The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has mandated that Ascension Health Alliance divest seven ambulatory surgery centers as a condition of its $3.9 billion acquisition of AmSurg LLC, finalized June 2, 2026. This action aims to prevent anticompetitive effects in outpatient surgical services across five U.S. metropolitan areas, including Nashville, Tennessee; Tulsa, Oklahoma; and Panama City, Florida. The FTC's consent order includes provisions for transition assistance, ongoing compliance monitoring, and a 10-year acquisition notification requirement for Ascension in the affected markets to preserve competition and protect patient care quality.
Why this matters: Procurement professionals and contractors in healthcare services should note the divestiture requirements that create new opportunities for ambulatory surgery center ownership and management in key regional markets.
The FTC's enforcement signals continued regulatory scrutiny on large healthcare mergers, emphasizing the importance of competition preservation in outpatient services.
Organizations involved in healthcare facility acquisitions or partnerships should evaluate compliance obligations and market impacts stemming from this consent order.
Vendors and service providers may find emerging demand in the divested centers for operational support, compliance consulting, and transition services.
Agencies
Federal Trade Commission, Office of the Attorney General of Florida, Office of the Attorney General of Oklahoma, Office of the Attorney General of Tennessee
Vendors
Ascension Health Alliance, AmSurg LLC, SC Affiliates, Florida Gastroenterology Center
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Regulatory Compliance
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Information Technology
The House Committee on Energy and Commerce held a legislative hearing on June 4, 2026, to examine the proposed Secure Data Act, a federal comprehensive privacy and data security law. The discussion focused on the need for a uniform national privacy standard to replace the current patchwork of 22 state laws, with proponents emphasizing the benefits for businesses, especially small businesses, in reducing compliance burdens and fostering innovation. Witnesses highlighted the Act's consensus-based approach, built on existing state laws, and its provisions for consumer rights such as data access, correction, deletion, and opt-out options for data sale and targeted advertising. However, several members and witnesses criticized the bill for lacking strong data minimization rules, insufficient protections for sensitive data, absence of a private right of action, and broad preemption of stronger state laws, which they argued could weaken consumer privacy and civil rights protections. The hearing also addressed concerns about enforcement mechanisms, the impact on AI and children's data privacy, and the balance between protecting consumers and enabling business growth. No specific contract awards, RFPs, or procurement decisions were discussed during the hearing.
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Contracting Vehicles
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Policy
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Construction & Infrastructure
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Professional Services
The City Council of Santa Paula held a regular meeting on June 3, 2026, which included extensive discussions on several procurement and development-related topics. Key procurement-related items included a presentation and review of the East Harvard Infill Redevelopment Action Plan (IRAP), funded through the Ventura Council of Governments (VCOG) REAP 2.0 program. The council reviewed three conceptual development plans for a privately owned site, focusing on mixed-use, senior housing, commercial space, and potential medical facilities. The council ultimately directed staff to proceed with Concept One, emphasizing senior and multifamily housing with commercial space, while recommending a reduction in dwelling units to address parking concerns. Additionally, the Public Works Department provided updates on ongoing capital improvement projects, including water and sewer main replacements, street paving, and a microgrid incentive program, highlighting challenges such as labor shortages and chloride compliance in wastewater. The Finance Department reported on accounts payable and receivable activities, including processing over 4,000 invoices totaling approximately $6.5 million. The council also reviewed and discussed a proposed Artificial Intelligence (AI) Use and Governance Policy aimed at establishing responsible and ethical AI use within city operations, with plans to refine and return the policy for future adoption. No formal votes were taken on the AI policy during this meeting. The council scheduled a study session for June 17 to discuss water and sewer rate studies and infrastructure needs. The meeting concluded with an adjournment in memory of a local resident.
