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Industry Announcements
Conaton Becomes Lead For
USAF Space Matters:
Air Force Secretary Michael Donley has designated the USAF
undersecretary position—currently occupied by
Erin Conaton—as "the senior
Air Force official for space matters" at the headquarters level. This
includes being the focal point for planning, policy, strategy,
international relations, space interagency relations, and interfacing
with the Office of the Secretary of Defense on space matters, Donley
wrote in a memo issued Thursday. There is one exception: space
acquisition oversight shifts from the undersecretary's office to the
purview of USAF's assistant secretary for acquisition, thereby
consolidating all service acquisition functions—space and
non-space—under one office, according to the memo. These changes are
among the senior-level realignments that Donley has ordered following a
review of USAF's headquarters space functions (see below). Conaton,
in her post since March, is
already playing the leading role in USAF's energy matters. (DOD
release) (Donley
memo) (Space management
review)
Donley Creates Air Force Space Board:
Air Force Secretary Michael Donley is
establishing an Air Force Space Board to coordinate the service's space
activities. "This board will serve as the overarching forum to integrate
acquisition, international affairs, plans, requirements, operations, and
training efforts related to space," he wrote in
a memo issued Thursday. The
Air Force undersecretary will be co-chair of the board, along with the
USAF vice chief of staff. The head of Air Force Space Command and other
senior Air Staff and Air Force Secretariat officials will sit on the
board. The Donley memo outlines USAF's headquarters-level realignment to
streamline space oversight functions following a comprehensive review
that Donley directed last December. This review found space functions to
be fragmented, leading to confusion over roles, responsibilities, and
relationships. Another change is making the Air Force undersecretary the
lead for space matters at the headquarters level, except for
acquisition. (Space management
review)
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Upcoming Events
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Aug. 25, 2010
Writing Your Own Patent Application workshop
at TVC in
Albuquerque, 8:30
a.m. - 12:30 p.m. Free, but please RSVP with
Margaret Speer by
email.
Aug. 29 - Sept. 3, 2010
Commercialization of Micro-Nano Systems
Conference,
in NM at the Hyatt Regency Tamaya Resort &
Spa. See
COMS for full registration and
speaker information.
Sept. 8, 2010
CCET (Financial Management) at
UNM's STP in Albuquerque, 8:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Free, but please RSVP at
TVC.
Sept. 14, 2010
BioMedical Tuesday in Albuquerque at TVC, 11:30 a.m. - 1:00
p.m. For details and registration, see
NMBio.
Sept. 22, 2010
Writing Your Own Patent Application workshop
at TVC in
Albuquerque, 8:30
a.m. - 12:30 p.m. Free, but please RSVP with
Margaret Speer by
email.

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SBIR Newsletter
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August/2010
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Director's Desk
Barbara.J.Stoller@LMCO.com
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Since the SBA raised the SBIR award threshold
amounts from $100,000 to $150,000 for Phase I,
and $750,000 to $1,000,000 for Phase II, you may
be even more interested in next week's two-day
proposal writing workshop, The Whole Story
Winning More SBIR/STTR Awards. On Tuesday,
August 24, Greenwood Consulting Group will present a
comprehensive day on SBIR/STTR Phase I and Phase
II at TVC in Albuquerque. Then on
Wednesday, August 25, GCG will present the
challenges and lessons learned in Phase III
Commercialization at the Santa Fe Community
College. Part of the
day will involve a New Mexico panel
presenting its success stories with
commercializing SBIR technologies. One of the
benefits unique to attending a GCG workshop is
the invaluable offer to review your proposal in
advance of the agency deadline.
Registration and Info
The SBIR
Resource
Center
is focusing on better tracking of SBIR/STTR
awards. You can send me an email with the
agency, award title, and funding amount or just
send the confirmation you receive from the
agency. I can be most helpful with SBIR/STTR
resources when you are early in the process, and
possibly help you optimize the whole experience.
The SBIR Reauthorization is under another
Continuing Resolution until September 30, 2010.
