Davis questions Treasury's approach to enterprise contract

Rep. Tom Davis (R-Va.) said this week that the Treasury Department's insistence on going forward with its own contract instead of using a General Services Administration governmentwide vehicle "makes no sense."

Fiscal '07 Defense budget proposes slight increase

The $439.3 billion Defense budget, released to Congress yesterday along with the Quadrennial Defense Review, proposes a 7 percent increase over the fiscal 2006 budget.

Homeland seeks budget boost for IT infrastructure improvements

The White House is seeking a 21.2 percent increase in the IT budget for the Homeland Security Department in fiscal 2007, bringing the total to $4.41 billion, according to budget documents released by the Office of Management and Budget.

Combating cyberthreats a major focus of QDR

Information security is so vital, according to the latest Quadrennial Defense Review, that cyberattacks from abroad could result in an unspecified "overwhelming response."

Bush's submits fiscal 2007 IT budget

Under President Bush's fiscal 2007 budget request submitted to Congress today, agencies would receive an IT budget of $64.2 billion?a 3 percent increase over fiscal 2006.

Top official's departure could slow info-sharing initiative

The newly formed federal information-sharing environment is at risk of losing steam because its director, John Russack, has resigned after only six months on the job, Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) said at a hearing yesterday.

Bush vows to support e-heath records initiatives

In his sixth State of the Union address, President Bush last night said health IT advancements will help the country reduce healthcare costs and improve patient care.

Senators lean toward budget boost for U.S. Visit

The Homeland Security Department's flagship program for tracking travelers at ports of entry could get an early funding boost from the Senate Appropriations Committee.

Buy Lines: For 2006, troubling signs on the horizon

Ever hear the nautical adage, "Red sky by morning, sailor take warning?" By that measure, it is morning in the procurement arena, and the red sky is deepening. It could portend a series of challenges to the procurement progress that's been made over the last decade.

DHS IT security smacked again

The Homeland Security Department's forlorn IT security came in for another pasting this month from the department's inspector general and from Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.), chairman of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Homeland Security.

Metadata dreams adrift

With Michael Daconta gone from the Homeland Security Department, info-sharing hangs in balance

People: President, governors quickly fill top jobs

President Bush and two state governors have lost little time in filling top Homeland Security Department and IT positions.

DataStream: The News in Brief

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Infotech and the Law: New rules raise procurement thresholds

Contractors soon may need to change the cost and pricing data they supply on government contracts as a result of several recent proposed and interim rules that would increase certain procurement thresholds.

Burden of proof

Identity rules may slow first responders, as well as interoperable communications

Inside Track: New Federal Projects

The U.S. Trade and Development Agency wants a contractor to Peru's Ministry of Transportation and Communications for technical assistance in developing a national telecommunications strategic plan.

Inside Track: New Federal Projects

The U.S. Trade and Development Agency wants a contractor to Peru's Ministry of Transportation and Communications for technical assistance in developing a national telecommunications strategic plan.

As I See It | by Tom Temin: Complexity curve rises sharply

I think of them as the shaggy lions of the federal IT industry: men and women who have been in the game long enough to have seen and heard pretty much everything. It's a good idea to pay close attention to what they have to say.

Small Business: In Brief

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SRA finds way to watch small biz by the bunch

About 100 small-business subcontractors are working with SRA International Inc. on the large task order contract it holds with the National Institutes of Health called the Chief Information Officer Solutions and Partners Innovations contract (CIO-SP2i).