Many
of you have been waiting to hear word on the Women-Owned Small Business
Federal Contract Program. Today I received the following information
from Bill Elmore, at SBA. (Thanks Bill) (Please see attached Rule in
its entirety).
"SUMMARY:
The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) is issuing this Final Rule
to amend its regulations governing small business contracting
procedures. This Final Rule amends part 127, entitled ``The Women-Owned
Small Business Federal Contract Assistance Procedures,'' and implements
procedures authorized by the Small Business Act (Pub. L. 85-536, as
amended) to help ensure a level playing field on which Women-Owned Small
Businesses can compete for Federal contracting opportunities.
DATES: This rule is effective February 4, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dean Koppel, Assistant Director, Office
of
Policy and Research, Office of Government Contracting, U.S. Small
Business Administration, 409 Third Street, SW., Washington, DC 20416."
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VA News for Thursday, October 7, 2010
1. Obama Awards Medal Of Honor To Deceased Afghanistan Vet. NBC Nightly News (10/6,
story 2, 1:00, Williams, 8.37M) broadcast that deceased Green Beret
Robert J. Miller, "just 24 years old when he was killed in Afghanistan,
was honored" Wednesday for "exceptional valor on the battlefield."
During a White House ceremony, President Obama presented Miller's
"parents with the Medal of Honor, the nation's highest military award."
The AP
(10/7, Smith) reports that Miller "was the third US service member from
the Afghan conflict to receive the Medal of Honor, the nation's highest
medal for gallantry." Obama will soon "award the medal to a fourth, and
the first living recipient: Army Staff Sgt. Salvatore Giunta, being
honored for bravery during a Taliban ambush in 2007." AFP
(10/7), meanwhile, says that in a "poignant ceremony Wednesday," Obama
"told Miller's parents Phil and Maureen: 'You gave your oldest son to
America and America is forever in your debt.'"
According to the New York Times
(10/7, A27, Baker, 1.01M), Wednesday's medal ceremony was attended by
some of Miller's "fellow soldiers from Company A, Third Battalion, Third
Special Forces Group from Fort Bragg, N.C. 'These soldiers,'" said the
President, "embody the spirit that guides our troops in Afghanistan
every day: the courage, the resolve, the relentless focus on their
mission to break the momentum of the Taliban insurgency and to build the
capacity of Afghans to defend themselves."
USA Today
(10/7, Jackson, 1.83M), which also takes note of remarks Obama made
during Wednesday's ceremony, reports, "'Rob Miller - and all those who
give their lives in our name - endure in each of us,' said Obama, on the
eve of the Afghanistan war's nine-year mark. 'Every American is safer
because of their service,'" added Obama.
2. Nisei Vets Honored. In continuing coverage, the Honolulu Star-Advertiser
(10/6, Kakesako) said that with "Medal of Honor recipient US Sen.
Daniel Inouye and other veterans of the famed 442nd Regimental Combat
Team flanking him, President Barack Obama signed legislation" Tuesday to
"grant the Congressional Gold Medal to the 100th Battalion, the 442nd
and the Military Intelligence Service." VA Secretary Eric Shinseki was
also at the signing ceremony for a law that "recognizes more than 6,000
nisei, or Japanese-Americans born of immigrant parents, who served the
United States and fought in battles in Europe and Asia during World War
II."
Rouse's Family Among Japanese-Americans Interned In WWII. The AP
(10/6, McAvoy) noted that when Obama "signed into law a measure
awarding Japanese-American veterans the Congressional Gold Medal," he
"mentioned the family of his interim chief of staff - Pete Rouse - was
among the 120,000 Japanese-Americans interned."
3. VA Announces Expansion Of Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery. The Chicago, Illinois-based Southtown Star
(10/7) reports, "A 20-acre expansion of Abraham Lincoln National
Cemetery was announced Wednesday by the Department of Veterans Affairs.
The $22.9 million project will make room for another 10 years of
burials, the department said in a news release," which also offered a
quote from VA Secretary Eric Shinseki. According to the Star, Shinseki
said the expansion "ensures Illinois Veterans will continue to receive
the benefits they earned."
4. In Meeting With Shinseki, Vets Express Concern About VA-Military Integration. In continuing coverage, the Watertown (NY) Daily Times
(10/6, Woolfolk, 23K) reported, "About two dozen veterans voiced health
care concerns Tuesday afternoon" to Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric
Shinseki and US "Rep. William L. Owens, D-Plattsburgh. 'This was a
broader discussion, instead of talking about your problem, we talked
about the system as a whole,' Mr. Owens said after the meeting at the
CANI Medical Complex at 19472 Washington St." After noting that Shinseki
"left immediately after the event, citing time restrictions," the Daily
Times added, "The biggest concern brought up by veterans was
integration between the military and the VA, according to Mr. Owens."
