Delaware has secured federal approval for a $107 million Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program grant to expand high-speed internet access to over 4,700 unserved and underserved homes and businesses across New Castle, Kent, and Sussex counties. Construction is scheduled to begin in Fall 2026 with completion targeted by the end of 2029. The project is supported by approximately $27.8 million in federal funds and $75 million in private investments from Verizon and Comcast, who are preliminary awardees for the infrastructure deployment. This initiative aims to address digital equity in rural and underserved areas, enhancing connectivity for residents and businesses.
Why this matters: Procurement professionals should prepare for upcoming contracting opportunities related to broadband infrastructure buildout in Delaware, including potential partnerships with major telecom providers Verizon and Comcast.
The involvement of both federal and private funding highlights a public-private collaboration model that may influence future broadband procurements.
Agencies and contractors specializing in telecommunications infrastructure, construction, and network services should evaluate capabilities to support this multi-year project.
The timeline through 2029 provides a multi-phase procurement horizon for equipment, construction, and technology services aligned with BEAD program requirements.
Access to reliable, high-speed internet is not a luxury, but a necessity for full participation in today’s digital economy, education system, and civic life.
— Matt Meyer, Governor
Agencies
Delaware Department of Technology and Information, National Telecommunications and Information Administration
The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) has proposed an overhaul of the federal performance management system that includes limiting the number of employees rated as "high performers." On March 2026, House Oversight Committee Ranking Member Robert Garcia publicly urged OPM to rescind this proposal, citing concerns that it could negatively impact federal workforce morale and effectiveness. This development highlights ongoing debates around federal employee evaluation reforms and signals potential shifts in how agencies may approach performance management moving forward.
Why this matters: Procurement professionals should anticipate possible changes or delays in OPM’s performance management reforms that could affect federal workforce planning and contract staffing requirements.
Agencies may adjust contractor workforce evaluation criteria or internal performance metrics in response to evolving federal policies.
Vendors providing human capital management or performance evaluation solutions should consider how these policy discussions might influence future federal procurement opportunities.
Organizations supporting federal workforce modernization efforts should monitor OPM’s decisions to align their offerings with potential revised requirements.
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Artificial Intelligence
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Regulatory Compliance
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Defense & Military
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Information Technology
A federal judge in San Francisco has issued a preliminary injunction blocking the Department of Defense's designation of AI company Anthropic as a "supply chain risk," halting the Pentagon's order to sever all government contracts with the firm. The court found the government's actions likely constituted unlawful First Amendment retaliation and violated due process by blacklisting Anthropic without prior notice or opportunity to contest. This ruling allows Anthropic to continue providing AI services under existing federal contracts, including classified network usage, while the legal dispute proceeds. The case raises significant constitutional and procurement implications regarding the limits of executive authority in defense contracting, especially concerning ethical restrictions imposed by technology providers on military AI applications.
Why this matters: Procurement professionals should note the legal precedent limiting the DoD's ability to unilaterally blacklist contractors based on policy disagreements, emphasizing the need for due process and constitutional protections in supply chain risk designations.
The ruling preserves Anthropic's access to federal contracts worth potentially billions annually, signaling continued opportunities for AI vendors with ethical safeguards.
Defense contractors and vendors should evaluate how ethical AI usage policies may impact contract negotiations and government risk assessments going forward.
Agencies must carefully justify supply chain risk designations with clear legal and security bases to withstand judicial scrutiny, affecting future AI and technology procurements.
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Regulatory Compliance
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Contracting Vehicles
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Physical Infrastructure
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Public Safety
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Information Technology
The ongoing Department of Homeland Security (DHS) shutdown has led to significant operational challenges for the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), including the loss of over 460 employees and nearly 58,000 officers working without pay. This staffing crisis has caused unprecedented airport security wait times exceeding 4.5 hours at major hubs such as Atlanta and Houston, just as TSA prepares for record travel volumes during the upcoming FIFA World Cup in June 2026. Concurrently, other federal agencies like the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) are planning substantial hiring efforts to replenish workforce losses. Meanwhile, the Coast Guard is advancing a $10 million procurement for a centralized acquisition system to improve procurement and approval workflows.
Why this matters: TSA's staffing shortages and unpaid workforce directly impact airport security operations and traveler experience, creating urgent demand for staffing solutions and operational support contractors.
The $10 million Coast Guard acquisition opportunity for a centralized procurement system signals ongoing modernization efforts within DHS components despite budgetary challenges.
Procurement professionals should evaluate opportunities arising from federal agencies' planned hiring surges and technology modernization initiatives to support workforce and operational resilience.
Organizations involved in airport security, workforce management, and procurement technology may find increased demand driven by DHS's efforts to mitigate shutdown impacts and prepare for high-profile events like the World Cup.
Jon Stehle, Director of Intergovernmental Partnerships at the Association of Government Accountants (AGA), emphasizes the critical need for strategic planning, regional collaboration, and enhanced accountability in government financial management across federal, state, and local agencies. The discussion highlights ongoing challenges such as improper payments and fraud, underscoring the importance of clear definitions and robust oversight as funding priorities and policies evolve in Washington, D.C.
AGA supports procurement and financial professionals through certifications, training, and best practice sharing to improve government financial operations and reduce risks.
Procurement teams should prioritize transparency and accountability measures to address fraud and improper payment vulnerabilities in contract management.
Regional collaboration and intergovernmental partnerships are increasingly vital for aligning financial management practices and compliance across jurisdictions.
Organizations involved in government contracting may benefit from engaging with AGA resources to enhance financial controls and adapt to shifting policy landscapes.