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Physical Infrastructure
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Contracting Vehicles
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Construction & Infrastructure
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Public Safety
The Committee on House Administration held a full committee hearing on June 4, 2026, to oversee the Architect of the Capitol (AOC) and discuss ongoing and future capital infrastructure projects. Key procurement-related topics included the recently completed Cannon Building renewal project, which concluded at $971 millionβ$200 million over the original 2009 estimateβand lessons learned to avoid similar cost overruns in the planned Rayburn House Office Building renovation. The AOC emphasized the critical need for financial discipline, timely completion, and minimizing disruption to congressional operations. The committee discussed the necessity of constructing new swing space to accommodate displaced offices during renovations, with a recommendation to build a new facility rather than refurbish existing buildings like Madison. The hearing also covered security infrastructure upgrades, elevator and escalator modernization, and the drafting of a new Capitol Complex Master Plan with outside consultants. Members highlighted the challenges of aging infrastructure, hazardous materials remediation, and the importance of maintaining operational continuity. The AOC committed to working closely with congressional leadership and security stakeholders to ensure project success and safety. No formal votes were recorded, but the hearing underscored the need for continued appropriations and oversight to support these large-scale capital improvement projects.
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Physical Infrastructure
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Construction & Infrastructure
FEMA Region 9 is conducting a Virtual Industry Day to engage contractors for the Permanent Housing Construction Repairs project supporting the Crow Tribe of Montana. This project involves repairing approximately 25 homes damaged by severe storms under disaster declaration DR-4847. Registration for the event closes on June 10, 2026, and the session will cover detailed project requirements, evaluation criteria, and emphasize compliance with tribal regulations and experience in tribal residential construction.
Why this matters: Contractors with experience in tribal housing and residential construction should consider participating to access this federally funded disaster recovery opportunity.
The project requires adherence to tribal regulations, highlighting the importance of cultural and regulatory compliance in tribal construction procurements.
Procurement professionals should note the June 10, 2026 registration deadline to ensure timely engagement.
This opportunity reflects ongoing federal investment in disaster recovery and tribal infrastructure resilience, signaling potential future projects in similar contexts.
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Cybersecurity
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Artificial Intelligence
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Policy
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Information Technology
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Defense & Military
President Donald Trump signed an executive order on June 2, 2026, establishing a voluntary federal program for advanced AI developers to provide early access to their frontier AI models up to 30 days before public release. This initiative aims to enhance national security and federal cybersecurity defenses by enabling government agencies such as the NSA, CISA, Treasury, and NIST to conduct safety and vulnerability assessments prior to deployment. The order creates a voluntary AI cybersecurity clearinghouse to centralize vulnerability information and fosters collaboration between federal agencies and leading AI companies including OpenAI, Google, Anthropic, and xAI. It emphasizes a non-mandatory, innovation-friendly approach that balances security oversight with the need to avoid burdensome regulation, while also prioritizing prosecution of AI-enabled cybercrimes.
Why this matters: Procurement professionals should note the establishment of a voluntary federal review process that may influence AI development timelines and compliance expectations for contractors working with advanced AI technologies.
The creation of a centralized AI cybersecurity clearinghouse signals new opportunities for vendors specializing in AI security testing, vulnerability management, and compliance support.
Agencies involved include DoD, Treasury, NSA, CISA, NIST, and DHS, indicating cross-agency collaboration and potential contracting needs for AI risk assessment and cybersecurity services.
Companies developing frontier AI models can leverage this framework to engage proactively with federal cybersecurity initiatives, potentially enhancing trust and market access in government AI procurements.
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Policy
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Regulatory Compliance
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Professional Services
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Public Safety
The City of Panama City's Charter Review Advisory Board met on June 3, 2026, to discuss various charter provisions and governance issues. Key procurement-related discussions included the agenda-setting process for city commission meetings, with a focus on balancing public notice requirements and the authority of the mayor, commissioners, and city manager in setting meeting agendas. The board debated a motion to allow any one commissioner to request items be placed on the agenda, maintaining a 48-hour public notice requirement, and agreed to amend the charter language accordingly. They also discussed the mayor and commissioner compensation, ultimately deciding not to include compensation details in the charter, leaving that to be addressed by the city commission. Other topics included clarifying single-member district voting provisions in the charter and residency requirements for key city officials, with a motion passed to require residency within Bay County rather than strictly within city limits for certain positions. The board planned to finalize the charter review by mid-June, with further meetings scheduled to address remaining agenda process details and to prepare materials for the city commission's consideration.