5. VA Urged To Review Complaint Of NMI Veteran. According to the Saipan Tribune
(10/7, Deposa), the US Department of Veterans Affairs is "being urged
to review the complaint" of Segundo Castro, a Northern Mariana Islands
(NMI) "veteran whose application for benefits was disapproved verbally
by one of its staffers." After noting that NMI Delegate to the US
Gregorio Sablan, in his letter to VA Secretary Eric Shinseki "on Monday,
asked the federal agency to review the incident," the Tribune adds,
"Sablan said Castro was among a group of veterans who were told by VA
staffer Lathe K. Bragg that anyone who contacted their member of
Congress would not receive his assistance or the individual's file would
be placed at the bottom of his work load." Castro, meanwhile, "said
that because the same situation has been happening to other veterans
from the islands, he pointed out the need to form an alliance with
disabled veterans from other regions to bring a strong voice to...VA."
6. Baker: IBM Expects To Meet Agent Orange Claims System Delivery Schedule. In his "What's Brewin'" blog for NextGov
(10/7), Bob Brewin notes that while speaking to a Senate committee
Wednesday, Veterans Affairs Chief Information Officer Roger Baker said
VA Secretary Eric Shinseki called IBM Chief Executive Officer Samuel
Palmisano this summer to express his dissatisfaction with IBM's progress
on development of a computerized Agent Orange claims processing system.
After noting that Baker "said he expects IBM to meet the delivery
schedule, but may need a backup if IBM misses it," Brewin adds,
"VA issued a proposal for a second contractor in September, although
the department has not issued an award." Brewin goes on to say that IBM
and VA have not answered his "multiple...queries on what problems they
have encountered with the Agent Orange claims system, what it's supposed
to do, and when it will go into operation."
7. Baker Says VA Pharmacy Re-Engineering Project Is Back On Track. Government Health IT
(10/7, Mosquera) reports, "The Veterans Affairs Department's pharmacy
re-engineering project – tagged as a troubled project last year – was
put back on track after being divided into a series of smaller,
incremental jobs, the VA's top information official said" Wednesday.
Government Health IT adds, "The system, designed to modernize the way VA
pharmacists perform medication ordering and dosage control, is now in
production at a VA hospital in South Carolina and will expand to four
more hospitals soon, VA chief information officer Roger Baker said" at a
hearing conducted by the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee.
8. Justices Torn Between Sympathy For Soldier's Family And Free Speech Protection. Arguments
before the US Supreme Court on Wednesday over whether the Westboro
Baptist Church of Topeka, Kansas, has the right to wage offensive
demonstrations at military funerals generated significant media coverage
last night and this morning, with lead stories on all three network
news broadcasts and prominent stories in national dailies. The general
thrust of the coverage was the justices' struggle in balancing their
obvious sympathy for the family of fallen Iraq veteran Matthew Snyder,
whose Maryland funeral was picketed by members of the church, with their
reluctance to curb vital free speech rights.
NBC Nightly News (10/6,
lead story, 3:40, Williams, 8.37M) broadcast, "This case has aroused
strong passions, partly because of the setting, a military funeral, and
partly because of the hateful message and several of the Justices seem
to be offended by it, too. Fred Phelps of the tiny" Westboro Baptist
Church "shows up at military funerals to claim that because the nation
tolerates gay rights, US war deaths are God's punishment."
The CBS Evening News (10/6,
lead story, 2:40, Couric, 6.1M) broadcast that for Matthew Snyder's
father, Al Snyder, who "won a $5 million judgment against the church for
invading his privacy, the case is about Matthew." It was "not at all
clear after these arguments," however, "which way the court would rule.
The Justices really struggled to balance the rights of the protesters
with the rights of the families to be left alone."
In the report it aired on this story, ABC World News (10/6,
lead story, 3:25, Sawyer, 8.2M) offered similar coverage, saying the
"Supreme Court wrestled with whether to carve out a kind of funeral
exception for the First Amendment." In a sidebar segment, ABC World News (10/6,
story 8, 2:20, Sawyer, 8.2M) broadcast a profile of Fred Phelps,
stating, "Almost all of the congregants at the tiny Westboro Baptist
Church are members of Phelps' own family."