Since our congressional delegation is in state
for recess until September 13th, it would be
beneficial for small technology businesses who
have benefited from the SBIR program to visit
with legislators and urge them to keep the SMALL
BUSINESS in the SBIR program. One of the best
ways a legislator can understand your business
needs is by visiting your business operation.
Invite a legislator to tour your site and meet
your staff. If you would like my one page
summary of SBIR Program considerations for SBIR
Reauthorization, send me your email request.
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SBIR/STTR Programs Extended "As Is" Through
Sept. 30
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According to the SBIR Insider Newsletter, the
House just passed H.R. 5849, "To provide for an
additional temporary extension of programs under
the Small Business Act and the Small Business
investment Act of 1958, and for other purposes."
What this means is that all SBIR and STTR programs (except DoD)
will be extended "AS IS" for an additional 60
days. The DoD SBIR, STTR and CPP were previously
extended through September 30, 2010 under
separate legislation. With the passing of this
bill, all 11 SBIR agency programs are authorized
through September 30, 2010.
If there is good news to this short term extension, it is that both
House and Senate committees are hopeful that
they will reach compromise prior to September
30, and unlike last year, the relevant
committees are communicating and getting close
to an agreement. The downside to this short term
action is the precarious position the agencies
are put in.
It is interesting to note that in his floor speech to urge passage
of H.R. 5849, Lynn Westmoreland (R-GA) stated
"uncertainty" is the enemy of growth." Do these
elected officials realize that "uncertainty" is
also the enemy of stability in government
programs? SBIR and STTR have been suffering from
this uncertainty for far too long, and many
agencies are reluctant to commit to making
awards, especially in Phase II.
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DOE Focuses on Entrepreneurs
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The recent issue of innovation: America's Journal of
Technology Commercialization, published by
Technology Ventures Corporation, has an
interview with DOE Under Secretary for Energy,
Kristina Johnson. In discussing DOE's recent
changes to support the SBIR Program, Dr. Johnson
states, "We've made improvements to the SBIR to
make it more entrepreneurship friendly... We've
shortened the time between Phase I and Phase II
funding from nine months to six months. We run
two solicitations a year. So if you don't get
funding on the first one you don't have to wait
another year and then another nine months,
(previously) it was almost two years before you
got funded. And we've increased the dollar
amount from $100,000 a year for Phase I to
$150,000, and from $750,000 to $1 million for
Phase II". To receive your free subscription to
Innovation, click
Innovation.
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USDA SBIR Impact
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The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) FY
2011 SBIR Solicitation deadline is only three
weeks away. For those who are in the process of
preparing to submit a proposal, it may be useful
to view the July 2010 issue of 'SBIR Impact'
which was recently posted on the USDA SBIR
website. SBIR Impact is a quarterly newsletter
for small businesses interested in the USDA-SBIR
program and for institutions and organizations
that support the small business community and
rural America.
Included in this issue is a grants.gov submission reminder (see
SBIR Proposal Writing Tips below) and notices
regarding the FY 2010 Phase II reviews,
Commercialization Assistance Training, USDA
success stories, and other items related to the
USDA-SBIR program. Please see
SBIR Impact for full details.
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SBIR Proposal Writing Tips
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Greenwood Consulting Group, our speaker for the
SBIR proposal writing workshop next week,
provides invaluable proposal writing tips which
are available from Greenwood Consulting Group
with a variety of relevant topics covered. This
month's topic: submitting grants.gov proposals
early. Find this and many other writing
tips at
Greenwood Consulting.
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Quote
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""If you don't have a fundamental "can't walk
away from it" passion for what you're going to
do, you're probably going to have a hard time
making it unless you're lucky and even if you
do, you'll be tired. I'm never tired of this; I
wish there were more hours in the day so that we
could do this better and do it faster and do
more of it."
---Matthew Dunn of Music IP, Barringer & Ireland
(2010), Entrepreneurship Successfully
Launching New Ventures, p. 10
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SBIR/STTR Solicitation Deadlines
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Open /
Released Solicitations
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Program
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Closing
Date
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PHS-2010-2 SBIR/STTR Omnibus
Solicitation of the NIH, CDC, FDA and
ACF
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Due April
5, August 5, December 5, 2010; AIDS and
AIDS-Related due May 7, September 7,
2010, and January 7, 2011
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NIH/CDC SBIR Contract Solicitation PHS
2011-12
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Expected
August 25, 2010.