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Cloud Services
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Artificial Intelligence
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Information Technology
The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) is actively addressing data fragmentation challenges by centralizing disparate data into a unified data lake and transitioning to a cloud-only infrastructure to support AI workloads. Deputy CIO Doug Robertson emphasizes that these efforts are critical to enabling AI integration into daily operations and improving economic outcomes for small business support and loan facilitation. Concurrently, industry experts like Deep Grewal, VP of Public Sector at MinIO, highlight that federal agencies face a significant AI readiness gap primarily due to foundational data management issues, including governance, infrastructure modernization, and workforce capabilities. These insights underscore the importance of robust data strategies and infrastructure investments to move beyond pilot AI projects toward scalable, mission-wide AI adoption.
Why this matters: Procurement professionals should prioritize contracts and solutions that address data governance, cloud migration, and AI infrastructure modernization to support federal AI initiatives.
Agencies and vendors can leverage this focus on foundational data management to develop offerings that enable scalable AI deployments beyond experimental phases.
Workforce upskilling and cultural adaptation are critical components, indicating opportunities for training and change management services alongside technology procurements.
Organizations should consider how AI investments will be evaluated based on economic impact, aligning proposals with measurable outcomes in small business support and loan facilitation.
Bill Webner, CEO of Allocore, highlights the urgent need to modernize the federal lending infrastructure, which currently relies on fragmented and outdated systems across more than 175 federal credit programs. These legacy systems contribute to slow loan disbursements, increased fraud risk, and elevated operating costs. Drawing on lessons from the Small Business Administration's pandemic-era lending experience and comparisons to commercial banking platforms, Webner advocates for a unified, modern lending platform to enhance speed, accountability, and borrower experience.
Why this matters: Federal agencies managing credit programs face operational inefficiencies and heightened fraud exposure due to legacy loan systems.
Procurement professionals should consider opportunities for technology modernization contracts aimed at consolidating and upgrading federal lending platforms.
Contractors specializing in financial technology and secure lending solutions may find increased demand as agencies seek to implement shared, streamlined systems.
This indicates a potential shift toward centralized procurement strategies for federal credit program IT modernization, emphasizing interoperability and fraud mitigation.
Jordan Burris, former chief of staff to the Federal CIO and current leader at Socure, highlights the urgent need for federal agencies to modernize identity verification systems to combat an industrialized, AI-driven fraud ecosystem that threatens hundreds of billions of dollars annually. This evolution in fraud tactics demands enhanced risk measurement and cross-agency collaboration to strengthen defenses and protect government resources effectively.
Federal procurement professionals should prioritize acquiring advanced identity verification and fraud detection technologies that leverage AI and machine learning.
Agencies are encouraged to adopt integrated, interoperable solutions that facilitate information sharing across silos to improve fraud risk assessment.
Vendors specializing in AI-driven identity verification stand to gain from increased government demand for modernized authentication systems.
This focus signals a shift toward proactive, technology-enabled fraud prevention in federal procurement strategies, emphasizing innovation and collaboration.
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Cybersecurity
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Artificial Intelligence
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Defense & Military
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Information Technology
Venice Goodwine, former CIO of the Department of the Air Force (DoAF) and current CIO at Arlo Solutions, shared detailed insights on leadership strategies, cultural transformation, and IT modernization efforts within the DoAF and broader Department of Defense (DoD) environment. The discussion emphasized mission-focused approaches, coalition-building, and the integration of cybersecurity and early artificial intelligence experimentation as key components of enterprise IT transformation. These insights provide valuable guidance for procurement professionals and contractors engaged in government IT modernization initiatives, highlighting the importance of aligning technology acquisitions with mission objectives and fostering collaborative partnerships across agencies.
Procurement professionals should prioritize vendors and solutions that demonstrate strong alignment with mission goals and enterprise-scale IT modernization.
Cybersecurity and AI capabilities remain critical evaluation criteria for upcoming DoD and DoAF IT procurements.
Organizations can leverage lessons from DoAF’s transformation to enhance proposal strategies and partnership models in federal IT contracting.
Emphasizing leadership and culture change is essential for successful adoption of new technologies in government environments.
The U.S. Army has officially updated its cybersecurity and privacy training policy by eliminating the previous mandate for annual training for both soldiers and civilian employees. This policy shift indicates a change in the Army's approach to ongoing cybersecurity education and compliance, potentially affecting training contract scopes, vendor engagement, and compliance monitoring processes.
Procurement professionals should note that existing or upcoming cybersecurity training contracts may require adjustment to align with the new policy, possibly impacting contract renewals or scopes of work.
Vendors providing cybersecurity training services to the Army may see changes in demand frequency and should evaluate how to adapt offerings to support the Army's evolving training strategy.
This change may influence compliance requirements and reporting obligations for contractors working with the Army, necessitating updates to internal training programs and contract deliverables.
Organizations supporting Army cybersecurity initiatives should assess the implications for workforce readiness and consider alternative training or support services aligned with the updated policy.
One year after the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) under the Trump administration executed extensive federal workforce reductions and agency restructurings, the anticipated cost savings remain uncertain amid ongoing litigation and operational challenges. Key federal entities such as the United States Institute of Peace (USIP) experienced significant personnel impacts, with some positions later reinstated under new leadership. DOGE's approach to cuts has been characterized as deep and indiscriminate, leading to disruptions in agency functions and questions about the long-term effects on government efficiency.
Procurement professionals should note that workforce reductions at federal agencies like USIP may affect contract management, vendor relationships, and service continuity.
The uncertain savings and operational disruptions highlight risks in aggressive restructuring efforts, suggesting agencies may prioritize stability in future procurement planning.
Contractors supporting affected agencies might encounter changes in contract scopes or delays due to staffing fluctuations.
Organizations involved in federal workforce and efficiency initiatives should evaluate lessons learned from DOGE's approach to inform future government efficiency programs.