USA Today
(10/7, Biskupic, 1.83M) reports, "Despite their sympathy for the
bereaved father," Supreme Court "justices, including Anthony Kennedy,
often a key vote, clearly struggled with how to avoid a decision that
encroaches on valid, although hateful, protest messages."
The AP
(10/7, Sherman) says the justices, "in a rare public display of
sympathy, strongly suggested Wednesday they would like to rule for a
dead Marine's father against fundamentalist church members who picketed
his son's funeral -- but aren't sure they can." The AP adds, "Left
unresolved after an hourlong argument that explored the limits of the
First Amendment: Does the father's emotional pain trump the protesters'
free speech rights?"
According to Bloomberg News
(10/7, Stohr), while the justices "searched for a possible way to
reinstate a $5 million award against a Kansas minister and his two
daughters for disrupting the Maryland funeral of a Marine who died in
Iraq," they "gave no clear indication which way they would rule."
The Washington Post
(10/7, Barnes, 605K) reports, "Most First Amendment experts said before
the argument that they expected the court to make a straightforward, if
distasteful, ruling that even vile public speech is protected by the
First Amendment." But if "that is what the justices decide," it
"appeared from the oral arguments that it would not come without some
angst."
The Washington Times
(10/7, Conery, 77K) says that "in a somewhat unusual move, Justices
Stephen G. Breyer and Antonin Scalia seemed to agree that the case may
not be about a funeral." Breyer, a "stalwart of the court's liberal
wing, noted that Albert Snyder, the soldier's father, did not see the
signs at the funeral," while Scalia, a "mainstay of the court's
conservative wing, seemed skeptical of" Snyder's attorney Sean Summers'
"assertion that Mr. Snyder could have a case against the Westboro
Baptist Church simply because of what he saw on the groups' website."
The New York Times
(10/7, A21, Liptak, 1.01M) notes, "Before the argument in the case,
Snyder v. Phelps, No., 09-751," Westboro Baptist Church members
"protested outside the Supreme Court. Abigail Phelps," one of Fred
Phelps' "daughters, carried a sign that said 'America is doomed.'" The Wall Street Journal (10/7, Bravin, 2.09M), meanwhile, points out that a decision on Snyder v. Phelps is expected by June.
After
noting that a "Kansas church known for protesting outside military
funerals, including ones in Oklahoma, is now the focus of debate" before
the US Supreme Court, the KOTV-TV
Tulsa (10/6, Murray) website reported, "Many Oklahomans are torn over"
the issue of whether offensive protests are protected by the First
Amendment.
NYTimes Siding With "Odious" Church Members. The New York Times
(10/7, 1.01M) editorializes, "To the American Nazi Party, Hustler
Magazine, and other odious figures in Supreme Court history, add the
Rev. Fred Phelps Sr. and the members of the Westboro Baptist Church,"
whose "antigay protests at the funeral of a soldier slain in Iraq were
deeply repugnant but protected by the First Amendment." The Times
concludes that it is in the "interest of the nation that strong language
about large issues be protected, even when it is hard to do so."
9. New Plavix Study Contradicts One Conducted On VA Patients. The Wall Street Journal
(10/7, Winslow, 2.09M) notes that a study published online this week by
the New England Journal of Medicine suggests concern about the risk of
combining Plavix, a blood thinner, with certain heartburn pills may be
overblown. According to the Journal, a warning last year from the US
Food and Drug Administration to doctors about avoiding such combinations
was in part prompted by a study on patients at Veterans Affairs
hospitals.
10. Physician Work Hours Study Includes Research On Vets Hospital Staff. The Boise (ID) Weekly
(10/7, Prentice) reports, "The authors aren't exactly sure of the
reasons, but a new study indicates a dramatic decline in work hours by
primary care physicians in Idaho." The report on the study, "(JAMA, Oct
6, Changes in Idaho Primary Care Physician Clinical Work Hours,
1996-2009) includes research on staff at the Boise Veterans hospital."
11. VA Hospital To Help Organize Therapeutic Riding Program. The last story in its "World Equestrian Games Notebook" column for the Louisville (KY) Courier-Journal
(10/7) notes that on Wednesday, "Kentucky first lady Jane Beshear
announced a new initiative...called Horses for Heroes, a therapeutic
riding program for military veterans" that begin early next month.
According to the Courier-Journal, the goal of the program, which "will
be organized by Central Kentucky Riding for Hope and the Lexington
Veterans Affairs Medical Center," is to "use horses and riding as a
means of easing post-traumatic stress disorder and depression."