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USDA-SBIR Phase I Solicitation
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Due
September 2, 2010.
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NASA SBIR and STTR 2010 Phase I
Solicitation
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Due
September 2, 2010.
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DoD STTR Solicitation 2010.B
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Due
September 15, 2010.
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DoD SBIR Solicitation 2010.3
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Due
September 15, 2010.
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ED IES SBIR Solicitation
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Expected
late Fall 2010.
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DOT FY11.1 SBIR Solicitation
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Expected
October 8, 2010.
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NSF FY-2011 STTR
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Due
November 17, 2010.
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nmOptics October 2009 Newsletter
Click here for the New Mexico Optics Industry
Association Newsletter, The Lens, October 2009 Edition
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This email is being addressed to every currently interested
NM SBIR Resource Center inquiry or
participant. That's a lot of people, but, at
this critical juncture, YOURS is the most
important voice that your Congressional
Member needs to hear. As you read below,
you'll find there is a real need to hear
from small business as the aggressive
opposition has avoided small business input
... and somewhat succeeded in recent
hearings. The changes afoot, as mentioned in
the following message from InKNOWvation,
would radically change the flavor of the
current SBIR/STTR Program that has helped so
many technology companies grow and thrive in
NM.
I urge you to take a minute to respond. I
tried to make it easy.
You can use the short, succinct letter
template to format your own version, cut and
paste to then email it to your Congressman.
You can use the same format to phone your
representative's staff, more direct and
effective. Or do both! Freshman
representatives are especially vulnerable at
this time, and NM has several freshman in Washington.
Here are the NM Congressional contacts:
I. HOUSE
Ben Ray Lujan: (sits on the important
House Science and Technology Committee)
Chief of Staff is Angela Ramirez.
angela.ramirez@mail.house.gov
202-225-6190
Tech legislative Assistant: Terri Nikole
Baca:
terrinikole.baca@mail.house.gov
Martin Heinrich:
Chief of Staff is Steve Haro.
steve.haro@mail.house.gov
202-225-6316
Harry Teague: Chief of Staff is
Adrian Saenz.
adrian.saenz@mail.house.gov 202-225-2365
II. SENATE
Jeff Bingaman:
senator_bingaman@bingaman.senate.gov
202-224-5521
Chief of Staff is Stephen Ward.
stephen_ward@bingaman.senate.gov.
Tom Udall:
Chief of Staff is Tom Nagle. tom_nagle@tomudall.senate.gov
202-224-5521
If you want the real scoop, read the
following letter from InKnowVation with the
on-the-scene details of the competing bills.
Barbara Stoller
Director, SBIR Outreach Programs
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Letter Template
As the owner of a small technology business
in NM, I wish to express my opposition to
HR. 2965, the SBIR Reauthorization bill
which, if adopted by Congress, will destroy
the SBIR Program as we know it.
I urge that Congressman ___ consider the
provisions of S.1233 and seek to get a bill
through the House more in line with the
Senate's bill.
My primary objections to HR. 2965 are as
follows:
-
It will allow venture capitalist (VC)
firms, including those owned by large
businesses to control/own "small
businesses" and thus participate
directly in the SBIR Program. This
provision will severely penalize true
small businesses.
-
It proposes a dramatic increase in the
size of SBIR awards, again to the
benefit of VC-owned/controlled "small
businesses" at the expense of reducing
the total number of awards which will be
available to true small businesses.
-
It eliminates the requirement of earning
a Phase I award before becoming eligible
for a Phase II award, again a benefit
which will only accrue to
VC-controlled/owned "small businesses".
Please bring this e-mail to the attention of
Congressman ___.
Thanks,
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InKNOWvation Letter:
Background: SBIR has seen much activity recently with hearings,
mark-ups, lots of constituency input and
interaction, media coverage, behind the
scenes maneuvering and negotiations.
