatives Mike Rogers (R-MI) and Dutch Ruppersberger (D-MD) of the House Intelligence Committee.

  3. A third unauthorized party illegally accessed the source code of multiple programs owned and managed by Adobe Systems last week. The hack is currently a threat to U.S. security given that 11 federal agencies currently use Adobe’s software for their operations. The Wall Street Journal observes that both Adobe and U.S. officials are concerned that the hackers will exploit vulnerabilities in the software or tamper with the source code.

  4. President Obama has chosen to nominate Janet Yellen, the Federal Reserve’s vice chair, to be the organization’s new chairwoman. If she is approved by the Senate, she will succeed Ben Bernanke following the conclusion of his appointment on January 31, 2014. As reported by the Associated Press, if approved by the Senate, Yellen will be the first woman in the world to head a major central bank and the first democrat since Paul Volcker in 1979 to hold the position.

  5. The Energy Department’s Inspector General has found that the agency’s Bonneville Power Administration has been ignoring federal hiring directives and manipulating the process used to rate job applicants. Moreover, the Inspector General claims that Bonneville has purposefully been excluding veterans from certain positions. A Special Report by the Department of Energy states that the Energy Department and OPM are initiating an investigation of Bonneville’s case files to address these allegations.

  6. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel announced today that Paul M. Lewis has been appointed to the position of Special Envoy for the closure of the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay. Defense.gov reports that Lewis’ appointment is an indication of the Pentagon’s efforts to execute the President’s directive to close the detention center at Guantanamo. As the former Minority General Counsel of the House Armed Services Committee, Lewis has experience working on Guantanamo related issues. In his upcoming position, he will be responsible for facilitating the transfer decisions for Guantanamo detainees.

  7. Sequestration and the current government shutdown are reducing the military’s civilian workforce and causing a subsequent decline in overall readiness. The Army Times notes that the military is having to bring back $17 billion worth of equipment from Afghanistan due to budget cuts and a decrease in manpower. Overall operational readiness for ground equipment is currently at 90 percent and at 75 percent for aviation equipment.

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