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Physical Infrastructure
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Construction & Infrastructure
The City of Anderson Planning Commission held a meeting on June 2, 2026, primarily to discuss a rezoning request (RZ26-3) involving two parcels totaling approximately 39 acres at the corner of Fant and River. The applicant seeks to rezone the parcels from Limited Office (LO) to Neighborhood Commercial (NC) to open a bakery, which is not permitted under the current zoning. Staff recommended approval based on the city's comprehensive plan and anticipated Unified Development Ordinance (UDO) changes that would likely reclassify the area as NC in the future. The commission approved the rezoning request, which will next proceed to the city council for readings and final approval. Additionally, the meeting included updates on upcoming UDO workshops and zoning ordinance changes aimed at reducing nonconformities and streamlining development processes.
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Physical Infrastructure
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Construction & Infrastructure
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Fort Worth District, is organizing an Industry Day on June 23, 2026, at the Houston-Lantrip Center in Abilene, Texas. This event will present forecasted project opportunities at Dyess Air Force Base, providing a platform for contractors, small businesses, and resource partners to engage directly with contracting officials and prime contractors. The session aims to facilitate networking and information exchange about upcoming projects, enabling industry stakeholders to better prepare for future solicitations and contract awards related to Dyess AFB infrastructure and construction needs.
Why this matters: Procurement professionals and contractors gain early insight into upcoming projects at Dyess AFB, allowing strategic planning and competitive positioning.
The event supports small business engagement and collaboration with prime contractors, enhancing subcontracting opportunities.
Organizations interested in federal construction and infrastructure projects in Texas should consider participation to build relationships and understand project scopes.
Early engagement can improve proposal quality and alignment with USACE Fort Worth District requirements for Dyess AFB projects.
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Physical Infrastructure
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Contracting Vehicles
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Construction & Infrastructure
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Public Safety
The City of Tonganoxie held a City Council meeting on June 1, 2026, which included several procurement and contract-related discussions. The council approved a contract with Cunningham Recreation for the replacement of aging playground equipment at Chieftain Park, a project financed through a local financial institution with repayment by the Tonganoxie Recreation Commission. Additionally, the council authorized the advertisement of a Request for Proposals (RFP) for street maintenance services focused on Main Street, with bids due in mid-June and contract consideration planned for the following meeting. The council also approved the purchase of mobile data terminals for the police department at a cost not to exceed $7,540.95 and approved fireworks sales permits for three vendors for the 2026 season. A significant portion of the meeting was devoted to public comments and council discussion regarding a proposed hyperscale data center project near Tonganoxie, with residents expressing both support and opposition. The council debated an 18-month moratorium petition on data center approvals, ultimately not supporting the moratorium due to concerns about losing influence over the project. The meeting also included updates on capital projects and financial reports, with emphasis on timely expenditure of ARPA funds and ongoing infrastructure improvements.
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Grants & Funding
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Physical Infrastructure
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Construction & Infrastructure
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Professional Services
The City of Bloomington, Minnesota held a council meeting on June 3, 2026, where several city charter amendments were discussed to clarify budget adoption deadlines and modernize municipal payment and bond authorization processes, enhancing transparency and accountability. The council approved support for multiple transportation grant applications aimed at improving safety and connectivity, including projects on 9M Creek Parkway, 102nd Street, and the Old Shakopee Road Trail. Additionally, the council announced an evolution of the Hatch Bloomington program to support multiple existing local businesses through competitive funding, focusing on economic resilience and long-term community benefits. Applications for this program will open on June 10, 2026.