However, given the extent of opposition to
to the House version of
SBIR Reauthorization, remarkably little
progress has been made towards finding
common ground. In the judgment of many SBIR
advocates,
the program as you have all known it over 27
years is in serious trouble.
There probably will be an SBIR
program but -without the common ground
achievement we have been seeking - any
resemblance to the diversity of small
company type participation, scope of
projects tackled in every field of endeavor,
and major economic impact particularly in
areas of the country that needs it most will
be only passing. Backed by major VC lobbying
support, Congressional action on
reauthorization is moving into high gear.
Decisions one way or the other could happen
in the next few days or, more likely,
following the Independence Day
holiday period beginning June 29, 2009.
As someone who works for an SBIR involved
firm, your input now is more important than
at any other time.
-
If you've already contacted your Member - do it again.
-
If you have been a passive observer - now is the time to
step up.
-
If you can - make arrangements to meet with your
Member(s) and/or their staffs next
week.
Perhaps you might even consider getting together with other
local awardees to schedule an SBIR focused
town meeting.
The House Small Business Committee (SBC) consolidated their
FOUR separate bills into a single bill HR
2965 and brought HR 2965 before the full
committee on Thursday, June 25. The House
Science and Technology Committee is
addressing markup of that same bill as we
prepare this email. All indications are that
the Committee will follow the SBC lead and
that a majority of the Science Committee
will also back HR 2965. Copies of these
bills are accessible from:
Bills.
Deja vu all over again: Let it be made very clear: In major part, HR 2965 is simply
a rework of the bill brought to the floor
(as HR 5819) during the 110th Congress. That
bill and the current reprise in the guise of
HR 2965 radically refocuses what SBIR is
about. Consistent
with the closed system approach that has
characterized SBIR reauthorization, last
week the House Small Business Committee held
a very selective hearing excluding almost
everyone who would have offered alternative
views to those in the leadership. However,
unlike last year when so many Members were
unaware of the extent of the damage the bill
would do, this time those opposed to this
radical restructuring have been very vocal.
Those true SBIR Supporters need your help to
encourage your Member to join them in
tackling this issue head-on.
We must be prepared for a floor fight when
HR 2965 is presented to the full House for a
vote. The consensus among those trying to
get to resolution is that the
Senate bill (S 1223) is far preferable to
the House bill.
So if you want simply to encourage
your Member to look at S 1223 provisions,
that would be very useful.
There are House Members who have been taking
a serious look at their SBIR options and may
be willing to introduce, and drive very
useful and different elements to help this
process. If your Member is one of those -
urge them seriously to consider helping to
break this log-jam, to seek common ground
that will enable effective SBIR
participation by as broad a range of
qualified firms as possible - and that means
both a cross-section of growth oriented
small firms having (or seeking) VC
involvement AND that overwhelming percentage
of small firms for which VC is never an
option.
Critical structural concerns to discuss with
your Congressman:
-
Emphasize the
importance of funding awardees doing
work in the full gamut of technology
space and across all stages from very
risky early-stage to the more mature
efforts that have near-term
commercial potential. Far too much of
the SBIR dollar is now being spent
primarily on later-stage
work...effectively emptying the pipeline
of the longer term development work that
so many of
you are
effectively doing.
-
SBIR focus on commercialization is NOT
about funding only work with the
potential for near-term application with
substantial financial return. That
incorrect assumption has been feeding
the drive towards using VC investment as
a surrogate to determine whether or not
a project (and a firm) is commercially
viable. That is a financial return
decision that may be useful but which
cannot be the primary determinant for
SBIR selection, for expenditure of
federal/public dollars. That funding
criteria must remain the technical
competence and importance of problem
issue.
-
Funding selection IS about supporting
earlier-stage, often higher risk work
that others are not yet ready to fund -
if at all - but has potential
application and addresses a real need.
