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Everything posted by bob7947
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For FY 2022, the Congressional Budget Office said that the U. S. spent: Iif we project the same amount in FY 2023, then NIH's annual contract amounts of $2 trillion under that procurement would cover 32 percent of the amount that the U. S. spent for everything and more than the discretionary money for FY 2023. CBO defines discretionary funding as With those contracts NIH could cover the entire discretionay funding for FY 2023. "An electronic chcken in every pot." That makes me feel warm and fuzzy.
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Why 305 to 510 awarded contracts? I haven't checked any previous procurement but I expect a lot less than that number of contractors ever getting work to do. I admit my math could be better. However, 305 to 510 contracts with orders of $50 billion could exceed $20 trillion. Who's kidding who? Now, for a true story. A contracting agency had about 6 IDIQ contracts with maximum order limits of $50 million each. One contractor was going to exceed the $50 million limit because it received most of the awards. The other 5 contractors received next to nothing. The contracting agency believed that increasing the maximum order limit for the one contractor would be improper and get the other contractors to take legal action. What to do? All 6 contractors had their original contracts maximum increased to $50 million even those who never received any business. That reminded me of the $50 billion number.
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400 contracts x $50,000,000,000 (billion) = $20,000,000,000,000 (trillion) I've never been great at math but I estimated the number of contracts at 400 with a maximum of $50 billion. Possible 10 years = $2 trillion a year. Is my math correct? Does the solicitation state that all contracts awarded could be worth $20 trillion?
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By Dan Chenok Last week, I had the honor of speaking at the retirement celebration for Steve Kelman, longtime Kennedy School Professor and globally leading government management expert, who I’ve been fortunate to know for over three decades. The event was a remarkable tribute to Steve, who: * * * * * changed the face of government procurement for the better, as outllined by Kennedy School Professor and event moderator Jeff Liebman; * * * * * See the article from IBM Center for The Business of Government
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The good part is: the discussion search is corrected and I can use the events page again, the SSL was extended to the discussion pages, and finally all pages are now operating correctly under the SSL Certificate and it will last for a year. and now, i can move on to upgrading the non-discussion pages of the site. That will take me some time.
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On 5/5/23, Wifcon.com's Discussion Board was finally fixed after years. Then on 5/5/23, its SSL Certificate expired. Because it expired, I was warned every time I tried to use this site and had to fight with google to see it. To renew the SSL certificate, I had to renew it with Network Solutions around 11 PM on 5/5/23. After it was renewed by Network Solutions, they gave me a lengthy registration number to take to my Web Host which is Inmotion. I took it to Inmotion and they didn't know what to do with it, at first. Finally, Inmotion's Advanced chat figured it out and added the registration number to my DNS server--yes, we all get numbers. Then, I had to go back to Network Solutions to check with them. It was now after midnight whn I got the all clear from Network Solutions that everything is correct and all I had to do is wait 24 hours to ave the SSL Certificate take effect. The 24 hours will end late Saturday, 5/6/23 but I still see the little red https. If you have experienced any problems seeing Wifcon.com, don't worry because soon the SSL Certificate will take effect if Network Solutions and Inmotion know what they are doing. Maybe, by the end of the weekend I will get a break from Wifcon.com.
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After some time, my expert told me that the problems you encounter when trying to use the search function are caused by defective ads. To test this theory, I deleted all ads and watched how the theory held. The same issue existed after I removed all ads. I've notified the expert about my test and I've given up.
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Few, if any of us, have been impressed with the current nominee for Assistant Secretary of Defense for Acquisition. I decided to look at the acting (of course) Assistant Secretary of Defense for Acquisition. I found several blurbs on her background: and here is the second blurb from an earlier position She appears to have more acquisition experience in industry and government than the current nominee. If you read her experience, you will have some of the same thought as I have. I'll add one more blurb when she was named to her current position. Maybe experience is a detriment. What do you think?
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Defense Contract Finance Study
bob7947 posted a topic in Proposed Law & Regulations; Legal Decisions
DoD initiated a comprehensive Defense Contract Finance Study at the end of 2019 to assess defense industry financial performance over a twenty-year timeframe. This study has 16 recommendations. -
It was Friday, February 1, 1974, when out of the blue, my supervisor asked me: Do you have anything against going to Huntsville, Alabama for a week? The person that asked that question was the one that I needed to file my paperwork for promotion. I immediately said no and asked when do I go? Monday was the answer. Since it was Friday and I was in Washington, D.C, I had a couple of days to get going and hundreds of miles to drive. Stunned, I left my office space amd began walking around the dismal GAO Building in a stupor. Over the years, I found that the halls of the GAO building were a wonderful place to think. The halls were dimly lit and neary devoid of people. The one week in Huntsville lasted for 3 months and I almost died there in the April 3, 1974 historic tornado outbeak. I would be working on the above mentioned bid protest with our Atlanta staff in Huntsville, Alabama at the Marshall Space Flight Center. Few people know it but this protest was the last time that GAO's General Counsel was stupid enough to involve GAO auditors in a bid protest. They now do desk top reviews. At the end of our work, GAO issued a 98 page bid protest decision. To my knowledge, it remains the longest bid protest decision that GAO ever issued. When I retired in 2003, I was the last person in GAO that had worked on that protest and I became a momentary celebrity in GAO's General Council. It's nearly half a century since that protest and now, after giving it much thought over the years, I am writing about my experiences on that protest. Many of my experiences are personal but many others are protest-related. The only protest-related source material I am using is my memory and the original protest decision. Additionally, I am writing this entry in parts so that I don't end up with something so long that no one would even attempt to read it. Monday, February 4, 1974, came quickly and it was time to go. I told my friends and family where I was going, packed my 1971 Datsun 240Z with as much as is would hold, and headed southwest through Virginia.
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Sage Acquisitions
bob7947 replied to here_2_help's topic in Proposed Law & Regulations; Legal Decisions
Thank you h_2_h.