2014 begins on a high note, especially for Lockheed Martin, which captured four spots among the top 10 awards for January. So, who else won the biggest contracts in January?
Northrop Grumman Information Technology has won a $26.1 million contract extension for sustainment and development services for Air Force reliability and maintainability information systems.
ManTech International Corp. has won an $85 million single-award contract to provide the Navy with range sustainability services for military training and testing range complexes and assets.
As Linda Hudson departs as CEO of BAE Systems, the sad state of STEM education is top of mind. At the NVTC Titan's breakfast, she offers a challenge to industry and three steps for improving a critical national resource.
DynCorp International has won a $6.4 million subcontract from GovSource Inc. to provide training assistance in support of the Afghan Engineer Training Security Assistance Team.
Exelis has won a $10.9 million contract to provide the Defense Logistics Agency with ARC-201D radios for installation in U.S. Army UH-60M Blackhawk and CH-47F Chinook helicopters.
Engility has closed its $120 million acquisition of Dynamics Research Corp., ending DRC's 58-year history of being an independent government contractor.
PLEXSYS Interface Products has won an $8.3 million contract to provide the Air Force with commercial training simulation services on contractor-owned equipment for the AWACS MTC follow-on program.
A bid protest battle involving SRA International and CSC has bounced from GAO to the Court of Federal Claims, and then back to GAO. The court will make a final ruling, and its decision might be felt beyond two companies and one $365 million FDIC contract.
Booz Allen Hamilton has won a $12.5 million task order to provide the Navy with program management office support for the Program Executive Office Enterprise Information Systems, Naval Enterprise Networks office.
Azimuth Corp. and General Dynamics Information Technology have won a $23.7 million contract modification with the Air Force to advance research and development efforts for the Hardened Materials Research and Survivability Studies Program.
Octo Consulting Group has won two contracts totaling $29 million to provide management consulting and systems architecture and engineering services to the U.S. Agency for International Development’s Office of the Chief Information Officer.