-
Redesign the program on issues like
increasing the levels of award funding
that are clearly less than adequate to
many of the tasks addressed, but
restrict very high-cost SBIR/STTR awards
- especially at Phase II - for what
really are Phase III projects. Very
large awards both at Phase I and II have
already had the crippling effect of
limiting the number and type of incoming
new projects. When the number of Phase
I's are reduced, the impact is felt most
profoundly among those firms with few
other options. When fewer Phase I are
being funded, those not getting the
awards are typically the younger,
smaller, earlier-stage firms, commonly
in states with a less robust SBIR track
record and usually with limited VC
access.
-
Address
directly the continuing problem of the
gap at the end of Phase II; you're not
ready for prime time. Funding Phase III
work (demonstration, engineering
scale-up, clinical trials) out of the
SBIR R&D pool is NOT an appropriate
solution. Far more effective means exist
to move SBIR projects forward and to
draw down the value of what has been
created.
Where are we now?
The House Committees of Small Business and
of Science have both thrown their weight
behind the seriously flawed HR 2965. This
bill will certainly be brought for full
House consideration and vote. In the
meantime, the Senate Committee on Small
Business and Entrepreneurship marked up
their SBIR Reauthorization bill (S 1223) on
June 18, 2009 and held a related Field
Hearing in
Maryland
on the NIH/SBIR Exclusion in the Recovery
Act on June 22, 2009. There is scattered but
important opposition in the Senate to the
SBIR bill (S 1223) and it is not clear when
the full Senate will vote on S 1223.
-
These two
bills are quite different in approach,
underlying assumptions and content.
-
They are also
almost exactly the same as the SBIR
bills before the Congress last year.
It
is critical that the deadlock of the 110th
Congress is avoided when the House and
Senate bills addressing reauthorization were
totally incompatible as they still are - and
when a Conference Committee was not even
convened. Continued operations of SBIR
required some political fast footwork and,
more recently, a Continuing Resolution
provision set to run out on July 31, 2009.
If necessary, there will be another CR - but
enough is enough!
In
these challenging economic times, SBIR
must be part of our country getting back on
its feet. Continued functioning of the
program in this limbo condition is
disruptive. Getting back to business - by as
broad a segment of technology-based small
business community as possible - is vital
and must be achieved soon.
Congress has an agenda already chock full of
critical issues. An appropriate SBIR
reauthorization should not be one of them.
You
live/work in the District of a Member who
will have a vote on this issue. That puts
you now in the front line of being able to
affect finding that common ground and
getting to an appropriate vote. Please let
us encourage you to contact your Member and
tell them what you want: the following link
will enable you to identify your Member,
contact information and the committees of
which they serve -
Member info.
Making contact: "Are You For
Main Street or
For Wall Street?"
-
Call to find
out who is handling the Member's SBIR
related issuues.
-
Talk to that
person about why you're calling.
-
Follow-up
with email addressing what you want them
to remember and act upon.
A
House staffer's email will be their name:
first.last@mail.house.gov.
Tell
them the importance of SBIR/STTR to your
firm. Your story may be the most important
thing you will likely say. All politics are
local. You are bringing in money and
creating jobs in the state. You and all the
other SBIR firms are a major factor in the
recovery of our struggling economy. Just
tell it as you see it and stick to what you
know.
Urge
your Representative to consider the SBIR
Reauthorization compromise being discussed
among many other Members that would maintain
the integrity and diversity of the SBIR
program with evaluation criteria solidly
grounded in the technical competency of the
applicant, relevance and importance of the
problem they address regardless of the scale
of the down-stream, market potential.
Keeping SBIR diverse and open to firms at
all stages of their development the strength
and importance of the SBIR endeavor. A
compromise would accommodate the effective
program participation of those applicants
with major growth potential who have been
successful in attracting relevant levels of
equity financing. Both VC and SBIR dollars
have a critical role to play in the
development of many small firms - but not to
the exclusion of everyone else.
Do
not allow you Member's staff to shortchange
what you have to say by sending you a form
letter telling you how much they appreciate
your input and that you should be assured
that they are strong SBIR supporters. You
need to know how they see the provisions of
HR 2965 being changed. Ask them: "Are you
for
Main Street or
Wall Street?"
If
they're solidly in the 2965 camp, that's
good to know. You'll not change their mind.