12. VA Years Behind On Implementation Of Homeland Security Directive. In continuing coverage, FierceGovernmentIT
(10/7, Perera) reports, "The Veterans Affairs Department is years
behind implementation of HSPD-12 thanks in part to a credentialing
system that lacks key functionality, says the VA inspector general. In a
report dated Sept. 30, auditors say the department has issued the
standardized identity cards required by Homeland Security Presidential
Directive 12--signed by President Bush in 2004--to only about 9 percent
of its workforce," when the deadline was 2008 for such cards to have
been issued. FierceGovernmentIT adds, "At the VA's current card issuance
rate of an average of 8,100 a month this past spring, the VA would
require until 2017 to issue cards to its employees, the report states."
13. VA Awards Calverton National Cemetery Turf Renovation Contract. The sixth item for the "Around Tech Valley" column in the Albany (NY) Times Union
(10/6) noted, "ERSI LLC, Lake George," has "won a $520,716 contract"
from the US Department of Veterans Affairs' "National Cemetery
Administration, Stafford, Va., for turf renovation at Calverton National
Cemetery" in Suffolk County, New York.
14. Headstone Support System Allows Togus National Cemetery To Reopen. On its website, WCSH-TV
Portland, ME (10/6, Rose) reported, "After being shut...for three
years, the gates of the Togus National Cemetery are once again open for
the public." After noting that the facility had been "closed down so
crews could work on solving a persistent flooding problem that
reoccurred every Spring," WCSH said Veterans Affairs "hired a
Philadelphia company to create a prototype headstone support system.
Togus is the only cemetery in the country that now uses it."
15. VA Supplies New Tractor To Iraq Vet. According to the Muscatine (IA) Journal
(10/6, Beaudette, 7K), the US Department of Veterans Affairs paid for a
"3038E model John Deere tractor, valued at approximately $22,000," that
was recently given to Iraq veteran Mike Simester, who in a 2005
motorcycle accident sustained "long-term injuries to his body and head."
Simester, who is "building a new future on a small family farm in
southern" Muscatine, "applied for the tractor through the Veterans
Administration vocational rehabilitation program." The Journal quoted
Simester, who said VA "staff...bent over backwards for me."
16. Ribbon-Cutting To Mark Opening Of New VA Clinic In Ohio. The Gallipolis (OH) Daily Tribune
(10/7, Carter) reports, "A ribbon-cutting ceremony to celebrate the
opening of the new" Veterans Affairs Gallipolis Clinic is "scheduled at 2
p.m. today at the clinic, which is located at 323A Upper River Road,
adjacent to Dave's American Grill and behind the Super 8 Motel."
According to the Daily Tribune, US Rep. Charlie Wilson (D-OH) "will be
the keynote speaker for the ceremony. Tours of the facility and
refreshments will be made available following the ceremony." The Pomeroy (OH) Daily Sentinel (10/7, 3K) runs the same story.
17. VA Moves Into New Clinic In Minnesota. The Huron (MI) Daily Tribune
(10/7, Hessling, 6K) notes that on Tuesday, the US Department of
Veterans Affairs "officially moved into the Huron County Health
Department facility, which will serve as a new community-based VA
outpatient clinic." The agency, however, has "not announced when the
clinic will begin seeing patients."
18. VA Re-Affirms Ramsey, Minnesota, As Site Of New Clinic. In continuing coverage, the Coon Rapids (MN) Herald
(10/7, Sakry, 4K) reports, "After reviewing a protest, the Veterans
Administration (VA) has re-affirmed that the new northwest metro
community-based outpatient clinic" will be located in Ramsey, Minnesota.
PSD LLC developer Jim Deal "said he received an e-mail confirming the
award last week." Deal "said he plans on having the clinic ready to open
the fall of 2011."
28. Medicare, Veterans To Get Downloadable Health Info. CNET News (10/7, Fried).
30. Veterans Compensation Law Tops Searched For Legislation This Week. US News And World Report (10/7, Kurtzleben).
34. President Asked To Allow Mojave Cross Replacement. The Riverside (CA) Press Enterprise
(10/7, Goad) reports, "Five months after the controversial Mojave Cross
war memorial was stolen from its High Desert perch, a group of
proponents of the monument appealed today to President Barack Obama to
allow them to replace it." The letter, "organized by
FamilySecurityMatters.org, which, according to the Web site, is designed
to keep people informed on national security issues," is the "second
request to Obama to allow a replacement. The first, made by a group of
veterans organizations, was unsuccessful."