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Helping Vets Transition to Private Sector: Plus the DorobekINSIDER 7 Stories

On GovLoop Insights’ DorobekINSIDER:

But up front: Last night was the annual Operation Jump Start.

In short, Operation Jump-Start is a charity event sponsored by the government IT community that seeks to help soldiers of Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom “jump start” their careers… to transition to civilian careers.

The event each year collects hundreds of suits — both men and womens — but also thousands of dollars. And it is one of my favorite events of the year. As I have said in years past the event is particularly remarkable because you can actually see people being helped — the military personnel themsleves. There are young men — and women — who proudly try on suits near the end of the evening.

Innovative? Ready for a challenge?

The White House announced the opening of applications for the second round of the Presidential Innovation Fellows. The White House is seeking applications to be a Round 2 Fellow from February 5th through March 17th, and are looking to put together a dynamic, diverse, innovative class that will produce tremendous results for the American people.

The new projects:

Speed reads:

The SEVEN stories that impact your life

  1. For the third year in a row, President Obama missed the deadline for submitting his budget request to Congress. The Washington Post reports, the administration’s refusal to say when Obama would release his 2014 spending plan was unusual. Congressional aides in both parties said they expect to see the budget in mid- to late-March — a delay of more than a month, unmatched by any other incumbent president except, on one occasion, Ronald Reagan.
  2. The Energy Department has been hacked and several hundreds of employees personal information was compromised. The New York Times reports, in an e-mail sent to employees Friday evening, the agency confirmed that hackers penetrated computers and servers at the agency’s Washington headquarters and stole the personal information of hundreds of employees and contractors. The agency said it was working with federal authorities to investigate the attack. It said that, based on its findings, “no classified data was compromised.”
  3. Lockheed Martin is offering voluntary layoffs for its IT business. The Washington Post reports, the move comes as defense contractors are struggling to show growth in their information technology businesses. Falls Church-based competitor General Dynamics, for instance, said last month it was devaluing its information technology business by $2 billion in response to falling government demand.
  4. Wall Street Journal reports, the European Union will propose new cybersecurity rules Thursday, requiring search engines, energy providers, banks and other companies to report disruptions to government authorities.Transit hubs, stock exchanges and a host of other entities would be covered by the proposal, which has been seen by The Wall Street Journal and which the European Commission, the bloc’s executive arm, drafted after a decade of failed voluntary measures.
  5. The debt ceiling has been averted. Yahoo News reports, President Barack Obama has signed into law a bill raising the government’s borrowing limit, averting a default and delaying the next clash over the nation’s debt until later this year. The legislation temporarily suspends the $16.4 trillion limit on federal borrowing. Experts say that will allow the government to borrow about $450 billion to meet interest payments and other obligations.
  6. Washington Post: The Postal Service paid death benefits to Postal Service survivors. In some cases, the benefits were paid late, as much as 25 years late, according to McKinney’s complaint. The Postal Service, making several legal arguments, sought unsuccessfully to have her complaint thrown out, saying her claims are outside of the court’s jurisdiction and “should be dismissed.” McKinney doesn’t have an estimate on how much the cash-strapped Postal Service could be on the hook for if it loses the case.
  7. And on GovLoop, have you registered for the next DorobekINSIDER live: BYOD. Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) continues to shape the government workforce. Like any new technology initiative, one of the core concerns about implementation surrounds security. Today, technology exists to allow government agencies to fully leverage BYOD strategies and protect information and data.

The DorobekINSIDER water-cooler fodder

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