It is the guys who are open to discussion
that we need to know about.
·
What is different this year:
Many
Members who voted in favor on HR 5819 in the
110th Congress subsequently have made it
clear that EITHER they did not like the HR
5819 provisions but thought this was the
only available slot on the legislative
calendar that year to address continuing
this very important program. Some actually
had no idea that they were not voting for a
straight reauthorization of the SBIR program
- a very popular, long-functioning federal
program which they knew to have been working
well.
These Members are now indicating that they
want a better and more appropriate SBIR bill
this time around. Advocates on both extremes
are being asked to accept a compromise which
gives full SBIR access to all technically
competent small firms.
Please do your bit to encourage compromise.
Much time and energy have already been
spent...the program still hangs by a thread.
Ann
Eskesen
Innovation Development Institute
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SBA PROVIDES LINK TO
FEDERAL POST-DISASTER CONTRACTING OPPORTUNITIES FOR SMALL BUSINESSES
WASHINGTON—
Information about federal contacting opportunities for small businesses
able to support post-disaster cleanup and rebuilding in areas devastated
by recent storms and flooding is now accessible through the U.S. Small
Business Administration’s Disaster Contracting Assistance Center.
The DCAC provides a central
point of reference for small businesses, particularly minority, women
and veteran-owned businesses, to register for and learn about federal
contracting opportunities.
“A vast area—from the Gulf
States to the Midwest—suffered millions of dollars in property damage
when these massive storms struck, and the rebuilding projects will
stretch well into next year,” said Acting SBA Administrator Sandy K.
Baruah. “We want to make sure small businesses have the opportunity to
seek federal contracting dollars, armed with detailed information that
will make it possible for them to take advantage of the network of
available resources.”
Business owners can visit
the Web site at
www.disastercontractingassistance.gov for a detailed look at how to
seek government contracts. Also on the main page is a link to FedBizOpps,
which allows businesses to sign up for e-mail notification of open
contracts related to specified fields. In addition, steps on how to
register for a Data Universal Number System identification number from
Dun & Bradstreet, and information on how to sign up with the Central
Contractor Registration —which establishes a company’s eligibility to
seek federal contracts—are provided on the DCAC site.
The site also provides
information on prevailing wages in construction contracts,
sub-contractor information and federal acquisitions regulations.
The DCAC can be contacted by
phone at 1-888-4USADOC (1-888-487-2362) Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to
9 p.m. EST, and 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. EST Saturday and Sunday. Contact the
center by e-mail at
disastercustomerservice@sba.gov.
For more information about
SBA’s Disaster Assistance program, visit the Web site at
www.sba.gov/services/disasterassistance.
Reinvigorating the Air Force Nuclear Enterprise
The United States
Air Force has been investigating the option of instituting a
Strategic Air Command organization – the following web site provides
access to a copy of the latest report on this subject. Following
the latest incident of a fire in Minutemen facility (not in the area
where the missile is) that went undetected for 5 days, this new
Global Strike Command will probably become a reality soon.
http://www.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-081024-073.pdf
Doug
Beason is a long time friend of PACA and a personal friend to many.
Doug sent the following job posting information regarding his
position at Los Alamos National Laboratory and is provided for your
interest and information.
(Click here
to download the Job Posting)
“…the posting for the job I am vacating this December.
Could you please pass this along to anyone
who might be interested in applying for this position? They may
visit the Los Alamos web-site for more information
(
http://www.lanl.gov ), or give me a call at 505-667-1437 for
additional details.
My position is responsible for all
non-nuclear weapons national security programs and people at Los
Alamos -- over $700M out of a total Lab budget of $2.2B -- and is
expected to exceed the LANL nuclear weapons budget in a few years.
It requires interactions at the Assistant and Under Secretary-level
at the Departments of State, Defense, Energy, NASA, the Department
of Homeland Security, and the Intelligence Community as well as with
our foreign collaborators and the IAEA. I've held this position for
4 years, and it has been the most demanding, yet most full-filling
(and fun) job I have ever held. I'd be happy to speak to
prospective applicants in confidence. Thanks in advance for your
help.”
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