Federal Contracts

Rule would let public assess subcontractor data

Written by Paul Blumenthal on March 26, 2007 - 2:47pm.
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Source Name

Federal Computer Week

Snippit

Under a newly proposed rule, contractors would have to report specific subcontract awards to a public database to assess the quality of the reported information, according to a notice in the March 21 Federal Register.

Rule would require ethics policies for big contractors

Written by Paul Blumenthal on February 27, 2007 - 11:20am.
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Source Name

GovExec

Snippit

Companies with large federal contracts would be required to implement ethics policies to minimize wrongdoing and ensure that employees know how to report incidents, if a recently proposed rule change becomes law.

Tracking Contractors and Lobbyists, and a Congressional Intervention

Add to the list of Freedom of Information Act requests sent out in pursuit of forms SF-LLL one requesting information related to the contract mentioned in this April 20, 2005, story from the Hill, concerning a federal effort to develop and distribute "intelligent transportation technology." As I understand it, this technology lets users access traffic information in real time, to see where tie-ups are and, hopefully, avoid them on their way home. (I think Al Gore might have had this system on his mind during the 2000 campaign, when he made livability one of his themes.) Right now, you can see what such a system would look like at Traffic.com, in part because Traffic.com (actually, its government services division known as Mobility Technologies) was the company that, in 1998, was awarded a federal contract to develop the technology in a few, test cities. Here's The Hill on what happened in 2001, when intelligent transportation technology was supposed to be offered to 50 additional cities: